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Why I don't vaccinate my child: The Onion


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2015 Feb 5, 12:38pm   19,752 views  59 comments

by tovarichpeter   ➕follow (7)   💰tip   ignore  

http://www.theonion.com/articles/i-dont-vaccinate-my-child-because-its-my-right-to,37839/

As a mother, I put my parenting decisions above all else. Nobody knows my son better than me, and the choices I make about how to care for him are no one’s business but my own. So, when other people tell me how they think I should be raising my child, I simply can’t tolerate it. Regardless of what anyone else thinks, I fully stand behind my choices as a mom, including my choice not to vaccinate my son, because it is my fundamental right as a parent to decide which eradicated diseases come roaring back. The decision to cause...

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1   The Original Bankster   2015 Feb 5, 1:56pm  

this once funny mag has become a bastion of politically correct SHIT

they sold it a few months back.

2   Vicente   2015 Feb 5, 2:03pm  

Brave fighter for the liberty of suppressed and assaulted pathogens.

Much as it is unfair to shackle bankers UNTIL they have wrecked a global economy, it is unfair to preemptively use toxic agents to enlist immune systems in pathogen genocide.

Big Government shouldn't be allowed to inflict violence on a virus or bacteria BEFORE it has crippled or killed someone, only punish it afterwards. Perhaps via lawsuit. Glibertopians should be all over it.

3   Reality   2015 Feb 5, 2:34pm  

The vax-shamers should be mandated to be injected with every vaccine known to men. Start with the dubiously effective HPV vaccine; being over the age of 25 is not a scientific excuse for not taking it: for all we known, those gullible vaccine advocates could well be virgins or near-virgins with no prior exposure to any strain of the virus. While we are at it, the people who are against individual choice on vaccine should be injected with every flu vaccine formula ever produced: after all, every year is different, and we want to make sure you are well protected, don't we?

If you are against other people diciding for themselves what' necessary, what's not, it's only fair to carpet bomb your own immune system.

4   Shaman   2015 Feb 5, 4:43pm  

The while point of public health is that it's for the public, not the individual. Anti-vaxxers' claims of individual Liberty are irrelevant when it comes to dangerous easily communicable diseases. Yes, the flu vax and HPV effectiveness are certainly debatable, but standards like the MMR are not. Anti-social people who make these choices should be denied use of public facilities until they become more social.

5   curious2   2015 Feb 5, 4:54pm  

Quigley says

The while point of public health is that it's for the public, not the individual.

Yes, and yet vaccines are taxed and the mandatory insurance system triples the price. During the 2009/10 flu season, the federal government bought plenty of vaccines, but refused to give them to the public, who had paid for them. Instead, the feds gave the vaccines only to established programs e.g. for government employees and the indigent, and more than 70 million doses then expired unused because the private sector providers charged prices higher than the market would bear. (I saw $85, for a $10 vaccine, and others were charged hundreds of dollars for a vaccine bundled with unnecessary and unwanted tests). We don't have a system where an ordinary person can simply walk into a public facility and get a vaccine. Instead, we have Obamneycare, where the "free" vaccines are bundled with unwanted tests and copays etc. Even California's recent emergency order requiring Obamneycare insurers to cover some doctors and hospitals does not apply to vaccines. If you visit a public health facility and ask for a vaccine, they ask what government program you're on, and if you aren't on any, they turn you away. Public libraries are for the public, but public health is not.

Meanwhile, "marcus"/"humanity" does not get flu vaccine, and yet claims to teach public school kids, the same age group who were getting killed by swine flu. According to "marcus"/"humanity", the reason for not getting vaccinated is because (s)he experienced flu symptoms only one year in the last 12, which reminds me of Typhoid Mary. I do feel sorry for those kids, and their families, if Typhoid Marcus spreads swine flu to them.

6   Reality   2015 Feb 5, 5:29pm  

Quigley says

The while point of public health is that it's for the public, not the individual. Anti-vaxxers' claims of individual Liberty are irrelevant when it comes to dangerous easily communicable diseases. Yes, the flu vax and HPV effectiveness are certainly debatable, but standards like the MMR are not. Anti-social people who make these choices should be denied use of public facilities until they become more social.

"Public" is just an imaginary entity that some individuals use in order to exploit others. The real debate is not about the low risk and low cost vaccinations, but the high cost vaccinations of marginal value that some advocates want to mandate via the government guns so that the vaccine patent holders can profit at ridiculous profit margin, at the expense of tax payers.

7   Vicente   2015 Feb 6, 7:37am  

Vicente says

Brave fighter for the liberty of suppressed and assaulted pathogens.

