Nope. The kid wasn't so innocent; after all, God let the kid die, right? God knows what He's doing.RIP innocent soul.
Anti-vaxxers used to be religious conservatives plus a teeny-tiny population of hippies. Still is. What changed is the religious conservatives have gotten a stronger voice.Yeah, it's really weird how that switched sides. Antivaxxers used to be a teeny-tiny population of mostly liberal, crystal-healing nutjobs, but then conservatives took it up full force. Absolutely bizarre.
Also quite sickening that Republican leadership is happy to kill their own people to gain political power.
https://fs.blog/roald-dahl-letter-daughter/Olivia, my eldest daughter, caught measles when she was seven years old. As the illness took its usual course I can remember reading to her often in bed and not feeling particularly alarmed about it. Then one morning, when she was well on the road to recovery, I was sitting on her bed showing her how to fashion little animals out of coloured pipe-cleaners, and when it came to her turn to make one herself, I noticed that her fingers and her mind were not working together and she couldn’t do anything.
“Are you feeling all right?” I asked her.
“I feel all sleepy,” she said.
In an hour, she was unconscious. In twelve hours she was dead.
Only one side of the aisle in the history of the country put an anti-vax nut job in charge of the Health and Human Services.Unfortunately vaccine "skepticism" is an ideology that reaches across the aisle, even if it's become a major plank on one side now.
It should be mandatory for everyone unless you have some legitimate medical reason to not get vaccinated.It should be child abuse to not vaccinate your children.
Doesn't fly, as many religious nutcases HAVE been successfully prosecuted for harming their child by withholding appropriate medical care (such as insulin, or chemotherapy). These parents should be prosecuted as well, assuming their child was both old enough to be vaccinated and had no medical contraindications to receiving the MMR vaccine.Religion.
Nope. The kid wasn't so innocent; after all, God let the kid die, right? God knows what He's doing.
/s (just in case)
The three types of people, per red states:So in a red state if you kill your unborn fetus via a previously legal medical procedure it is now illegal, but if you kill your already born living child with a preventable disease/sickness that’s ok?
Being Mennonite myself I can assure you there is nothing in our branch of Christianity that prevents vaccination. I am fully vaccinated as are my children as are those of all the other Mennonites I know. Well, there is one exception who has fallen into the Trump/RFK Jr sphere and started shunning things like vaccines for no other reason than the right wing has decided it's bad.Because of religion, we have to ban abortions!
Also because of religion, we have to let born children die of preventable diseases that they will also spread to others.
Y'know, pro life.
Yeah, I didn't like the way Beth phrased this:Being Mennonite myself I can assure you there is nothing in our branch of Christianity that prevents vaccination. I am fully vaccinated as are my children as are those of all the other Mennonites I know. Well, there is one exception who has fallen into the Trump/RFK Jr sphere and started shunning things like vaccines for no other reason than the right wing has decided it's bad.
Citation needed, Beth. Unless you specifically meant the local Mennonites, which I'd have a hard time refuting given the current situation. But certainly, I've known a few Mennonites (we even have a local Mennonite college of nursing!), and none of them were anti-vax.The current outbreak in Texas also involves a close-knit religious community—Mennonites—that has largely eschewed vaccination.
I don’t disagree, but at the moment I just hope it will remain legal for anyone to get the vaccinations they want. I don’t think that’s a given.It should be mandatory for everyone unless you have some legitimate medical reason to not get vaccinated.
Fluoride builds up to toxic levels in your pituitary gland. But don’t worry, a juice cleanse once every six months will fix it.Sadly, it is extremists in general. Here in the Pacific NW the ones that don't vaccinate their kids are still usually the all-natural "chemicals bad" hippie granola parents. The conservative extremists and the all natural hippies loop around the horseshoe and meet at the same anti-science stance.
edit: Shoot, we still don't do fluoridated water in Oregon because the hippie crystal clutching influence is still so strong.
The exemptions are not supposed to be easy, so I'm guessing you live in an R state? Or at least R local politicians in power?One person traveled to San Antonio ten days ago, visited an event at UTSA then did the tourist trap crawl through the Riverwalk, then ate out for dinner. They tested positive for measles after they returned to the Panhandle. It's only a matter of time before this spreads through the US, it's continued spreading into adjacent counties since it first began.
It's easy to blame religious zealots, but one facet I don't see talked about much is financial side. Vaccinations cost multiple trips to the doc depending on number of shots & boosters per vaccine. It's real money just to walk in the door to the Doc's office once, let alone several times in addition to whatever the vaccines cost. And yet they can save that money by just getting a piece of paper notarized and walking it into the school to create an exemption. Notary service is free where I'm at, if I had a kid it'd cost me nothing (and maybe 10 minutes of time) to make them vax exempt as opposed to the hassles and cost of vaccinations.
Given the prevalence of low income families with multiple children here, a large percentage of them on food assistance programs and literally dependent on school lunch programs for free lunches, people need to realize there's an existing cost disincentive for parents to vaccinate.
So whether they are religious zealots, scummy penny-pinching parents, or they are parents who are struggling financially and are already unable to properly feed their children, people need to realize there are real consequences to not having a proper national healthcare program. It's certainly not helping when it's so easy, fast, and free for anyone to get a kid exempted from vaccines.
