In a bombshell interview, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a leading figure in the vaccine skepticism movement and an independent presidential candidate, has publicly accused the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of deliberately suppressing a damning internal study.
Kennedy claims the study found a shocking 1135% increase in autism risk directly linked to the Hepatitis B vaccination, prompting researchers to allegedly conceal their findings.
During his appearance on Tucker Carlson’s program, Kennedy detailed what he asserts was a deliberate act of scientific misconduct by the CDC.
He painted a grim picture of an internal CDC study whose researchers were reportedly “shocked” by the magnitude of their discovery: a correlation indicating an 1135% surge in autism risk among children who received the Hepatitis B vaccine.
According to Kennedy’s detailed accusation, the method of this alleged cover-up involved manipulating the study’s data.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr explained, “They got rid of all the older children essentially and just had younger children who are too young to be diagnosed [with autism].”
This maneuver, Kennedy suggests, effectively scrubbed the dataset of the very subjects most likely to exhibit autism symptoms, thereby obscuring the alarming link identified in the initial research.
ALSO READ : Infertility Nightmare: The impact of COVID infection and vaccination
The implication, as Kennedy dramatically put it, is to “Imagine discovering evidence of catastrophic harm and making sure no one ever found out.”
Kennedy, a long-time critic of pharmaceutical companies and government health agencies, has consistently championed investigations into vaccine safety.
His claims, if substantiated, would represent a profound betrayal of public trust and ignite a fierce debate about the integrity of scientific research within federal institutions.
It’s crucial to note that the mainstream medical and scientific communities, including the CDC, unequivocally maintain that numerous comprehensive, large-scale studies have consistently shown no causal link between vaccines, including the Hepatitis B vaccine, and Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD).
Claims linking vaccines to autism have been widely debunked over the past two decades.
However, Kennedy’s allegations, amplified by his growing political platform, are expected to fuel renewed calls for transparency and scrutiny of historical vaccine-related data and public health practices.
The revelation of such an alleged suppression could have significant ramifications for public confidence in vaccinations globally