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Medicine Government United States

Hundreds Rally For Their Right To Not Vaccinate Their Children (msn.com) 524

CBS News reports that as Washington state confronts a measles outbreak which has sickened at least 56 people, "hundreds rallied to preserve their right not to vaccinate their children."

They packed a public hearing for a new bill making it harder for families to opt out of vaccination requirements, reports The Washington Post: An estimated 700 people, most of them opposed to stricter requirements, lined up before dawn in the cold, toting strollers and hand-lettered signs, to sit in the hearing.... The Pacific Northwest is home to some of the nation's most vocal and organized anti-vaccination activists. That movement has helped drive down child immunizations in Washington, as well as in neighboring Oregon and Idaho, to some of the lowest rates in the country, with as many as 10.5 percent of kindergartners statewide in Idaho unvaccinated for measles. That is almost double the median rate nationally....

One activist who spoke Friday, Mary Holland, who teaches at New York University law school and said her son has a vaccine-related injury, warned lawmakers that if the bill passes, many vaccine opponents will "move out of the state, or go underground, but they will not comply."

The sponsor of a similar bill in Oregon says that anti-vaxxers "have every right to make a bad decision in the health of their child, but that does not give them the right to send an unprotected kid to public school. So if they want to homeschool their kid and keep them out of other environments, that's their decision."

But there are still 17 U.S. states that allow "personal or philosophic exemptions to vaccination requirements," reports the Post, "meaning virtually anyone can opt out." (Though some states are now considering changes.) "The enablers are state legislators in those states, that have allowed themselves to be played," complains Dr. Peter Hotez, a co-director of the Texas Children's Hospital Center for Vaccine Development at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.

The World Health Organization estimates that measles vaccines have saved over 21 million lives since 2000. But last year in the European region's population of nearly 900 million people, at least 82,600 people contracted measles, reports Reuters. "Of those, 72 cases were fatal."
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Hundreds Rally For Their Right To Not Vaccinate Their Children

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  • Understood (Score:5, Insightful)

    by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Saturday February 09, 2019 @10:35AM (#58094172)

    If they go live on a deserted island and never come back, I'm OK with it.
    If not, they are a danger to society and should not be allowed to mingle with normal people.

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      To be fair they are mostly a danger to their children and to other unvaccinated children. But yes, something like this could be interpreted (and is interpreted in some parts of the world) as child abuse.
      • Re: Understood (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 09, 2019 @12:42PM (#58094800)

        Did you read it or just the headline? 90-97% of the population was vaccinated, only 20% of the infected people were vaccinated (who may not have had all the doses).

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      People who refuse to merge with nanobots will also be callled a burden on society. I hope you're ready to call for the forced mechanization of humans into cyborgs. Vaccines barely existed a century ago so be sure that new scientific opportunities become obligations under the State-as-religion philosophy.

      Social Darwinism is a more powerful force, btw. But gotta wear that Resistance is Futile Che shirt, I get it.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 09, 2019 @10:43AM (#58094186)

    I want a religious exemption from speed limits.

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *

      As a practicing Aztec I want a religious exemption for murder. It just doesn't feel right when I can't cut someone's heart out with an obsidian knife and throw their corpse down my pyramid.

      Freedom must have limits. One of them is public health.

    • I want a religious exemption from speed limits.

      Does anyone know of a religion that forbids paying taxes . . . ? I'd like to become a believer.

      There are so many wacky religions out there . . . there's probably ones that forbid driving on the right side of the road or brushing your teeth.

      And I don't get how Christian folks say Jesus was against vaccinations. He trotted around healing lepers with his touch, which is kinda sorta like giving folks vaccinations.

      • Well Scientology was founded just so Hubbard wouldn't have to pay any taxes. I do however gladly pay way more taxes before ever contemplating going down that rabbit hole.
      • by malkavian ( 9512 )

        I believe that the Pope has a religious exemption from paying taxes as head of the Catholic Church. That's why the Discordians had a time when anyone could be a Pope of the Discordians.