Only if you have insurance. Out-of-pocket for the measles vaccine is lowest at Costco (around here, anyway), at $105. If you're poor, that's expensive.A simple shot costing a few dollars versus endless bankruptcy trying to cure the effects of the disease.
I'm absolutely certain that given that an innocent child has died, the GOP, given that it calls itself the prolife party, will ensure that a robust childhood vaccination program will be implemented just like they have prioritized gun control and safety given years of mass shootings, particularly in schools.Measles is one of the most contagious airborne viruses known to man. For every case that is detected, it's likely tens to hundreds of others have been exposed. I would be VERY surprised if this outbreak is anywhere close to over. This is likely just the first unfortunately. Lets see if the unnecessary and horrific deaths of children spurs anything other than crocodile tears and performative sighs from those in power.
It's possibly MUCH worse than that, because some of these cases could have been children of parents who would have vaccinated them. "...39 in children aged 0 to 4, some of whom may be too young to vaccinate."Horrible when innocent kids die because their parents are fucking anti-vaxxers.![]()
Fucking Hell that's dark. And not at all unlikely.On the plus side, in a few years school shootings might not be the #1 cause of death for US children anymore!
Not only from measles, but from many other diseases, some of which are emerging superbugs.Unfortunately this is only the first death. More will be coming.
Nope. Fuck religion. Fuck religious beliefs that decry vaccination even more.The exemptions are not supposed to be easy, so I'm guessing you live in an R state? Or at least R local politicians in power?
The exemptions are a relief valve for society, to allow 99% of folks to vaccinate while not forcing the genuinely held beliefs of religious minorities into an oppressed state. It's a very very important function to have that release valve. However, nobody said it should be easy to use the valve; it should be the goal of any school district to make it way more a pain to get an exemption than to get vaccinated.
Somewhere along the way, I think folks with some vested interest (whether money or power) decided they'd use that as a wedge for their own benefit, RFK among them. They push and push, straining the system until it breaks, as happened here. If there is a hell, I believe those folks will rot in it.
The Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn that had a measles outbreak followed a similar path. There’s nothing in Judaism that says “no vaccines”. Judaism tends to be pretty pragmatic about medicine, in general. If you take medicine that has to be taken with food, for example, the rabbi would tell you that even on a fast day, you should eat the necessary amount of food with your medicine.Being Mennonite myself I can assure you there is nothing in our branch of Christianity that prevents vaccination. I am fully vaccinated as are my children as are those of all the other Mennonites I know. Well, there is one exception who has fallen into the Trump/RFK Jr sphere and started shunning things like vaccines for no other reason than the right wing has decided it's bad.
While this is obviously an avoidable tragedy, it is not "murder". Murder is a deliberate killing, and I'm sure these parents loved their children.Adults paying the price for their own stupidity doesn't bother me, they played dice against nature and lost (remember, in any form of gambling, the odds are always in favour of the house).
But children being sacrificed in the altar of ignorance is where I draw the line. No religion should be allowed exemptions where it concerna children health care.
In any civilized society, those parents would have been charged with abuse and murder.
I really haven’t seen many actual liberals espousing antivax views lately. My feeling is that the Right has just consolidated all the anti-intellectual, conspiracist, woo-culture bullshit since 2021 or so.Unfortunately vaccine "skepticism" is an ideology that reaches across the aisle, even if it's become a major plank on one side now.
I really haven’t seen many actual liberals espousing antivax views lately. My feeling is that the Right has just consolidated all the anti-intellectual, conspiracist, woo-culture bullshit since 2021 or so.
I'm sorry but where is this that people have to pay for vaccines? I worked for a major private medical center in NYC as well as the public hospital system, the country's largest, and I've never heard of anyone having to pay out of pocket for vaccinations. Maybe insurance covers it, maybe not, but you can definitely get them for free. EDIT: or should be able to!One person traveled to San Antonio ten days ago, visited an event at UTSA then did the tourist trap crawl through the Riverwalk, then ate out for dinner. They tested positive for measles after they returned to the Panhandle. It's only a matter of time before this spreads through the US, it's continued spreading into adjacent counties since it first began.
It's easy to blame religious zealots, but one facet I don't see talked about much is financial side. Vaccinations cost multiple trips to the doc depending on number of shots & boosters per vaccine. It's real money just to walk in the door to the Doc's office once, let alone several times in addition to whatever the vaccines cost. And yet they can save that money by just getting a piece of paper notarized and walking it into the school to create an exemption. Notary service is free where I'm at, if I had a kid it'd cost me nothing (and maybe 10 minutes of time) to make them vax exempt as opposed to the hassles and cost of vaccinations.
Given the prevalence of low income families with multiple children here, a large percentage of them on food assistance programs and literally dependent on school lunch programs for free lunches, people need to realize there's an existing cost disincentive for parents to vaccinate.
So whether they are religious zealots, scummy penny-pinching parents, or they are parents who are struggling financially and are already unable to properly feed their children, people need to realize there are real consequences to not having a proper national healthcare program. It's certainly not helping when it's so easy, fast, and free for anyone to get a kid exempted from vaccines.
Depends on what state you are in. Michigan if the family doesn't have insurance you can still get all vaccines covered if you go to the health department and such. I believe that is where my parents got my vaccines when I was young because they had terrible insurance at the time.Only if you have insurance. Out-of-pocket for the measles vaccine is lowest at Costco (around here, anyway), at $105. If you're poor, that's expensive.