Celebrity News

Jenny McCarthy calls BS on Needless Vaccinations

Published on April 5, 2008 at 10:04 PM

I meant to write about this earlier but missed it. Jenny McCarthy got angry on live TV last Wednesday night when she raged at medical officials about what she claimed are needless vaccinations.

The bubbly blonde actress and former playboy bunny, who is dating Jim Carrey, has become a leading advocate for alternative research into the causes and ‘cures’ for autism ever since her son Evan was diagnosed with the brain development disorder.

Faced with a panel of three trained pediatricians, who disputed McCarthy’s claims that childhood vaccinations could be responsible for some autism cases on CNN news show Larry King Live, the actress shouted “bulls**t” twice.

Banging her hand on King’s table, she scolded, “The increase (in immunization) is ridiculous, you guys… It’s plain and simple. It’s bulls**t… Too many shots, too soon. My son ‘died’ in front of me due to a vaccine injury… and every week I get a picture sent to me of a child, following a vaccination.”

McCarthy’s five-year-old son was diagnosed with autism when he was two after he suffered a heart attack and was clinically dead for two minutes.

As the doctors continued to dispute McCarthy’s claims, linking vaccines to autism, the actress leaned across the table and said, “An increase in the measles, I’ll take that way over autism any day.”

Jenny like most of us is not a doctor, but more people should call bulls**t on the medical profession in general and question their doctor. What’s certain knowledge today may be proved wrong in a few years. I know that vaccinations are important and save millions of lives so I am not suggesting we stop them all. But completely dismissing their potential role in the ever increasing cases of autism is questionable. Placing too much faith in the pronouncements of “medical science,” particularly when so much of its “research” is paid for by the pharmaceutical industries that have a big stake in the results to me is a big concern.

Article Recommendations

    Featured Comments