In 1993 my son was four years old and received a diagnosis of autism. It was probably the worst day of my life.
At the time autism was quite rare. I couldn’t find anyone in my local area who had it and most people had never heard of it. Those that had automatically thought of Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man. The statistics then were 4 out of 10,000 – the majority of whom were boys.
Fast forward to 2006 and autism is a word on everyone’s lips. You may not know what it is but you will have heard of it or know some family affected. Statistically it now stands at 1 out of 156.
And the big question is WHY?
Could it be mercury, the second most toxic substance on the planet used in many childhood vaccines as a preservative under the name of thimerosal?
I think so, and what if a bit of aluminium and formaldehyde is mixed in for good measure? How can a young child’s developing immune system possibly cope?
Vaccines play a very important role in eradicating preventable communicable diseases. The theory is if you put a weakened version of a live virus into someone their immune system will send out antibodies to fight. Hopefully, after a bit of a tussle the antibodies win, the body remembers the foe and should the virus attack in its full strength at a later stage it’s prepared for battle.
What happens though if your immune system is too weakened to fight?
When someone contracts a virus naturally it passes through the skin or mucous substances in the nose and throat. The body has a bit of a warning. Childhood vaccines are injected directly into supposedly healthy babies. There is no warning.
Vaccines contain the weakened live virus and also preservatives and stablisers including aluminium hydroxide, aluminium hydrochloride, formaldehyde and thimerosal, all toxic substances.
I don’t think it’s just coincidence the amount of children falling under the autistic spectrum has increased with the introduction of more and more recommended childhood vaccines. Do you?
In UK in 1968, Polio and DPT vaccines were given at 6 months and 7

