Andy Wakefield Has Written a Western Featuring a Child With Autism... In 1867
The Real Truth About Vaccines
And now for something totally different… Andy Wakefield not only thinks that he has somehow been vindicated and proven right, but he has written a western featuring a child with autism... in 1867.
Starting out as a screenplay, he eventually turned it into a book - to turn it into a source of funding for a movie…
Andy Wakefield Has Written a Western Featuring a Child With Autism... In 1867
Is your mind blown?
Yeah… if Andy Wakefield was vindicated and his theories were proven right that the MMR vaccine causes autism, then how could this child in 1867 have autism?
After all, his book is set more than 100 years before the MMR vaccine was developed!
And over 130 years before Wakefield paid kids at a birthday party to let him draw their blood for his autism study…
Oh, and then there is the simple fact that no one knew about autism in 1867…
Remember, Leo Kanner first described the classic symptoms of autism in 1943, although Grunya Efimovna Sukhareva did describe people with autistic traits even earlier, in 1925. And Eugen Bleuler introduced the term autism in 1911 as part of his description of schizophrenia.
So does that mean that there couldn’t have been autistic kids in the 1800s?
Of course not!
There almost certainly were - they were just undiagnosed, which helps make the point that vaccines aren’t associated with autism!
In fact, historians describe several people from the 1700s who likely had autism, including Hugh Blair of Borgue and Henry Cavendish.
Interestingly, both were born before we even had smallpox vaccines!

And no, there has been no ‘full vindication’ for Andy Wakefield.
Wakefield’s fraud has been widely exposed
Andy Wakefield’s license to practice medicine hasn’t been returned to him
no one was ever able to replicate his studies on his autistic enterocolitis
the measles vaccine he tried to patent was never developed
he was wrong about mutating measles causing outbreaks
he was wrong that measles outbreaks being caused by waning immunity
he was wrong that the CDC whistleblower proved anything - his Vaxxed movie that exposed Robert De Niro…
he is wrong that measles is a ‘trivial disease’ for children
he was wrong to visit the Somali community in Minnesota and scare them into thinking the MMR vaccine is associated with autism
he was wrong that Brian Deer was a ‘hit man’ that was brought in to take down Wakefield because he was damaging the reputation of the MMR vaccine
he was wrong in his Protocol 7 ‘documentary,’ a “true whistleblower movie,” but that changes the names of everyone involved…
he was wrong in his Infertility: A Diabolical Agenda ‘documentary,’ which claims that a deliberately contaminated tetanus vaccine is sterilizing African women
he was wrong in his Who Killed Alex Spourdalakis ‘documentary,’ a movie that whitewashes the brutal murder of an autistic child by his own mother
In fact, the only thing he was ever right about, is that he is very good at scaring parents into skipping or delaying getting their kids an MMR vaccine, leaving them at risk to get measles.
More on the Fraud of Andy Wakefield
Why Is Peter McCullough’s Talking About His Autism Report Again?
A Reminder That The Lancet is Partly to Blame for the Destruction That Kennedy Has Wrought
Andrew Wakefield 25 years later: Paving the way for FLCCC and COVID quacks
Wakefield admits fabricating events when he took children’s blood samples


