
by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and David Kirby
Even as the evidence    connecting America's autism epidemic to vaccines mounts, dead-enders at    the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) -- many of whom promoted the    current vaccine schedule and others with strong ties to the vaccine    industry -- are trying to delay the day of reckoning by creating    questionable studies designed to discredit any potential vaccine-autism    link and by derailing authentic studies.
  
  On January 12, a cadre of mid-level health bureaucrats left over from    the Bush administration ignored Federal requirements for advance notice    in order to vote to quietly strip vaccine research studies from funding    allocated by Congress in the Combating Autism Act (CAA) of 2006. Members    of Congress had said that this money should be used to study the    vaccine-autism connection.
  
  These rogue bureaucrats -- members of the Interagency Autism    Coordinating Committee -- held an unannounced vote to remove previously    approved vaccine studies from funding under the CAA. Nearly all of the    "Federal" members of the panel voted to remove the two studies, whose    estimated cost was $16 million - or 1.6% of the billion dollars    authorized by Congress for autism. The panel's civilian members, in    contrast, voted nearly unanimously to retain the funding.
  
  IACC's action to halt vaccine-autism research flies in the face of    congressional intent. The bill's authors clearly stated that vaccine    research should be funded. Even the esteemed Institute of Medicine has    condemned CDC's methods. In 2005, an IOM panel condemned CDC for its    "lack of transparency" in vaccine-autism research.
  
  The bureaucrats responsible for this scandal are on the wrong side of    history and it's hard to not attribute an obstructionist motive to their    act since vaccine-autism research has already entered the realm of    mainstream science. Serious scientists (except those tied to the vaccine    industry) no longer debate whether vaccine-autism research should be    done, but rather how it should be done, and by whom.
  
        Please click here to visit the Huffington Post website to read this    piece in its entirety.
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