Question:
Why would corporate-indoctrination media air a show about a vaccine that causes autism in children?
stale mate
2008-01-30 17:24:45 UTC
The ABC network said on Monday it will go ahead with plans to air an episode of its new legal drama "Eli Stone" despite objections from pediatricians who say the show may discourage parents from having their children immunized.

The debut episode features the show's title character and hero, a trial lawyer for big corporations who decides to fight for the little guy, convincing a jury that a mercury-based preservative in a vaccine caused a child's autism.

On the show, a jury awards the boy's mother $5.2 million in damages after it is revealed the CEO of the vaccine maker kept his own daughter from getting the company's vaccine because of autism concerns.
Five answers:
Moosey
2008-02-01 06:40:29 UTC
the same reason they show people blowing each other's faces off. tv is not real people.
jtlow47
2008-02-02 12:23:48 UTC
It's definitely a hot topic with parents these days. Considering that the viewer base is made up largely of young adults (who are more likely to be parents of young vaccine-aged children), they decided to choose a topic that would appeal to them. It's all about the ratings there. While the producer of the episode said that he would be upset if parents who watched the show decided not to have their children vaccinated, one would suspect that this would probably happen with at least a few people. I'm not sure if we can ascribe an ulterior motive to the producer just yet. Personally, though, I don't like the idea of the episode being aired without a strong disclaimer, as diseases like pertussis and measles are on the rise in the US, and considering the tighter packing of our population, will be much easier to spread and trigger a pandemic.
?
2016-10-16 05:02:58 UTC
reason it would not. The optimum scientist that did the learn interior the 1st place released his "findings" whether very wealthy human beings paid him to "learn" their little ones who've autism. the fact is this scientist went back and did a learn on a extensive quantity of little ones with and with out autism and has considering got here upon that vaccines do no longer reason autism. Autism is a genetic fault that the two parents could desire to posses of their DNA. Autism would not modern-day till 2 years of age. on the tip of the day it rather is a genetic fault that reasons Autism and not vaccinations that preclude ailments and as a result no longer exceeded directly to different little ones and reason their families extra harm then it could have if the parents of the unvacinated baby did the magnificent ingredient interior the 1st place. R&R the reason that their is not any genuine documented circumstances of autism interior the 30's,40's, 50's 60's even by way of to the 80's via subject that it grow to be considered as a psychological ailment. ALL little ones with Downs or Autism the place positioned into psychological institutions and labelled as "broken" and "pshycotic" and considered to have a psychological ailment whilst in fact it grow to be no longer. Do your examine and honestly be conscious of what you're speaking approximately till now you're making stupid comments. Autism has been around for generations till now vaccinations have been even invented. the different reason that extra little ones are got here upon to have extra Autism then ever till now could be via couples leaving having little ones to later in existence which contributes to and docs are extra conscious of what the signs and indications of Austims are. Oh and young ones with autism was labelled "retarded"
men in black
2008-02-01 11:03:52 UTC
For ratings of course! Every body knows there are problems with the vaccines but think it won't happen to their kid. I hope it causes parents to open there TV addled brains enough to research the subject and perhaps save their child from a lifetime of autism or worse.
Heather R
2008-01-31 10:13:12 UTC
money and it is a hot topic, i know my son has autism


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...