He’s Wrong: Donald Trump Says Vaccines Caused An ‘Autism Epidemic
He said he’d get along with Vladmir Putin in the interest of a more stable world, and as for fighting the so-called Islamic State he said: “Why are we fighting ISIS in Syria?”
From his critical comments about fellow GOP candidate Carly Fiorina to his firm stance on immigration to his host of incendiary (and sometimes-deleted) tweets, Trump has proven himself a no-holds-barred attack dog during this campaign season thus far.
Pediatricians and infectious-disease experts responded to the candidates’ remarks with dismay. He certainly wouldn’t be the only candidate up there saying things that were diametrically opposed to truth.
Trump largely let the line pass – “I don’t feel so safe” – but on social media, it was a clanger.
The footage was used to illustrate the verbal account of a California woman who said she formerly worked with StemExpress, a biotech firm that partnered with Planned Parenthood. “It’s not surprising there would be some pushback”. Trump, the front-runner in the polls going into the debate, believes that “the American Dream is dead”, and that stupid American leaders are consistently outwitted by their foreign counterparts.
One was when he appeared to link vaccines to autism, and he proposed making doses smaller. However, the study was later found to be fraudulent. Moreover, a CBS poll released Tuesday shows that only a slim majority of voters who support Mr. Trump say they have locked in their votes, while 46 percent are open to switching candidates. With his signature brashness, he immediately took on his rivals, saying Kentucky Sen. “I’m for vaccines, but I’m also for freedom”. Speaking, we assume, on behalf of us viewers, Kasich said that after spending the first 10 minutes of the debate talking about Trump, “if I were sitting at home watching this back and forth, I’d be inclined to turn it off”.
“I don’t like calling people liars but I think he was less than honest to say he was not trying to establish a casino foothold in Florida, especially here in Miami”, Gelber said. But he quickly backed down under criticism from pediatric experts and others, and endorsed vaccines. “She’s got a attractive face, and she’s a lovely person”, he said. “Vaccinations do not cause autism – but the use of autism as a means of scaring parents from safeguarding their children from life-threatening illness demonstrates the depths of prejudice and fear that still surrounds our disability”.
“Why do we vaccinate so young?”
“You want a second opinion?” “Delaying vaccines only leaves a child at risk of disease for a longer period of time“. “I thought we had three branches of government”. “I love that idea, until it comes to public health”, she said. “I give to everybody”.
Still, there was more than enough running room for Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz. “I know that’s a different opinion than some people hold, but it died off really quickly”.
“You remember the rubble?” asked Bush.
Baker countered that there shouldn’t have been any measles outbreak at all, given that the virus has been eradicated in the United States since 2000. He did neither. He said nothing memorable; he barely said anything at all. “We’ve had a president who called ISIS the J.V. squad, Yemen a success story, Iran a place we can do business with”. “But to me, that’s just luck. So, I don’t see any goal in having that”.