The Amish Don’t Get Autism? And They Don’t Get Vaccinations – Possible Link?

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People outside the alternative health community are often confused by the lack of autism in the Amish people. The Amish do not experience autism, or most of the other learning disabilities that plague our technological society. They live in a society that consists of outdated technologies and ideals, at least by contemporary standards. Their diet consists of eating organic, fresh, locally-grown produce, and of course, they do not follow the established vaccination routines. To the dismay of the mainstream media and the medical establishment, this has resulted in a healthier people, who are void of all of our chronic diseases. Heart disease, cancer, and diabetes are virtually non-existent in Amish villages. Equally non-existent are our modern, chemically-engineered medicines, enhanced (chemically engineered) foods, G.M.O. (genetically engineered) foods, and of course, vaccines. How is it that those who are without the so-called “miracles” of modern orthodox medicine are healthier? The truth about health, medicine, and how they both relate to the Amish has become an embarrassment to some rather powerful people.

There have been 3 (yes three) verified cases of autism in the Amish, and two of those children were vaccinated. No information is available for the third child, who was likely vaccinated himself. The strong correlation between vaccinations and autism is becoming undeniable, unless you work for the medical establishment, the government, or Big Media. Proponents of the status quo actually claim that the Amish must have a super gene that makes them immune to autism. They rationalize that autism must be some type of genetic failure, which attacks brains based on religious affiliations. It is truly the best of F.D.A. and A.M.A. science in all its shining glory. Vaccine proponents are willing to espouse any ridiculous explanation, so long as they do not have to accept that their industry is causingchronic disease. Due to all their help, children in the United States have a stunning 2% chance of developing autism, and that percentage is growing rapidly.

Beware When The G’ Man Comes Knocking

The Amish are constantly harassed by health officials, who attempt to convince them to vaccinate their children. Whilst most Amish still refuse to vaccinate their children, a small minority are beginning to succumb to the scare tactics. This continues despite the fact that health officials actually have no legal right to visit peoples’ homes and harass them into accepting these poisons. As more of the Amish vaccinate, the autism rates in their community will rise. Fortunately, the majority of the Amish still contend that vaccinations are against God’s will, which interestingly enough, does indeed seem to be bringing about many health blessings.

Many of the viruses which children are vaccinated against are no longer circulating. However, fear tactics by the media have led frightened parents to vaccinate their children against these viruses anyway. One of those viruses is polio. Dr. Sherri Tenpenny reported that the most recent case seen in the Western Hemisphere was in Peru, in 1991. The World Health Organization (W.H.O.) declared the Western hemisphere free of Polio in 1994. Such inconvenient figures are not cited by the mainstream media, doctors, or the American Medical Association.

On October 14, 2005, the media swung into hysteria after the vaccine-strain of the polio virus was found in the stools of four Amish children. The media initially declined to mention that it was the chemically-inactivated version, which is only found inside the orally-given vaccine. This means that the source for the out-break was the vaccine itself. The situation was sensationally exploited to terrorize parents who had been avoiding vaccines.

Big Business: Intentionally Creating a Paralyzing Pandemic

The horrors of polio were greatly exaggerated by the allopathic establishment’s across-the-board removal of tonsils, which is the only organ that produces polio antibodies. Around the same time, the newly-created F.D.A. began suppressing the use of silver in medicines, which was the only safely-digestable substance that was known to kill viruses (like polio). Finally, ‘the solution’ that industry desired, namely a vaccine, was released at the time that the epidemic was naturally ending, so that the industry’s vaccine could be given credit. All of this was orchestrated to manipulate the masses into buying into vaccines, radiation, and chemistry for health.

“During the polio epidemics, it was found that people who had their tonsils removed were 3 – 5 times more likely to develop paralysis… There were many at that time that suggested that polio was an iatrogenic disease [caused by the medical establishment]… we caused thousands of cases of paralysis. We did not cause the polio, but we converted people who would have recovered from a viral illness into people with a paralytic illness.”

— Dr. Mark Donohoe

With vaccinations, we convert people who may have had natural immune-strengthening infections like the flu, or chickenpox into people who have life-changing disorders like autism. None of the Amish children who had polio in their stools experienced paralysis, or any other horrific symptoms. That fortunate conclusion to their infections is likely the result of them lacking the ‘miracles’ of allopathic medicine.

We must wonder how four Amish children who live in an isolated community managed to become exposed to the unique chemically-inactivated vaccine strain of the polio virus. It is more than likely that such a thing was intentional, especially when the harassment by local health officials is considered. In addition, the vaccine strain that was discovered had not been used for five years, due to the possibility of it causing paralysis. After all, if some Amish children were to get sickened by the polio virus, the Amish may all rush to get their children vaccinated, and the science of vaccinations is proven with a wink and a nod.

