Call me naive, but I don't think that most people
who unquestioningly promote vaccination as the end-all and be-all of
preventive health care are evil or have evil intent. In fact,
other than a possible select few, I think most ardent vaccine
supporters honestly believe they are helping humanity.
Perhaps they are. And if properly designed studies
ever are conducted, time will tell.
Regardless of their intent, however, I do not view
their unwavering support as benign, fair-minded or responsible.
For as the saying goes, the road to Hell is paved
with good intentions.
In the past week, pavement of that road has
appeared to bring us closer than ever to that wretched place. I
am referring, of course, to recent efforts to force vaccination in
Maryland by threatening parents with
jail.
There are so many aspects of this story that are
alarming, it is hard to know where to begin. But let me start
with what I once said in a speech,
from which I will be quoting: " We
parents deserve the right to choose what we feel is best for the
children we love, and for whom we are responsible. No one else
will be expected to care for our children if the vaccines or diseases
maim them. No one else’s heart will be broken like ours if they
are killed or otherwise harmed."
No one, indeed.
Of course, the all-trusting supporters of
vaccination will argue that vaccine damage is minimal and that the
benefits outweigh the risks. But as anyone who has read my column
knows, from what I can tell and have provided credible evidence for,
those studies that purport to show zero to minimal damage are based on
flawed research, which includes, in part 1) improper comparisons
between vaccinated groups and the failure to include any
never-vaccinated people as controls, 2) outright dismissal of virtually
all anecdotal and other evidence, as well as failure to properly follow
up on any of it, and 3) dismissal of biological evidence in support of
damage claims.
But even if vaccines had been genuinely shown to
be mostly safe, there are some very insidious things going on
here. As the
National Vaccine Information Center has
aptly warned, "If it happens to your child, the risks are 100%".
Thus, implied in the argument that damage is minimal is a dismissal of
the harm done to some children. I would submit that the amount of
harm vaccines do is unknown. But even if it were small, the
implication is that vaccine damage or death is less important
than disease damage or death, or that all that matters is sheer
numbers. And although most would not say this directly, also
implied is that vaccine-harmed children are less important than
disease-harmed ones.
Vaccine-damaged children are also often treated
like drafted casualties
in our war again disease. It is as if being drafted for this
purpose is inherently a good thing, an honorable thing, that vaccine
risk is obviously a risk well worth taking. Even if it were a
good thing, however, isn't it a risk that the parents of the
potentially damaged child should be allowed to take? Is it right
to force vaccinations on anyone? Does the end justify the means?
And isn't the very subtle implication that only
death or harm from disease is "bad"; that death or harm from a
vaccine is somehow okay or "good", because it is in support of the
"cause" of "public health"?
Also implied in the argument that it is okay to
force vaccination is the notion that "you", an unwilling vaccine
participant, should be forced to vaccinate your child(ren) to protect
"my" (the one who seeks protection) child(ren) from disease.
There are two major problems with this argument, First, why
should someone be required to risk their child for another? What
makes the child being "protected" more important than the "protector"?
Second, if the
vaccines work, anyone choosing them will be protected. If they
don’t prevent the spread of the disease to the vaccinated, why are we
vaccinating? It hardly seems right that those who don’t want to
be vaccinated should have vaccination forced on them because vaccines
don’t always work.
And to whatever
extent vaccines are being required because the 'immune suppressed'
cannot be vaccinated, and are more vulnerable to the adverse effects of
disease, while my heart goes out to such people, they are not more
important than children who are harmed by vaccines. Nor should
the notion that vaccination may in itself be creating immune
suppression be left out of this equation.
Besides there
is documented proof of outbreaks in 100%
vaccinated populations.
The irony is, of course, that even if they don't
recognize it, those who support forcing vaccination are doing so
precisely because they don't believe in the effectiveness of vaccines.
Besides, where is the sense of history,
the recognition that medicine as practiced and promoted has often been
found to be lacking or even just plain, dead wrong?
But even if we were to assume virtually 100%
effectiveness and safety of vaccines, is forcing vaccines in a free
society ever justified? As I said in that speech, "I also
consider any notion of 'public health' to be suspect, which sacrifices
the individual to some alleged higher goal. Many of us find it
way scarier that the state would sacrifice children to someone's idea
of the common good, than to take our chances with Mother Nature.
Who decides? What's the right number? Who's counting?
Even in wartime, the draft of adults is only used very judiciously and
sparingly. We also go to considerable effort to avoid enemy
civilian casualties. Yet we seem to think nothing of sacrificing
our own innocent children."
Our brave soldiers have fought and died, and will
continue to fight and die, in order to protect us from tyranny which
threatens our freedom and way of life, including what the Declaration
of Independence "hold(s) to be self-evident", the right to "Life, Liberty and the
pursuit of Happiness".
Do we really want to force vaccination and violate
this most basic American right? Do we really want to pave that
road?
by Sandy Gottstein (aka
Mintz)
"Eternal vigilance is
the price of liberty." - Wendell Phillips (1811-1884), paraphrasing
John Philpot Curran (1808)