US Embassy Statement on the Dissolution of Move Forward Party in Thailand
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So you want to live in the rural area about 1 hour of Bangkok
Yeah it's great if you like flooding -
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US will abandon Ukraine peace efforts ‘within days’ if no progress made, Rubio warns
25% tariffs are still in place for automobiles and tariffs for auto car parts are due to start May 3rd so at the moment what you have posted in relation to automobiles and auto car parts is incorrect and false https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/adjusting-imports-of-automobiles-and-autombile-parts-into-the-united-states/ -
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Those of you who live on 40k a month
many are quoting the Aussie pension per month, it a fortnight, but paid in 2 fortnights 28 days. I don't know if they can collect every fortnight. but I think not. -
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Stop Calling It Autism. Start Calling It Vaccine-Induced Encephalopathy
Yes, the study that originally claimed a link between vaccines and autism has been thoroughly discredited—both scientifically and ethically. Here are the key facts: The Study: It was a 1998 paper by Andrew Wakefield, published in The Lancet, which suggested a link between the MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine and autism. Flawed and Fraudulent: The study had: A sample size of only 12 children. No control group. Cherry-picked and falsified data. Undisclosed financial conflicts of interest (Wakefield was funded by lawyers suing vaccine manufacturers). Consequences: The paper was retracted by The Lancet in 2010. Wakefield lost his medical license due to serious professional misconduct. Scientific Consensus: Over 25 large-scale, peer-reviewed studies have found no causal link between vaccines and autism. Health organizations worldwide—including the CDC, WHO, NHS, and American Academy of Pediatrics—have confirmed vaccines are safe and do not cause autism. So yes, not only was the original study disgraced, it also sparked a damaging wave of anti-vaccine hysteria that continues to harm public health today. -
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Stop Calling It Autism. Start Calling It Vaccine-Induced Encephalopathy
That's misinformation disguised as concern. Autism is a neurodevelopmental condition, not a cover-up for “vaccine injury.” Countless rigorous studies have found no link between vaccines and autism. Spreading this false narrative endangers public health and stigmatizes autistic people.
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