News publishers take down truthful stories about vaccine damaged children!
TORONTO, Ontario, Canada (PNN) - March 29, 2015 - A popular Canadian media outlet recently decided to pull a story that it published back in January about the dangers of the Gardasil vaccine for HPV after some doctors and public health officials reportedly raised a stink about its content.
Clearly kowtowing to the vaccine industry, the Toronto Star pulled the story after it allegedly led to "confusion between anecdotes and evidence" - the story was about how Gardasil has severely injured at least 60 Canadian girls, a fact that may have led some readers to forego getting their own children vaccinated.
It was apparently too much for readers of the Toronto Star to have access to information about how injections with Gardasil can lead to debilitating health conditions and death, so the newspaper's cowardly editors simply removed it, with the only available access to it on the Internet Archive Wayback Machine at TheStar.com.
God forbid that readers of the Toronto Star be allowed to make up their own minds about a vaccine that has more than 38,000 reported adverse events and at least 220 deaths. No, let's just pull the story and tell people what they should believe about Gardasil - that it's completely safe and effective.
On the flip side, The Charlotte Observer boldly published a story recently about a vaccine-injured child by the name of Angelica Black who in 2006 was awarded a nearly $2 million lump sum and roughly $250,000 in annual payments for injuries resulting from childhood vaccinations.
This highly distressing report, which is one of just a few to even talk about vaccine injuries and the oft-ignored vaccine injury compensation program, draws public attention to the very real risk of vaccine injuries that most of mainstream media are ignoring with their insane vaccine-hawking agenda.
Will this story remain on the Internet, or will it face the same fate as a recent Toronto Star investigative report about girls damaged by the Gardasil vaccine?