Aaron Siri's 'Vaccines, Amen' Challenges Vaccine Science as Belief-Based Rather Than Evidence-Based
By
Maryanne Demasi
Hand-rolled, kettle-boiled, baked to perfection. Worth every minute at the bakery.
Summary
Aaron Siri's book "Vaccines, Amen: The Religion of Vaccines" challenges the unquestioning acceptance of vaccines in modern medicine, arguing that vaccine science is based more on belief than on proof. Siri focuses particularly on America's crowded childhood immunization schedule, asserting that no child should be sacrificed to what he calls the "religion of vaccines." The article reviews Siri's critical examination of vaccine safety and the social pressure to avoid questioning vaccine mandates.
Key quotes
· 3 pulledNo child should be sacrificed on the altar of the religion of vaccines.
the story we've been told about vaccine science rests far more on belief than proof.
To question them was heresy. To raise concerns about safety was to risk professional exile.
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