He was not asked to give an example in that interview..[/QUOTE
It's a trick question. He said, "
I've heard of many tragic cases of walking, talking, normal children, who wound up with profound mental disorders after vaccines." Didn't say he'd actually ever met any of these children... Just apparently believed what some people he's never even talked to about what would be a very complex medical diagnosis.
However, Paul is now doing everything he can (except admit he was wrong) to back away from his own statement. You talk about changing stories. Now he says, "I did not say vaccines caused disorders, just that they were temporally related -- I did not allege causation. I support vaccines, I receive them myself and I had all of my children vaccinated." And: โThereโs 400 headlines now that say โPaul says vaccines cause mental disorders,'โ he added. โThatโs not what I said. I said Iโve heard of people whoโve had vaccines and they see a temporal association and they believe that.โ
yeah, right, Rand, "temporal associations" sounds so much better than "profound mental disorders." And you believe that they believe it . . . not that it's true. How convenient.
Your question was about if I remembered getting vaccines in school , NOT when I was a baby. Besides, we are given a little vaccine book from the Hospital or Clinic, where the various vaccines are marked with their respective date as well as the date of future vaccines to be taken. This happened with me and with my kids..
I'll never know what your vaccine book shows. I do know most kids where I grew up got multiple vaccinations at once. But I'm not complaining about it because there's nothing to complain or worry about.
And I can assure you that we are NOT given 6 or 7 vaccines all at once like in the US, precisely what Rand Paul was talking about, but the Liberal nuts seem to think he is wrong for thinking that way..
No, "the liberal nuts" think he is wrong for saying (and now not saying) that multiple vaccinations cause "profound mental disorders," in children, which several unbiased studies and investigations have proven is not true.
Let me tell you something, only idiots or some looney liberal scientists will believe that giving 6 or 7 vaccines all at once is safe and harmless for every kid. If those scientists say so, it's because they've been bought by the Pharma industry. .
You can tell me all you want about how the CDC and such are full of idiots and looney liberal scientists and they are all bought off by the Pharmaceutical industry, but even people like Sen Marco Rubio don't believe what Paul said. "Absolutely, all children in America should be vaccinated," Rubio said, according to NBC News, later adding: "There is absolutely no medical science or data whatsoever that links those vaccinations to onset of autism or anything of that nature."
So why were you watching a program of a "religious guy on TV curing people of their serious diseases by touching their forehead"? I wouldn't waste a minute of my life watching that crap.
You don't seem to have any trouble believing things, so what makes you think a faith healer who sells disease-curing Glorious Spring Water isn't the real deal? After all, I've heard of many unable to walk, sick people who have had miraculous recoveries after drinking the glorious water. . . . Never actually met any, but saw a woman throw away her crutch on the TV show. What more proof is needed, actually examining her? Rand Paul didn't seem to think that was necessary.
Doesn't common sense tell you that these so called "religious" people are nothing but greedy capitalists who's only intention is to sell people in pain or despair a worthless product? Those kinds of TV shows are an American phenomena, which unfortunately has spread to other countries.
Now you're mocking your fellow Christian faith healer as a greedy capitalist selling a worthless product? Doesn't common sense tell me this? Yes, just like science tells me Rand Paul made up his vaccine/profound mental disorder nonsense.
Just like Male circumcision, a procedure which was brainwashed into Americans brains to think that it was a healthy thing to do. It was nothing more than a way of doctors making more money out of a completely unnecessary operation. Thankfully here in Europe we didn't have idiotic doctors brainwashing people into believing it is was a good procedure, so... it's not practiced, except by the Jewish and Muslim community.
The only thing I'll say about this is that I was born weighing nine pounds but only weighed seven pounds after being circumsized.