  • Call CPS (Score:4, Interesting)

    by brickhouse98 ( 4677765 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @10:50AM (#58094220)
    Call CPS, have them come get the kids. It's a danger to themselves and to the public safety. Enough with these loony tunes who think it's their right to endanger their offspring and the general population.
  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @10:50AM (#58094224)
    ... then they should pay for the public health costs that arise because of their decision. It is a welfare of the community issue. Laws are often made to protect the community from the bad decisions of individuals.
    • by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @11:29AM (#58094420)
      This sounds good on the outside but fails upon examination. Young children can't be vaccinated, the age they can depends on the specific vaccine, but as a general rule infants are unprotected. The elderly are also at increased risk even if vaccinated. Then there are some few people with whom a particular vaccination isn't particularly effective. Those may be a small minority of the vaccinated population but they often don't even know who they are. There are also a small minority of people with whom there is a legitimate medical reason they can't be vaccinated. Those people depend on a healthy "herd" of people. So when a child contracts a preventable illness through negligence like not vaccinating, then spreads it to the above vulnerable groups, it should be a criminal act because it is clearly morally wrong and injures or kills innocent people. But plenty of poor people choose not to vaccinate, how do you get blood from a stone? How do you compensate for the loss of an infant, elderly person, or loved one who can't be protected? Money dosent fix the emotional loss, nor can properly compensate for the disfigurement or life long health effects if they live.

      It should absolutely be a crime against the parents/guardians, yes, but at the same time it can be hard to prove exactly who actually infected the victim and there is no possible way to compensate the damages or in some cases to even get any compensation. That's why I'm in favor of isolating them from society if we cannot make it mandatory (excusing legitimate medical reasons only).
    • by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @11:29AM (#58094422)

      ... then they should pay for the public health costs that arise because of their decision. It is a welfare of the community issue. Laws are often made to protect the community from the bad decisions of individuals.

      Exactly. Non vacinators should pay for increased risk they self select, unless there is a real medical reason not to. They also should not be allowed to send kids to public schools where they endanger kids who can’t be vacinated for valid reasons. They are entitled to be stupid but not endanger others.

    • by kiviQr ( 3443687 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @11:38AM (#58094470)
      If you do start with that - then tax sugar, fast food, tabaco, vap, alcohol, gasoline, coal, plastic, and everything else to support wealth of the community.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Dear Americans,

      not everything can be reduced to a sum of money.

      What cost exactly do you plan to tell parents you assigned to the death of their child?
      And how will some material trinkets bring back that specific life?

      No, the right choice is that they don't get to mingle with us at all, if they made decisions that make them a danger to us.
      Originally, that's what prisons were created for. But to be fair to everyone, I'd tell them they can make their own country, with Jesus and measles. And we’ll put an e

  • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @10:52AM (#58094230)
    ... of those who contract measles, and their insurance fees should reflect that added risk.

    Only by making the costs or either decision transparent, you can address both the unfounded and the founded fears of vaccinations risks versus non-vaccinations risks.

    While the benefit of the measles vaccination seems obvious to most, actual scandals surrounding other vaccinations have cast shadows of doubt on just every vaccination, especially for those who do not differentiate.

    One tragic contemporary example:

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world... [bbc.com] /
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    • And what price are you going to put on the price of a death caused by them not vaccinating their child(ren)?

    • As with any actual medical analysis, the details are important, often difficult to understand for people who aren't medical professionals, and sadly often give rise to irrational fears among the population. If you look at the WHO analysis [who.int]there is a group of people who are at risk for a slightly negative outcome over those in that same subset of people who went unvaccinated. This can be in principle reduced to a positive for society and individuals with a screening test, even if there is a slight false ne
      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        IIUC there is a problem with Dengue fever, in that there are multiple strains, a vaccine against one not only doesn't protect against a different one, it can make that strain considerably more deadly. And the immune system won't allow you to vaccinate against all of them.

        OTOH, I'm not real certain of the name of the particular illness. And it was my understanding that it occurred in South America, not in the Philippines. Still, the effect is real, and at the time I read the article how to deal with it wa

  • by ZombieCatInABox ( 5665338 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @11:01AM (#58094286)

    "have every right to make a bad decision in the health of their child"

    No they fucking don't. Whenever someone causes harm to their children, either by a deliberate act or neglect, we call it child abuse. Why would this be any different ?