The manner in which this was reported is very telling. For instance, if the vaccine strain of the polio virus was found in a normal child, would the media have made the story into front page news? Would it even have been reported? The Washington Post explained that both state and federal officials had informed them of the story. Misleading titles such as, “Polio Outbreak Occurs Among Amish Families In Minnesota” were then used to manipulate resistant parents with bio-terrorism.

When the Amish are simply left alone, to live free of chemical toxins found in our medicines and foods, they are not plagued with diseases, learning disabilities, or autism. They are categorically more intelligent, with the exception of advanced (college-level) writing skills, which is explainable by the fact that English is not their primary language. Could it be those same Amish ‘super genes’ at work again? Society could learn greatly from their example, if we would only stop poisoning ourselves, and our children on a routine basis.

The Information War

Opposition websites often claim that vaccinations are normal in the Amish community, and so is autism. These are lies. While there may be some small Amish groups which vaccinate, and thus have autism; neither is normal. The United Press, in conjunction with Generation Rescue, published a story about the rates of autism in an Amish community in Pennsylvania.

Reporter Dan Olmsted went searching for the autistic Amish. Statistically, there should have been around 130 Amish in the community he examined. Dan discovered 3 cases. The first was an adopted Chinese girl, who had suffered through all of her vaccinations on the same day. The second developed symptoms within 24 hours after getting vaccinated, and there was no information about the third case. The reporter even spoke with the local allopathic doctor, who the Amish sometimes visit whenever herbs and supplements do not suffice (ie. broken bones). The doctor admitted that he had never seen autism in the community.

Dr. Max Wiznitzer of University Hospitals in Cleveland is an expert witness for the government, and he fights against families who file for compensation in the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. He made a mistake when he admitted that autism rates in the Amish community are somewhere around 1 in 10,000. The rate for the rest of us is now about 1 in 50, and growing rapidly. The numbers are actually skewed against the Amish, since a tiny portion of their children are secretly vaccinated now.

We are waiting for real outbreaks of autism in the unvaccinated Amish. If you’re still unsure about the cause of autism, and are looking for studies then read, How To Cure Autism and The Time Bomb of Mercury Poisoning. Studies which purportedly disprove the link between autism and vaccinations have all been funded by the pharmaceutical industry. Truly independent studies have repeatedly shown the clear relationship.

No vaccine has ever undergone any independent, controlled, double-blind studies to determine safety and effectiveness. Seriously. Read the studies yourself, research extensively, and do the right thing. Opt out of vaccinations with a religious or philosophical exemption to defend your child. The public schools cannot legally turn you away if you do that, so learn your rights, and use them! Do it, or someday your own children may curse you for not doing the right thing.

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Contributed by Thomas Corriher of The Health Wyze Report.

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  • felicity

    Thimerosal has been removed from the MMR and other vaccines for children under 6. I believe there are other causes particularly drugs that are given to women during childbirth. I have an autistic child so I’m watching out for all possibilities.

  • Andy

    Makes sense to me.Keep your powder dry.

  • Ken, your UK friend

    Wa-hey! These Amish sound like the perfect preppers because an EMP would destroy us but have zero effect on them. Shame I cant friend them on Facebook LOL to learn of their ways.
    Happiness, clean living and prosperity to all!

  • Carl

    What a fantastically important discovery for you to have made! It’s a little short on details though. If you could cite references that back up your claims, show that there really are only three Amish people with autism, and document that the correlation is as strong as you claim, you would have a good journal article for a scientific publication! Without any of that, I’m afraid to say that nobody who understands how medicine and science works will pay any attention to your claim. You MUST actually measure the things you claim are true and report the numbers.

    • http://twitter.com/AutismNewsBeat AutismNewsBeat

      The “only three autistic Amish” story comes from a UPI reporter named Dan Olmsted who wrote a series of poortly investigated stories in 2005 called “The Age of Autism.” Olmsted claimed that he scoured the hills and dales of Lancaster County, PA, and found only three Amish kids with autism. But he totally missed the cryptically named Clinic of Special Children in Strasburg, PA, which treats dozens of autistic kids. The clinic also has a very active vaccine clinic for the Lancaster Amish and Mennonite populations.

      When challenged, Olmsted said the clinic treats the wrong kind of autism. He has also said that his research did not constitute an actual scientific study, and was meant only to raise questions. Olmsted has also admitted that he is not qualified to identify and diagnosis ASDs.

