Jenny McCarthy is speaking out against vaccines, not because she is against the vaccines themselves, but because of the loads of unnecessary toxins in vaccines. Why is she so against the “toxins”? Well, she believes there is pretty good evidence these toxins can flip the switch and trigger autism in many children just like her son. Autism is an epidemic in the United States. Currently, 1 in 94 boys in the country has autism.
What kind of toxins are in vaccines? Some of the toxins include mercury – the second most toxic neurotoxin known to man, ether, aluminum, and even anti-freeze! She claims that most people she tells this to are completely baffled that their doctors didn’t tell them about these harmful chemicals before they were injected into their babies.
Doctor’s know these products are toxic, yet they advocate for parents to give their children vaccines. The question is: why? She says that smoking use to be thought of in the same way. Everyone assumed it was harmless. Now, everyone is well aware of the damage it can do and consequently, smoking bans are in place just about everywhere from restaurants to airports. Second hand smoke kills and people don’t deny this fact anymore.
So, how is it that some kids can handle a vaccinations without getting autism, while others cannot? She believes that there is some sort of environmental condition taking place that is making these children more vulnerable. Somehow, something is happening in the environment that is causing these children to end up with a weakened immune system which makes it so their bodies can’t detoxify those toxins once they get into the body.
Normally, a chemical in the body helps attach itself to toxins in order to excrete them as wastes, called glutathione. For some reason, many of these children don’t produce as much of this detoxifier as normal. Jenny states that the amount of shots a child has to get has also increased as well, going from 10 in 1983 to 36 in 2007. This means children lately have been getting more toxins and viruses injected in their body than ever before. If vaccinations can act as a trigger to autism, as a parent, what is the one thing you can do to prevent your child from getting autism?
Jenny says that if she had a child she would definitely not give her child vaccinations. She believes that she has a genetic predisposition that could cause subsequent children she would have to suffer from the same problem that her first child did – at least increasing the child’s risk by many times.
Not vaccinating your child sounds easy enough, but other parents might be met with some resistance if they decide not to vaccinate their children. Pediatricians sometimes threaten to “let go” of patients who protest against vaccinations and most parents believe that schools force children to be vaccinated. However, parents should know that you can exempt your child from vaccinations if you get a religious exemption from the health department.
Unfortunately, the Center for Disease Control is disturbed by the three-fold increase in religious exemptions and Jenny proposes that if they are so concerned about children going unvaccinated, then they need to take the toxins out of their shots to ease parental concerns. She believes that parents would be willing to pay extra money for the CDC to put in quality preservatives that didn’t run the risk of harming their children.
Jenny says, “I do not care if you say there is no correlation between autism and vaccinations,” because toxins have no business going into children and pregnant womens bodies. So, is there any hope for people who are now living with autism?
Hope For Children With Autism
Jenny says that every kid is different and can require a wide array of treatments in order to help them recover from autism. She says when her son Evan got autism, what helped him recover was a gluten-free, casein-free diet followed by antifungal therapy to treat his yeast overgrowth. She believes that antifungal therapy is very beneficial for the treatment of autism and cites that she believes roughly 90% of children with autism suffer from it.
So, what exactly was her recipe for success? She says she used an antifungal prescription on her son called Diflucan, followed by six months of probiotics. She says that after three months he began speaking again after losing these skills.
She says the medical community doesn’t acknowledge the possibility that the gut affects the brain because these therapies don’t seem to work for every child. Each child is different and different therapies may or may not work on them, depending upon the child’s condition. The trick is to keep trying to find the right treatment and not give up. There is hope.

