America Out Loud PULSE: Bombshell Autism Report will change the course of history. Dr. Peter McCullough and Malcolm Out Loud (10/30/25, article + podcast 58 min).
americaoutloud.news/bom…
Dr. McCullough and Malcolm discuss The McCullough Foundation’s landmark study showing a strong link between multi-vaccinations and autism, along with other contributing factors.
The study itself and the summary below feature many $64 words; but the bottom line is that well-conducted studies show definite links between combination routine childhood vaccination and autism.
Discussion also includes Q&A, a regular feature of the broadcast.
Summary (Grok ai, edited; image from article)
The McCullough Foundation comprehensively reviewed autism spectrum disorder (ASD) risk factors, integrating more than 300 studies to evaluate genetic, environmental, and iatrogenic contributors.
Authors focused on childhood vaccination's role amid rising U.S. prevalence of autism now exceeding 1 in 31 children. They also focus on the most severe forms of autism, which render
Introduction Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) affects more than 1 in 31 U.S. children (much higher in California, where vaccinations are nearly universal), with prevalence increasing over the past two decades.
What is ASD? A complex neurodevelopmental condition influenced by genetic liability, immune dysregulation, perinatal (just before and after birth) stressors, and environmental toxicants (including vaccines).
Review synthesizes evidence on vaccine-related and non-vaccine contributors to ASD risk.
Methods Authors examined epidemiologic, clinical, and mechanistic studies on potential ASD risk factors, assessing outcomes, exposure quantification, association strength and independence, temporal relationships, validity, cohesiveness, and biological plausibility.
Results Potential determinants of new-onset ASD before age 9 include:
Older parents (>35 years mother, >40 years father)
Premature delivery before 37 weeks
Common genetic variants
Siblings with autism
Maternal immune activation
In utero drug exposure
Environmental toxicants
Gut-brain axis alterations
Combination routine childhood vaccination
These factors intersect via immune dysregulation, mitochondrial dysfunction, and neuroinflammation (inflammation of the nervous tissue), leading to neurodevelopmental injury in susceptible children. Of 136 studies on vaccines or excipients:
29: Neutral risks or no association.
107: Possible links to ASD or other neurodevelopmental disorders, based on epidemiologic, clinical, mechanistic, neuropathologic, and case-report evidence.
12: Superior health outcomes in completely unvaccinated (as compared with vaccinated), including lower ASD risks.
Neutral study limitations: absent unvaccinated controls, misclassification, and confounding.
Positive studies: Found population signals and mechanistic plausibility, with risks from clustered dosing and early exposure.
No studies: Evaluated full pediatric vaccine schedule's safety for neurodevelopmental outcomes.
Most research: Focused on subsets such as MMR, thimerosal, or aluminum.
Conclusion
Evidence supports a multifactorial ASD model involving genetic predisposition, neuroimmune biology, environmental toxicants, perinatal stressors, and iatrogenic exposures converging to a post-encephalitic state.
Combination and early-timed childhood vaccination is the most significant modifiable risk factor, supported by convergent findings, intensified use, dose clustering, and lack of cumulative schedule research.
Clarifying vaccine dosing and timing risks is an urgent priority as ASD prevalence rises.
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