    I'm appaled by the number of people who still see their children as we did in barbaric times; as their personal property, to do with them as they please, with the right of life and death over them.

    We are not fucking barbarians anymore. This is the 21st century. We live in a civilized society now, or at least we should be. And in civilized societies, human beings don't own other human beings. Your children are not your children, no matter what your fucking animal instincts tell you. Your children, are citizens, just like you are, with the whole gammut of basic human rights every evolved and civilized culture agrees on. They are under your care until they reach the legal age of independance. And until then, your are required, by law, and by basic human decency to provide them with the best possible care. And so is society as a whole. That's why every civilized nation has mandatory education. And also why every such nation has, or should have nationalized health care for all children.

    Grow the fuck up, people. Barbarism, tribalism, social Darwinism are over. Join the civilized world.

  • By coming together in one place like this, all it takes is one person with measles to decimate them. I would expect them to be concerned about this, even if they do not wish to be vaccinated. I wonder if the adults are vaccinated? Like, were they vaccinated as children, yet they don't want their children vaccinated?

    • by ffkom ( 3519199 )

      By coming together in one place like this, all it takes is one person with measles to decimate them.

      While deaths or severe complications from measles are easily avoidable by vaccination, most people contracting measles do not suffer any severe complications. So no, they are most probably not concerned of being decimated when they come together.

      Apart from that, there are even lots of anti-vaxxers that practice the dangerous habit of "voluntarily" exposing their children to certain infections, because they are under the believe that this somehow helps their immune system to develop. (The weird misconceptio

  • You don't want to "mandate", but at the same time you don't want to create a disease problem (especially one that could escalate).

    I don't think the "homeschool" safety option is necessarily "safe".

    We're probably going to have to mandate vaccinations and live with the small amount of "collateral damage" (autonomous vehicles will rack up more collateral damage that this).
  • So we have somewhere to put these idgits.

  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @11:21AM (#58094396) Homepage

    Vaccinations are part of your public responsibility, like following traffic laws. If you don't want to obey traffic laws, that's easy: don't have a vehicle. If you don't want to vaccinate your kids, that's fine, don't have kids.

    I'm not hugely worried about compliance. An idiot can speed through town a time or three, but eventually they'll get caught. Children's immunizations should be signed off by a pediatrician, and verified at the beginning of every school year, when buying that summer pass to the swimming pool, and other occasions.

  • They're all so anti-vaccine and pro-disease, I'm sure they would have been just fine with a couple of the active measles patients coming to the hearing.

    That'd help things along.

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @11:29AM (#58094426) Journal

    The smartest man in the world believes vaccines are a danger.

    http://fortune.com/2017/02/16/... [fortune.com]

  • If ever there was a legitimate time for Trump to order a drone strike on a location it was then and there.
  • The great majority of vaccines are extremely valuable. Unfortunately the same can't be said in general for everything provided by the medical industry, and uninformed / uneducated people may not understand the fundamental difference between say vaccines and over-prescribed pain killers.

    Its easy to think that everyone should be informed, but despite our best efforts one out of ten of the population is in the bottom 10% in terms of understanding things. That is still a lot of people and we need to help them

    • A family I know had a daughter who was perfectly normal and healthy and fine become kind of totally mentally disabled within weeks after a vaccine. She now requires 100% constant supervision, and likely will for the rest of her life. I know that doesn't prove anything. But if you were those parents, your perspective would be different. Thanks for your thoughtful post on the matter. Not sure if you were trying to make a joke when you said "one out of ten... is in the bottom 10%." LOL. Even more shocking, onl

      • My comment on the 1 in 10 was to head off possible responses that people need to be better informed, smarter, whatever. (typical on slashdot).

        I'm sorry to hear about you friends daughter - that is terrible.

