CDC Vaccine Whistleblower: The Silence That Kills

Jon Rappoport – It’s now been a year since William Thompson, long-time CDC researcher, publicly admitted he concealed evidence that indicted the MMR vaccine for its connection to autism.

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William Thompson, Ph.D., CDC eipidemiologist

It’s been a year since Thompson publicly accused his colleagues at the CDC of doing the same thing. Two of those colleagues, Frank DeStefano and Collen Boyle, are high-ranking CDC executives in the area of vaccine safety.

During this past year, mainstream reporters and defenders of the realm have taken two approaches: silence; and vague claims that Thompson’s statements are false.

Both of these approaches are slimy and disingenuous, because the man we want to hear from is Thompson himself. And we have not.

We want to hear from him in a public setting, in front of a hearing where he can speak at length, where he can fill in details, where he can air all his claims without censorship.

At the moment, the possibility of such a hearing is remote, because the US Congress is bought and sold.

Short of a hearing, we want Thompson to sit down with a reporter and speak on camera, extensively, and submit himself to questions.

He has said he will not do this. He and his lawyer, Rick Morgan, know there are a number of reporters who will do a proper interview, without edits. I could easily name a dozen reporters who would conduct an in-depth interview, live, online, for the whole world to see.

Thompson’s reluctance? It appears he believes his public testimony, under oath, in front of a Congressional committee, will protect him from harm. I’m talking about harm from people who will do anything to maintain the reputation of vaccines.

But what if there never is a full-blooded open Congressional hearing? What then? Will Thompson maintain silence for the rest of his life? Continue reading

Your Challenges Open Your Heart

Mary O’Malley – I recently took quite a fall coming down my front stairs. My feet just sailed right out from under me and I fell hard on my wrist and hip, as well as deeply wrenching my knee. Even my ribs hurt. Where did my mind go when this happened? Immediately it was feeling sorry for itself. Then it went into fear mode as it asked, “Who is going to water my

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“Shadow Shapes” by Artist Carolee Clark http://www.caroleeclark.com/

garden everyday and take care of my house?” In a few minutes, I was able to relate to what the mind was saying and bring its struggles into my heart. I was also able to go toward the pain in my body, giving it the spacious attention it needed to begin to heal. Slowly and surely, I started to feel better because I was responding to what I was experiencing rather than reacting to it.

Later in the day while reflecting on my fall, I recalled how tight my body became immediately afterward, and I remembered how spacious I was when I was very young. You too were once wide open and truly alive, but as you grew up, you got tighter and tighter, holding onto your breath and resisting life. The fall amplified this tightness we all carry around and it gave me an opportunity to invite it to relax and open to exactly what Life was offering me.  Continue reading