Congressman Bill Posey of Florida speaks on the House floor on July 29, 2015 about CDC whistleblower Dr. William Thompson exposing deception at the CDC and calls for a hearing and thorough investigation of the CDC. Read video transcript here. |
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Former NBC CEO Bob Wright sits down with Matt Lauer to talk about his new book, “The Wright Stuff,” which chronicles his NBC tenure as well as his co-founding of Autism Speaks, an organization to help families dealing with an autism diagnosis, as his has. - 3/29/16
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At point 4:40 to about 8:30, you'll hear Matt Laurer ask Bob Wright about the film Vaxxed and refer to Dr. Andrew Wakefield as "widely discredited." You'll then see a brief clip of Mr. Wright's daughter saying how Dr. Wakefield helped recover her son, Bob Wright's grandson, from autism.
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Former Media Power Player Sounds Alarm Over Vaccines
by Clint Kincaid, Accuracy in Media, Aapirl , 2016
Excerpts from article . . .
Autism was once a rare disorder but is now so common that most people know someone with an affected child. Many parents with autistic children have concluded that government policy dictating that every child get 69 doses of 16 vaccines, some with controversial chemical ingredients, is a factor in the rise of autism.
One of the important voices in this controversy is Bob Wright, whose new book, The Wright Stuff: From NBC to Autism Speaks, is getting some important press attention. He ran NBC Universal for more than 20 years and started the organization Autism Speaks, after his first grandchild was diagnosed with autism back in 2004. In his book, he says that President Obama’s key adviser, Valerie Jarrett, killed a proposal to improve the safety of vaccines, so that parental fears about the link between vaccines and autism could be addressed.
On CNN, Wright explained that the vaccine program “can be significantly improved for very little money and we tried, and I tried with two administrations, the Bush administration, Obama administration and I failed to get it. It got stopped in the White House in both cases.”
Read full article.
by Clint Kincaid, Accuracy in Media, Aapirl , 2016
Excerpts from article . . .
Autism was once a rare disorder but is now so common that most people know someone with an affected child. Many parents with autistic children have concluded that government policy dictating that every child get 69 doses of 16 vaccines, some with controversial chemical ingredients, is a factor in the rise of autism.
One of the important voices in this controversy is Bob Wright, whose new book, The Wright Stuff: From NBC to Autism Speaks, is getting some important press attention. He ran NBC Universal for more than 20 years and started the organization Autism Speaks, after his first grandchild was diagnosed with autism back in 2004. In his book, he says that President Obama’s key adviser, Valerie Jarrett, killed a proposal to improve the safety of vaccines, so that parental fears about the link between vaccines and autism could be addressed.
On CNN, Wright explained that the vaccine program “can be significantly improved for very little money and we tried, and I tried with two administrations, the Bush administration, Obama administration and I failed to get it. It got stopped in the White House in both cases.”
Read full article.