CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ANTI-VAXXERS THREATEN FREEDOMS OF OTHERS”
Imagine a California where polio
becomes a threat to children’s health as it was before the 1950s, when first
the Salk vaccine and later the even more effective Sabin formula threw this
dreaded and crippling disease and all its iron lungs into dormancy.
Or a California where dozens of kids
die every year from pertussis, better known as whooping cough for the gasping
whoop children often make after their deep coughing. And more, like measles,
mumps and rubella, to name a few.
This was the threat that faced
California after Gov. Jerry Brown in 2012 attached a one-sentence signing
message to a law that aimed to make it tougher for parents to evade getting
their kids vaccinated.
Now
a proposed referendum being circulated by anti-vaccination activists threatens
to thrust the state back into those Dark Ages-style dangers.
Brown’s
short message in 2012 called on state health officials to provide a religious
exemption on a form allowing parents to opt out of vaccinations and still
register them for public or private schools.
Checking the religious belief box allowed
parents to claim their deep theological beliefs precluded vaccinations. Many
with little religious belief lied when they took the checkoff. They either
believed the widespread shibboleth that vaccinations are harmful or they were
just plain lazy.
Within less than three years, there
followed outbreaks of both measles and pertussis. There is no proven link
between these bursts of previously inactive diseases to Brown’s personal belief
box, found a Johns Hopkins University study of a 2010 pertussis epidemic in
California. But the report showed a link between the location of cases and
the areas where parents most actively sought previous, harder-to-get, religious
exemptions.
Of course, no organized religion then
or now, aside from the Black Muslim Nation of Islam, has opposed vaccination.
The great preponderance of vaccination exemptions have come in wealthy coastal
counties with virtually no Nation of Islam presence. So parents claiming a
religious belief exemption must either have lied or possess a private religion.
All this caused Brown to reverse
himself this year and okay a law allowing vaccination exemptions only for
medical reasons. This law, effective with the start of the next school year,
still doesn’t demand all children be vaccinated before kindergarten and seventh
grade; parents can home school their kids if they don’t want them vaccinated.
The current referendum effort aims to
put a measure on the November 2016 ballot and reverse the new law. Only two
modern-era referenda have succeeded: one in 1982 cancelling government approval
of a “peripheral canal” project to bring Northern California river water to the
San Joaquin Valley and Southern California, and one last year reversing state
approval of an off-reservation Indian casino.
It’s telling that religion has barely
been mentioned in public meetings around the state pushing the anti-vaxxers’
referendum. Most speakers describe the vaccination mandate as a “fundamental
human rights issue.” As an example, they argued in one San Diego County meeting
this summer that “the state wants to get between a parent and a child.”
The anti-vaxxers want to be free to
leave their kids unprotected from potentially deadly diseases whose viral or
bacterial causes are still present in the environment. They claim, for
instance, that the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine is linked to increased autism
rates. This myth, originally published in a medical journal, was debunked long
ago and later denounced by the authors of the flawed British study, who admit
their research was faulty. But it persists, even getting a full airing on the
syndicated talk show of former CBS News anchorwoman Katie Couric, who later
apologized for that.
Essentially, parents who want to be
free to keep their children unvaccinated and at risk for dangerous diseases
would deny the freedom of other children with medical reasons that preclude
vaccination to attend schools or enjoy theme parks and other public areas for
fear of picking up disease from unvaccinated peers. It’s clear the belief of
some parents in a discredited theory should not take precedence over the
freedoms of other kids to live without fear of preventable diseases.
But this conflict will never be voiced
by anti-vaxxers who formerly could take the religious exemption even when they
had no religion.
Which makes it clear responsible
Californians should refuse to sign the current referendum petitions when
accosted outside supermarkets and big box stores by carriers being paid up to
$9 for each signature they gather.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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