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Updated: May 16, 2019



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In April, an award-winning documentary film about the vaccine controversy—”Vaxxed”—was abruptly pulled from the Tribeca Film Festival.


On this edition of Green Street, Patti and Doug welcome the film’s producer, Del Bigtree, to discuss the strange and disturbing story behind the massive campaign to cut off any discussion regarding the safety of vaccines, and the story behind the CDC whistleblower whose research supports the possibility of a link between the MMR vaccine and autism.









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In this edition of Green Street, we talk with an MIT-trained scientist who became fascinated with the environmental links to autism. Dr. Stephanie Seneff has analyzed the data, read the reports and developed an intriguing theory about how a common weed killer may be interfering with the microbes in our bodies, affecting our brains and contributing to the increasing prevalence of autism.



 
 
 

Updated: May 16, 2019


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For many years, the research on autism has been focused on the role of genes – and looking for that single “autism gene” that may be causing the condition. But as Dr. Herbert points out, genes don’t function in a vacuum – they interact with proteins and other chemicals in the body – and with chemicals that enter the body from our environment that aren’t supposed to be there.


Dr. Martha Herbert is an Assistant Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School, and a Pediatric Neurologist and Neuroscientist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. Visit her website at MarthaHerbert.org.






 
 
 
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