As a physician who has diagnosed and treated many vaccine-damaged children, including autistic ones, I find your stance truly remarkable. Given that you are a parent of an autistic child, it is even more remarkable. While I do not know the degree to which your child is vaccine injured (i.e., autistic), I would remind you that the independent science is clear (science can never be settled: only religion can be): clean water, hygiene, sanitation and nutrition prevent infectious diseases. Government statistics make that clear.
Cherry picked pseudo statistics support the opposite conclusion: vaccines can prevent disease. They cannot,. In fact, every vaccine-targeted disease shows an increase in incidence and morbidity once the vaccine “against” that disease is introduced while every communicable disease, including the ones for which there are no vaccines, like scarlet fever, show a corresponding decrease when the four factors, clean water, hygiene, sanitation and nutrition, improve. Every one. So your program to force families to bend to your religious, not your scientific, beliefs is a violation of human rights and rational, scientific facts. It is, however, in line with religious fervor.
Religions generally teach compassion and, since your position is a religious one, I assume that it includes a high degree of compassion. I assume that your compassion extends to the families in the district you represent so that, as a staunch supporter of the pseudoscientific Church of Vaccinology you are prepared to go the next step and take on the burdens of caring for those children damaged by the “prevention” which you so strongly endorse.
My attempt to post this article to Facebook just got a curious censorship response, telling me OST is not “secure” and I would have to complete a “security check” for which there was no link.