  • Carolyn Harris

    Let me know when you have anything at all to prove anything in this article. …oh that’s right, you don’t. *facepalm*

  • http://healthwyze.org Thomas Corriher

    I am the editor of the site from whence this story originated. People don’t want to see pages of statistics. Our opponents would like us to work that way, because nobody would actually read our articles if we were that “scientific” — check and mate. We have been doing this long enough to know that the story of vaccinations is entirely about politics, power, and money. So you want to talk some science? How about this? Name one vaccine that was independently tested by a third party in a double-blind study? Can you name one? Where’s that science proving safety and efficacy? Why did the National Institutes of Health find that over half of the doctors interviewed refuse to take routine vaccinations for concerns over safety and effectiveness? Don’t they respect the science? Quite frankly, it gets worse, not better, when you start examining the facts scientifically. Notice how all of these ‘independent’ (and scientific) people showed up here to shout us down at almost the same time. Science would tell us that this is probably not a coincidence, and that there is an agenda of discrediting our work — and we call that sort of thing dishonesty. It is what we have been fighting. I don’t need hundreds of pages of statistics. I can look up mercury and see that it destroys brain neurons, and that it crosses the blood-brain barrier. I can look up that mercury was stealthily put back into the vaccines, so that manufacturers can continue claiming that it “WAS REMOVED” — but isn’t. I can look up that the U.S. National Vaccine Injury Act was instituted to prevent manufacturers from being held accountable — and the lawyers involved stated that one of the motivations was the fact that convulsing children tend to “bias a jury”. They actually said that! I can also lookup the original MMR vaccine insert (given only to doctors) that states a known side effect of the vaccine is autism. The word “autism” has since been removed from the insert, but the new one is otherwise identical to the original. Is that scientific enough?

    Can I prove that Dan’s findings are true about there only being 3 autistic children when he researched? Of course not. Can you scientifically prove that I have never had a mole on my rear? That’s one of the tricks played by the people disingenuously pretending to be “scientific” — that it is impossible to prove that something does not exist.

    We did our work well enough tor anyone to be able to follow-up with their own research. This is our job, and we did it well. For those who refuse to listen to facts and the true science behind us, then we feel they deserve what they get, but unfortunately, it is usually their children who pay the biggest price.

    • Anonymous

      “I am the editor of the site from whence this story originated. People don’t want to see pages of statistics. Our opponents would like us to work that way, because nobody would actually read our articles if we were that “scientific” — check and mate. ”

      Positive claims need to be supported by their own evidence. Rock throwing doesn’t really count. Pages of statistics, references, etc are preferable to what appear to be baseless claims

      “Can I prove that Dan’s findings are true about there only being 3 autistic children when he researched? Of course not. Can you scientifically prove that I have never had a mole on my rear? ”

      This is a non-sequitur. Again, “Dan” should have shared his methodology, sample size, etc. then compated that to national rates arrived at via similar sampling methodologies, to ensure that his comparison was in fact valid. Apparently he admitted that it wasn’t exactly ‘research’. That being the case, again, why repeat the claim?

  • Herb Wagemaler

    NIMH concordance rate
    identicle twins 90%
    genetic factors

  • Martin Watt

    THis article assumes most amish do not get vaccinated. Most Amish parents do get their children vaccinated. The Amish children do suffer autism and it is possibly at lower levels than others. This however has not been clearly established. Rates of 1 in 271 children have been found. Though the Amish do shy away from formal identification of medical problems and use their own people and hospitals. Rates could therefore be much higher.

  • Nicole Flatt

    I’m not sure what the goal of this website is. Is it satire, or are you trying to inform? If you are trying to inform your information is false. As someone who has spent my life with the Amish and just recently asked a lot of questions regarding this subject, yes, most Amish do vaccinate their children. Would you mind citing where you obtained your information?

    • Voter

      Nicole, they’ve “borrowed” the story from the website Healthwyze, which is notorious for printing ridiculous information. It’s obvious that the original author, Thomas Corriher, has never been in Amish country, has never interviewed a single Amish person, and has absolutely NO CLUE about how the Amish live. In my journalism career I’ve interviewed countless Amish and, living in Amish country myself, I find it hard not to roll on the floor laughing in hysteria at the ridiculous claims made here in this article. They’ve taken a story that was done years and years ago about some Pennsylvania Amish and embellished it. No. Clue. No. Clue. Whatsoever.

  • Voter

    This is the most ridiculous story I’ve ever seen on the Amish. Obviously the author has no clue about Amish ways.