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Medicine Government

California Senate Approves School Vaccine Bill 545

mpicpp writes: California state senators have passed a controversial bill designed to increase school immunization rates. SB277 would prohibit parents from seeking vaccine exemptions for their children because of religious or personal beliefs. California would join West Virginia and Mississippi as the only states with such requirements if the bill becomes law. "SB 277 is about increasing immunization rates so no one will have to suffer from vaccine-preventable diseases," said Sen. Ben Allen (D- Santa Monica) who coauthored the bill with Sen. Richard Pan (D-Sacramento).
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California Senate Approves School Vaccine Bill

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  • by Jailbrekr ( 73837 ) <jailbrekr@digitaladdiction.net> on Thursday May 14, 2015 @05:46PM (#49693583) Homepage

    I expect to see a lot of anti vaxx outrage and legal challenges, but this is a good first step.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 14, 2015 @06:06PM (#49693723)

      +1. We can't vaccinate people against stupidity, but we can keep their kids from suffering for it.

    • I knew that IBM was never fond of VAX, but I didn't think it reached the level of outrage.

  • by Ann O'Nymous-Coward ( 460094 ) on Thursday May 14, 2015 @05:50PM (#49693611)

    Infectious diseases don't pay attention to your religion or any of your other crackpot obsessions about autism or mercury or whatever this week's flavor of craziness is.

    So the prevention of said diseases shouldn't either.

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Thursday May 14, 2015 @05:57PM (#49693663) Journal
    ... the constitutional right to freedom of religion. If you are required by law to do something that your religion actually prohibits, then you are not free to really practice your religion in that country at all.
    • by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Thursday May 14, 2015 @06:07PM (#49693741)

      There's a problem with this: It destroys the concept of law entirely, because for every law there exists a person somewhere who has a religion that demands they disobey the law.
      "My religion prohibits the use of electricity, so I can't install a fire alarm in my business to meet state building regulations."
      "My religion requires I capture an endangered species for ritual sacrifice."
      "I had to kill by baby in the microwave, I sensed he was possessed by a demon."
      "My religion prohibits paying taxes, because all my property is just being held on behalf of God."
      "My religion requires I kill innocent citizens to defend my people against their country."
      "I know my daughter was critically ill, but my religion does not allow me to seek medical treatment, as it shows a lack of faith in God."
      All of these are real cases - and those are just in the US. These situations show that freedom of religion cannot be absolute, because absolute freedom of religion renders every area of law effectively meaningless: You would be able to literally get away with murder by claiming you believed it to be a religious mission.

      • To save googling: Amish, native american tradition, forget the name but not hard to find, Kent Hovind, the 9/11 attackers among many, Dale and Leilani Neumann.

      • by Defenestrar ( 1773808 ) on Thursday May 14, 2015 @07:23PM (#49694263)
        I think it was the Rehnquist court that developed a "conviction test" that was pretty useful. (i.e. It was something like not bending your conviction even when faced with pressures or threats by all of the following: state, peers, family, death, etc...). By that test, many people do not hold religious convictions - especially with respect to the law. I could be thinking of another Justice though... IANAL. It's got me curious again, I'll have to hit Google later, or perhaps one of my books to find that test.
    • They can still choose not to vaccinate and practice their religion. They simply won't be allowed to go to a public school.

    • If you are required by law to do something that your religion actually prohibits ...

      Nobody is required by law to vaccinate their kids. They just can't send unvaccinated kids to public schools where they endanger other people. You are entitled to your religious views, but you are not entitled to impose the consequences onto other people. Feel free to home-school.

      • or....They just can't send unvaccinated kids to public schools where they endanger each other.
      • In most countries parents are obliged by law to vaccine their children.
        In most countries home-schooling is either not really possible or bluntly illegal.

    • Wrong, they can practice all they want; AT HOME. No shots? Then keep your fucking kids away from the public and at home! Dopes

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )
        Hey.... I never said *I* support the antivaxers for a second.... only that I can see one or more of them crying foul about this in the not-too-distant future, and because it allegedly challenges the US constitution, may even end up having to face a supreme court decision on the matter. I predict that the next couple of years cold be *very* interesting with respect to the impact it may have on people with such beliefs.
    • Except that you're not actually forced to get the vaccine for your kids. You can still choose not to vaccinate your kids. You just won't be able to send them to a public school and will have to find an alternative way to educate them. Which is easier in CA than it is in many other states given the support CA gives to alternate education (including home schooling).

      Beyond that, there are many conflicting rights with respect to vaccinations. Which rights should take precedence? (yes, I know the answer you

    • Frankly, Health of the General Population > Freedom of religion.

      If your "religion" demanded that you fire a machine gun into the air for 5 minutes a day, you'd find very little tolerance for it.

      Either scenario has a probability of harming someone around the same order of magnitude, I guesstimate. So why should the first be any different?

  • Australia has something similar. The government consulted with the major religions beforehand and none of them had problems with vaccinations.

    I think we should go further and when unvaxed children come down with preventable diseases, their parents should be charged with child neglect.

    • I presume you would exempt parents of unvaxed children who were unvaxed for reasons beyond their control, such as

      1) Could not afford shots
      2) No access to health care
      3) Child could not get shots for medical reasons

      I, for example, COULD NOT get my kid vaccinated vs. Hepatitis A because my healthcare provider didn't have the vaccine, and no pharmacy who HAD the vaccine would ADMINISTER the vaccine to a child, that I could find. (I tried 4.)

      This persisted for a few months until I found a new pediatrician fo

      • I presume you would exempt parents of unvaxed children who were unvaxed for reasons beyond their control, such as

        1) Could not afford shots 2) No access to health care 3) Child could not get shots for medical reasons

        --PeterM

        In Australia the shots are free and there would be obvious exemptions for kids who can't be vaccinated for medical reasons, but maximizing Herd Immunity to protect these kids is another reason for vaccinating as many as possible.

    • by meglon ( 1001833 )

      I think we should go further and when unvaxed children come down with preventable diseases, their parents should be charged with child neglect.

      .... because it needed to be said again. Neglect, abuse, endangerment, stripped of parental rights.... whatever needs be done.

  • by supernova87a ( 532540 ) <kepler1@@@hotmail...com> on Thursday May 14, 2015 @06:10PM (#49693783)
    I am all for free speech and entitlement to personal opinion. But the very role of government and public policy is to have a rational and objective view on what is reasonable for citizens to do and not do as part of civil society. It is not to merely sway with the wind and throw up one's hands and say, well, we can't offend anyone's beliefs so we shouldn't do our jobs for fear of being voted out of office.

    It is high time that both we as citizens and we as government not put up with or enable a small ridiculous minority of extremist views to hold the rest of society hostage, with the threat of lawsuits.

    There is such a thing as being overly reasonable. And there are many more issues that don't rise to this level of publicity, that policy makers give in to, for fear of negative repercussions, rather than doing the right thing.
  • Mostly good (Score:4, Interesting)

    by blue9steel ( 2758287 ) on Thursday May 14, 2015 @07:02PM (#49694115)
    I'm pro-vaccines, after all they've done a huge amount of good over the years. They're not an unqualified good, some people do experience negative outcomes but the chances of that are extremely rare so for society as a whole they're a net positive when used approrpriately. I am concerned however with trends I've seen for dogs and horses where the vaccines schedules and number of booster shots keep getting increased. For the most part it looks like greed rather than science and with a public mandate I'm worried that behavior may move to human vaccinations.

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