“I saw it on Facebook. It must be true.”

NOT.

We all know that there is a lot of information on the internet, and not all of it is trustworthy. How do you decide what you can and cannot trust? I used to take it for granted that any information put forth by, say, government agencies must be reliable.
What I know now is that it is not. You have to go to the source and educate yourself to empower yourself so that you can advocate for yourself and your loved ones. What I also know is that if I post something that is true on Facebook, Facebook can slap a “False Information” claim on it and remove it. That’s what they did when I posted about a court case concerning vaccines and the CDC. (see below)



The CDC has been claiming for years that they have oh, so many studies that prove that vaccines don’t cause autism. Del Bigtree (of the Informed Consent Action Network) asked them to show us this mountain of studies. And asked and asked and asked. Finally, he asked the court to ask them to show us the studies.

Guess what! Of the 20 studies that the CDC produced (that’s TWENTY, not twenty thousand), not one of them proved that vaccines do not cause autism.
I don’t want you to take my word for it. I want you to educate yourself.

Watch the video, then decide.

I watched it. My conclusion is that the CDC has been lying to us for years.

If something doesn’t make sense to you when you hear it, then don’t believe it. Investigate it for yourself. Question everything.


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