CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 24, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“VACCINATION VACILLATION SHOWS BROWN'S PRAGMATISM”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 24, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“VACCINATION VACILLATION SHOWS BROWN'S PRAGMATISM”
“A foolish consistency,” the
philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson once noted, “is the hobgoblin of little minds,”
and no one has ever accused Gov. Jerry Brown of being small minded. So why be
surprised when he completely reverses himself as he did the other day on
vaccinations?
Less than three years ago, Brown
signed into law a plan allowing parents to place in public schools children who
had not been vaccinated for diseases like polio, measles, mumps, smallpox and
whooping cough. These once were plagues that killed thousands of children
yearly, but by the end of the last century they had been virtually eradicated
from industrialized countries. Vaccinations did that job.
The bill Brown signed in 2012 required
parents not wanting to meet schools’ vaccination standards to present written
proof they had heard from a health professional the pluses and minuses of
getting the shots, which are often dispensed free, at public expense. But he
attached a signing message that essentially negated the law he had just helped
create: it ordered public health officials to craft a form where parents could
simply claim vaccinating their children violates their religious beliefs.
Never mind that no organized or even
quasi-organized religion, from Roman Catholicism to Christian Science to
Orthodox Judaism to Hinduism, Scientology and Wiccanism, opposed vaccination
then and only the black Muslim Nation of Islam does now.
The next 30 months saw two outbreaks
of pertussis (whooping cough) and one – much more publicized – burst of measles
that allegedly began at Disneyland, which has no vaccination rules.
No one blamed Brown for
those disease flare-ups. But there’s no doubt he keeps track of the news
and realized that if a similar outbreak ever reached epidemic proportions, he
would be blamed. Disease, not construction projects like bullet trains or water
tunnels, could become his most prominent legacy.
So when a much tougher public school
vaccination law reached his desk this month, he signed it instantly. It takes
effect next year.
“The science is clear that vaccines
dramatically protect children against a number of infectious and dangerous
diseases,” went his latest signing message, “…the evidence shows that
immunization powerfully benefits and protects the community.”
Where in 2012 Brown spokesmen
rationalized his move by saying he aimed “to take into account First Amendment
religious freedoms through an extremely narrow exemption,” this time there was
no mention of either religion or an exemption, other than for home-schooled
kids and children with medical reasons not to be vaccinated.
No form this time where parents too
lazy or too fearful to get their kids vaccinated can easily lie by checking a
box saying they are religiously opposed to the shots.
No foolish consistency here from
Brown, who has not just vacillated, but completely reversed himself in the
space of three years. It’s not the first time he’s done that, the most famous
prior occasion coming after the June 1978 passage of the Proposition 13
property tax limits. Back then, Brown had spent the spring as the chief opponent
of the initiative, sponsored by anti-tax gadflies Howard Jarvis and Paul Gann.
When it passed – by a margin of about
30 percent – Brown instantly became its most active proponent, quickly meeting
with Jarvis and Gann and signing enabling legislation that still plagues the
state with nonsensical definitions of what constitutes a change of ownership.
Back then, there were no crazies to
dog Brown’s path toward embracing Proposition 13. This time, there are plenty
of misinformed parents still determined not to vaccinate their kids. They may
qualify a referendum for next fall’s ballot, trying to cancel the new law.
They’re still staging vocal protests.
But don’t expect Brown to change his
mind again. He’s far too practical (some call it opportunism). He knows, as he
did when he issued his signing message in 2012, that opposition to vaccination
is based primarily on the widely circulated myth of a link to autism, since
recanted by the British academic whose flawed study is at its base.
Also, don’t expect Brown ever to
acknowledge his signing message of three years ago was a big-time error. While
he’s prone to reversing himself, public mea culpas are not a habit for
this former seminarian.
This reversal was strictly a practical
matter, and as Jarvis and Gann discovered long ago, Jerry Brown can be
pragmatism (or opportunism) personified.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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