The National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program was established in 1986 by the United States federal government and exists because there IS a risk of vaccines causing damage. Also, the CDC does not advise US citizens to get the one existing Tuberculosis vaccine because of risks and limited effectiveness, despite many illegals detained at the border having TB.
Related to this, there has been a TB outbreak in Gwinnett County in Georgia, which is about a half hour drive from Atlanta, where the CDC is based. There's a reason this seems suspicious.
Recently there has been the 2017 measles outbreak in Israel in a highly vaccinated population where the primary patient had been vaccinated 3 times yet still got measles, the failure of the dengue vaccine in the Philippines, and the two studies (one done in Tehran Iran, where they don't care about Big Pharma) done in 2018 that show a link between the vaccine additive Thimerosal and neurodegenerative disorders such as autism. A key point many miss is that some additives are designed to create inflammation to increase the immune response so it is more likely antibodies will be produced. Lack of a reaction is a problem with the measles vaccine, which is why at least two doses are required to make it more likely it will actually do what it's supposed to. Autism can be triggered by inflammation. People are told to focus on the disease in the vaccine itself and all the suffering that the disease has caused, and not worry about what else is in there because the FDA has declared it "safe", just like all the drugs that have been recalled were declared "safe".
One could easily assume that a false flag op could have been performed to create a world wide measles outbreak to distract people from this news, and if the public reaction was not strong enough, a TB outbreak could be staged because most people in the US aren't vaccinated against it. Assuming this, one could also assume their man at the CDC was too lazy to drive any farther than Gwinnett County. But I'm just being paranoid, right?