NewCzech an hour ago

I wish that there were a way for me as a consumer to understand this issue.

I used to think these "vaccines cause autism" people were crazy: I once put them in the same mental box where I put people who think the moon landings were faked.

But after all of the government lies in Covid-19, I no longer easily believe what governments say is true. I'm don't really believe the "vaccines cause autism" people, either, but at least I'm willing to listen to what they have to say. And some of the things that they say sound at least plausible to me now.

If there were a good and true answer it would probably be out there for me to see. But all the information I can find is always from a source with an axe to grind.

My first child is about to be born, and I am very conflicted about which of these vaccines I should accept and which I shouldn't, and at what time I should allow them. I want to act in the best possible interest of my soon-to-be-born baby, and I have no real idea who to listen to.

metalman 2 hours ago

aluminum is not safe, and it's inclusion as an "adjuvicant" is entirely, about money the only reason that aluminum "works" is that it triggers a massive immune response to it's sudden, and unwelcome presence in the human body, where, statisicaly, you will survive, but it is still very much a roll of the dice.

  • dc396 an hour ago

    > aluminum is not safe

    [Citation needed]

    As I understand it, aluminum salts have been used for decades globally, administered to over 1 billion people in vaccines with no statistically significant indication that it is unsafe. For example, in a study[1] in Denmark including more than 1 million children, there were no statistically significant increases in risk for any autoimmune and developmental outcomes they studied.

    If you're going to assert a lack of safety in something that has been used so much for so long, it would be helpful to cite methodologically sound studies and non-anecdotal data to back up that assertion.

    [1] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40658954/