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Jenny McCarthy on Generation Rescue, Causecast

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Uploaded by on Sep 18, 2008

http://www.causecast.org

Actress and activist Jenny McCarthy talks about the battle with her son's autism, how she connected with Generation Rescue, how they helped her cure her son, and how Causecast can provide tools for spreading the word.

For more information on Generation Rescue, visit http://www.causecast.org/org/generation-rescue.

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  • Generation Rescue along with many other bullshit peddlers around actively promote dangerous neglect of children.

    If you'd like to actually look at the science then the papers are all there. CDC, NIH, et cet have done the work. All you have to do is go check it out and you'll see that bullshit is bullshit and science reveals truth.

  • There is no cure for autism. There are a lot of misdiagnoses, because there are no objective tests for the condition.

    Intentional ignorance on your part doesn't change the facts son. And there is precisely zero link between vaccines and autism.

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All Comments (40)

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  • I'm autistic and you disgust me, Jenny.

  • "empower the world with hope tools and resources that we need to make significant changes in the world."

    Well, as the rate of measles related illness climb and birth complications increase as unvaccinated little girls become unvaccinated young women then become unvaccinated pregnant mothers passing on congential infections to their children.

    Youre right, you WILL help make significant change in the world. as a future doctor I'll say Thanks Jenny! We couldnt have gotten here without you!

  • wow Jenny McCarthy is stupid

  • @menspeakout "I'm more concerned with the quotation and the point that it makes, which is sound"

    It's only sound if you ignore pesky thinks like the complete lack of evidence to support Mendelsohn's claims. What use is a point based upon lies and misinformation? The quote and it's claims are not "anti-establishment" they're anti-reality.

  • @halleyscomet I'm more concerned with the quotation and the point that it makes, which is sound. So you don't like Mendelsohn, I could care less. But since when was it a bad thing to be anti-establishment toward the pharmaceutically biased medical industry? I work in the medical field, I see it every day.

  • @menspeakout "Mendelsohn considered himself a "medical heretic." He opposed water fluoridation, immunization, coronary bypass surgery, licensing of nutritionists, and screening examinations to detect breast cancer."

    This is the kind of moron you consider worth quoting???

    The more research I do about Mendelsohn the more vile, ignorant and flat out stupid he sounds. Are all the anti-vaxers really this ignorant?

  • @halleyscomet Read one of his books, turn to the numerous citations to back up his claims, but there is alot more recent material available. I don't think you will find many doctors who think that quote is wildly speculative. "May be" is not causal or conclusive, it's just what it is.

  • @sunclov They took the mercury out of childhood vaccines about a decade ago, and it made no change in autism rates.

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