Autism and hormones injected into beef, chicken etc...

lainie wrote:

Don't feed them any beef, chicken etc... They aren't necessary to a
decent diet.

If your children and grandchildren are over the age of 3 or 4 years and
don't exhibit symptoms of autism, they aren't likely to develop them in
the next year or two. Some diagnoses are made as late as school-age but
the symptoms appeared earlier than that.

Since autism seems to run in some families, there is the genetic
component to consider as well.
 
lainie wrote:

Don't feed them any beef, chicken etc... They aren't necessary to a
decent diet.

If your children and grandchildren are over the age of 3 or 4 years and
don't exhibit symptoms of autism, they aren't likely to develop them in
the next year or two. Some diagnoses are made as late as school-age but
the symptoms appeared earlier than that.

Since autism seems to run in some families, there is the genetic
component to consider as well.
 
On 2/19/2011 12:35 PM, lainie wrote:

It's the internet that cried wolf. You may have gotten the
story mixed up or your source got the story mixed up. It's supposed to
be vaccines that are responsible for the rise in autism. My guess is
that either is not the cause of autism but it could be that fear of
vaccination is probably responsible for a few, if not many deaths of
kids. Your best bet is to investigate any legitimate medical studies in
this area and forget about internet chatter.
 
In article , dsi1@usenet-
news.net says...

It's supposed to

No, that claim has been totally discredited. The doctor who made it
has been struck off the medical register for faking his research.

Janet
 
In article , dsi1@usenet-
news.net says...

It's supposed to

No, that claim has been totally discredited. The doctor who made it
has been struck off the medical register for faking his research.

Janet
 
In article , [email protected]
says...

Genetics are not the only cause of neurological problems, and
learning disorders, many of which are caused by environmental, prenatal
or accidental influences (such as mothers drinking alcohol, oxygen
deprivation at birth, viruses).

The cause of autism is not yet known .

Janet
 
On 2/22/2011 4:51 PM, Cheryl wrote:

My son was home schooled but it was all pretty unstructured. He's back
in classes at the community college which I think is a better
environment - I suck as a teacher. As it goes, these kids don't really
appreciate the education system until they get to the college level. I
sure didn't.

He liked my stuffed bell peppers so I taught him how to prepare it
yesterday and he made it tonight. He said it turned out pretty bland.
Stuffing peppers and cooking it is easy. Learning how to season is
tough. I'll have to come up with a better way to teach this other than
dumping what appears to be random amounts in the bowl.

The two things I'd like him to learn from me is to play the guitar and
cook. These are things most worthwhile. :-)
 
In article , [email protected]
says...

Not at all, before his research, (1998) child-vaccination levels in
the UK were high; promoted nationwide by the NHS (and completely free,
of course). After the scare., they dropped by almost a fifth, allowing
what had become rare infections to return to epidemic proportions.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MMR_vaccine
"Before publication of Wakefield's findings, the inoculation rate for
MMR in the UK was 92%; after publication, the rate dropped to below 80%.
In 1998, there were 56 measles cases in the UK; by 2008, there were 1348
cases, with 2 confirmed deaths."

Janet.
 
In article , [email protected]
says...

Genetics are not the only cause of neurological problems, and
learning disorders, many of which are caused by environmental, prenatal
or accidental influences (such as mothers drinking alcohol, oxygen
deprivation at birth, viruses).

The cause of autism is not yet known .

Janet
 
On Wed, 23 Feb 2011 01:07:18 -0500, "J. Clarke"
wrote:



Because each was loaded with bloviated bullshit, unfounded nonsense
and maudlin idiocy.

Otherwise, gosh, they're swell.

Boron
 
In article
,
Miche wrote:


I'm pretty sure the OP was not suggesting that autism is injected into
meat. LOL!!

Oh, where's Grammar Girl when we need her? I wonder how the thread
would have gone if the subject line had been, "Do hormone-injected meats
cause autism?"


You weren't alone in your confusion, Miche.

--
Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Holy Order of the Sacred Sisters of St. Pectina of Jella
"Always in a jam, never in a stew; sometimes in a pickle."
Pepparkakor particulars posted 11-29-2010;
http://web.me.com/barbschaller
 
On 2/19/2011 12:35 PM, lainie wrote:

It's the internet that cried wolf. You may have gotten the
story mixed up or your source got the story mixed up. It's supposed to
be vaccines that are responsible for the rise in autism. My guess is
that either is not the cause of autism but it could be that fear of
vaccination is probably responsible for a few, if not many deaths of
kids. Your best bet is to investigate any legitimate medical studies in
this area and forget about internet chatter.
 
On Feb 20, 2:14?am, sf wrote:
Knowingly faking research that has cause thousands of children to skip
immunizations leads to children dying. Children too young to get the
vaccine are protected by herd immunity. Scientists who fake research,
and convince ignorant parents not to vaccinate their children, are no
better than someone who gives a child a loaded gun to play with.
http://thestir.cafemom.com/toddler/114684/autism_vaccine_doc_andrew_wakefield

--Bryan
 
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