        Its tricky. Vaccines are in general clearly a huge win. I think people have forgotten the horrors of diseases like measles, polio and the like. Vaccines have almost entirely fixed that. They are not perfect, there is some risk, but I believe that risk is small compared to the disease risk. The proble

    • 1) Most the stuff you and your children can not catch because you were vaccinated so being exposed isn't a problem. That is why you got vaccinated in the 1st place.

      2) If their kids suffer, it's their own fault. We don't have civilized healthcare but if we did, then it would cost the tax payers something and an argument could be had on that front.

      3) We are overpopulated.

      4) Bad paranoid parents of low IQ (in your opinion) then shouldn't be stopped from lowering their own impact on the gene pool. We have to s

      • Its not the *kids* fault and they are the ones who suffer.

        Its probably more about education than about IQ. Some children of uneducated parents are very intelligent and to very well later in life.

        The medical industry is not trustworthy - like all industries it is a shark. One should expect it to act like a shark and take appropriate precautions, put in appropriate restraints. Like a shark it isn't "evil", it is just doing what it is designed to do, which is make money.

  • by mamba-mamba ( 445365 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @12:10PM (#58094614)

    The reactions to this news piece, and to some extent even the way it is written perfectly demonstrate the dysfunctional dynamic gripping America right now. Everything is an OUTRAGE, and the solution that is immediately proposed is a PUNISHMENT. It is an OUTRAGE that these parents should not want to vaccinate their children. The parents should be PUNISHED by being exiled to a desert island or by having their children removed by CPS.

    I would like to challenge you all to find some empathy in your heart and focus on ways to improve voluntary compliance with all the wonderful things you think everyone else should do. I mean, I am sure you are right, because you are smart and you have all the answers. But please focus on gently and kindly educating others instead of sending police of some sort around to force them to do whatever you think is in their best interest.

    • But please focus on gently and kindly educating others instead of sending police of some sort around to force them to do whatever you think is in their best interest.

      That's been tried, and it's not working. You can give them the facts calmly and reasonably, and they will dismiss you as part of some kind of conspiracy, or as an unwitting tool. Then their precious little snowflakes carry some disease to others, who suffer. Is it kind to permit that to happen to them? Is that gentility?

    • by Livius ( 318358 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @10:53PM (#58097396)

      I would like to challenge you all to find some empathy in your heart

      It is not a virtue to have more empathy for parents who experience modest intellectual discomfort because of their own wilful ignorance than for the victims who suffer physically because of the former's irresponsible choices.

      If you judge everything by your feeling of empathy for one particular person without 1) considering impacts on others, and 2) considering impacts in future as well as impact in the present, then your value system is seriously deficient.

  • by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Saturday February 09, 2019 @12:26PM (#58094710)

    I didn’t read the article, but I’m pretty sure Slashdot cut the headline off early. I’m not sure how it was supposed to end, but I have a few guesses:

    Hundreds Rally For Their Right To Not Vaccinate Their Children...
    ...measles outbreak ensues
    ...thousands expected but had to stay home with sick children
    ...in what turns out to be the largest CPS sting in history
    ...casket futures soar
    ...millions mourn the demise of reason
    ...immigrants ask if they can fill the upcoming vacancies
    ...then find that their doctors refuse to see them
    ...Doomsday Clock moved closer to midnight
    ...last surviving Iron Lung users gather to protest rally

    I was going to add:
    ...pastor tells them to “stop being stupid”

    But that one actually happened after a measles outbreak in Texas a few years back. The pastor who pushed an anti-vaccine agenda thankfully had the sense to tell everyone to go get vaccinated once the people in their community were getting sick, since the immediate harm was of significantly and obviously greater concern than the fictional harm they were all worried about.

  • Maybe we should mandate all of these things too? Because there are hundreds of communicable diseases that all those protect people against -- not just measles.

    https://www.drfuhrman.com/shop... [drfuhrman.com]
    "In Disease-Proof Your Child, Dr. Fuhrman details how a Nutritarian [vegetable-emphasizing etc.] diet increases a child's resistance to common childhood illnesses like asthma, ear infections, and allergies. He explains how eating a high-nutrient diet during childhood protects against developing chronic illness includin

  • Quarantine those nasty buggers and give them their shots, while we have them together.

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