‘I Will Not Delete My Post’: Zoho’s Sridhar Vembu Says Parents Should Take Autism Analysis Seriously Amid Rapid Increase in India
Zoho’s CEO Sridhar Vembu sparked debate after urging parents to take a recent autism analysis seriously, suggesting that young children may be receiving too many vaccines. His remarks drew criticism from a user who called the post “reckless” and harmful to public health. Vembu said he would not delete his post and stood by his views.
Zoho’s Sridhar Vembu recently reacted to a post discussing autism analysis from the McCullough Foundation’s Landmark Report, which reviewed over 300 studies. The report stated that evidence supports a multifactorial model of ASD, where genetic, neuroimmune, environmental, perinatal, and iatrogenic factors interact to produce a post-encephalitic phenotype. Responding to the report, Vembu said, “Parents should take this analysis seriously. I believe there is increasing evidence that we are giving way too many vaccines to very young children. This trend is spreading in India too, and we are seeing a rapid increase in autism cases here.” In reply, Indian doctor PV Ramesh urged Vembu to delete the post, calling it “reckless and devastating to public health.” The doctor further criticised Vembu for citing a “dodgy western source” to make a sweeping recommendation. Vembu, however, refused to delete his post, stating, “I will not delete my post. I stand by what I said. The term ‘dodgy western source’ should be applied to FDA and CDC recommendations, by the way. Those institutions do not deserve blind faith. The brave doctors who are questioning the dogma are doing a valuable service.” ‘Indian Immigrants Make the Highest Fiscal Contribution to Their Host Nation’, Sridhar Vembu Reacts to Research by Economist.
Sridhar Vembu Refuses to Delete His Post on Austim and Early Age Vaccinations in India
(SocialLY brings you all the latest breaking news, fact checks and information from social media world, including Twitter (X), Instagram and Youtube. The above post contains publicly available embedded media, directly from the user's social media account and the views appearing in the social media post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY.)