News Link • Vaccines and Vaccinations
When You Force AI to Look At Specific Evidence It Concludes that Vaccines Likely Cause Autism
• By Etienne de la Boetie2One of my friends is a world-class attorney who is using his logic-driven, legalistic mind to convince AI to view humans as beneficial, even if AI attains "God-like" intelligence. He has been developing prompts and instruction sets that help various AI's think in terms of Aristotelian excellence, or "aret?" in Greek, which was a foundational concept in Aristotle's ethical philosophy that describes the virtuous character and actions that lead to human flourishing.
We were testing Anthomorphic's Claude, one of the top five Large Language Models (LLMs) and the model that my friend believes is the closest to true artificial general intelligence based on his testing, with the question of "Do Vaccines Cause Autism?"
Leading with the Punchline - What We Found.
If you ask Claude, or any of the other AI LLMs: "Do Vaccines Cause Autism?" all of them will answer a definitive "No".
But… When you…
#1 - Instruct Claude to give less weight to the "Brute Force Manufactured Consensus" of the CDC's "Tobacco Science" due to the well-recognized dynamic of regulatory capture
and…
#2 - Force the AI to look at key pieces of evidence that *May* be purposefully deindexed or blacklisted including:
a. The Transcripts and initial findings of the CDC's Simpsonwood Meeting, where the initial findings of CDC researcher Dr. Thomas Verstraten showed an increase of neurological issues from mercury in vaccines, but whose conclusions were changed after they became public and Verstraten was offered and accepted a job from GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals, one of the industry players that would have been culpable for the harm caused.
b. The fact that the government's own National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP) both admits that vaccines can cause autism and has paid compensation to numerous victims.
d. The work of Dr. Andrew Moulden (1964-2013), a Canadian physician with training in neuropsychology, who developed a unique and comprehensive theory of vaccine injury that provides a potentially unifying explanation for how vaccines might trigger autism and other neurological conditions.