And I thought I was making a joke. People take this SERIOUS!

http://www.amazon.com/dp/1466938897

8   HydroCabron   2015 Feb 6, 8:15am  

Reality says

"Public" is just an imaginary entity that some individuals use in order to exploit others.

"Epidemic" is just an scare concept used to make people think piles of dead bodies are bad.

9   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 8:41am  

HydroCabron says

Reality says

"Public" is just an imaginary entity that some individuals use in order to exploit others.

"Epidemic" is just an scare concept used to make people think piles of dead bodies are bad.

If you really believe epidemic would massively reduce population among those selective about vaccination, shouldn't you have some faith in Darwinism in action? The truth is that you don't even believe in the fantasy of people dying in droves after refusing a few vaccines.

10   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 11:39am  

Reality says

If you really believe epidemic would massively reduce population among those selective about vaccination, shouldn't you have some faith in Darwinism in action? The truth is that you don't even believe in the fantasy of people dying in droves after refusing a few vaccines.

Except that's not how it works. It's babies under the age of 1 that never got the choice to vaccinate for measles, that are the ones getting it now.

11   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 11:40am  

Reality says

The real debate is not about the low risk and low cost vaccinations, but the high cost vaccinations of marginal value that some advocates want to mandate via the government guns so that the vaccine patent holders can profit at ridiculous profit margin, at the expense of tax payers.

Is MMR a high cost vaccination of low marginal value?

12   HydroCabron   2015 Feb 6, 11:49am  

Reality says

The truth is that you don't even believe in the fantasy of people dying in droves after refusing a few vaccines.

Shut up, bitch.

TABLE 2. Baseline 20th century annual morbidity and 1998 provisional morbidity from
nine diseases with vaccines recommended before 1990 for universal use in children
-- United States
===============================================================================================
Baseline 20th century 1998 Provisional %
Disease annual morbidity morbidity Decrease
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Smallpox 48,164* 0 100%
Diphtheria 175,885+ 1 100%&
Pertussis 147,271@ 6,279 95.7%
Tetanus 1,314** 34 97.4%
Poliomyelitis (paralytic) 16,316++ 0&& 100%
Measles 503,282@@ 89 100%&
Mumps 152,209*** 606 99.6%
Rubella 47,745+++ 345 99.3%
Congenital rubella 823&&& 5 99.4%
syndrome
Haemophilus 20,000@@@ 54**** 99.7%
influenzae type b

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Average annual number of cases during 1900-1904 ( 1 ).
+ Average annual number of reported cases during 1920-1922, 3 years before vaccine
development.
& Rounded to nearest tenth.
@ Average annual number of reported cases during 1922-1925, 4 years before vaccine
development.
** Estimated number of cases based on reported number of deaths during 1922-1926
assuming a case-fatality rate of 90%.
++ Average annual number of reported cases during 1951-1954, 4 years before vaccine
licensure.
&& Excludes one cases of vaccine-associated polio reported in 1998.
@@ Average annual number of reported cases during 1958-1962, 5 years before vaccine
licensure.
*** Number of reported cases in 1968, the first year reporting began and the first year after
vaccine licensure.
+++ Average annual number of reported cases during 1966-1968, 3 years before vaccine
licensure.
&&& Estimated number of cases based on seroprevalence data in the population and on the
risk that women infected during a childbearing year would have a fetus with congenital
rubella syndrome ( 7 ).
@@@ Estimated number of cases from population-based surveillance studies before vaccine
licensure in 1985 ( 8 ).
**** Excludes 71 cases of Haemophilus influenzae disease of unknown serotype.
================================================================================================

13   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 12:03pm  

tatupu70 says

Reality says

If you really believe epidemic would massively reduce population among those selective about vaccination, shouldn't you have some faith in Darwinism in action? The truth is that you don't even believe in the fantasy of people dying in droves after refusing a few vaccines.

Except that's not how it works. It's babies under the age of 1 that never got the choice to vaccinate for measles, that are the ones getting it now.

The benefit vs. risk analysis of whether giving an infant measles vaccine is highly dependent on the infant's environment. If the infant is being raised a 3rd world country where measles are an ongoing concern, then the odds are highly in favor of immunizing. However, for a child being raised in an upper middle class to upper class family, rarely in public outside the house, and the household has both parents and full-time baby sitter fully immunized with MMR vaccine for decades, the odds are in favor of delaying even a relatively benign vaccine like MMR to after 1yr old, when the child's brain is better developed. I did not give my child MMR until she was 4 and ready to attend pre-school.

14   mell   2015 Feb 6, 12:23pm  

Reality says

The benefit vs. risk analysis of whether giving an infant measles vaccine is highly dependent on the infant's environment. If the infant is being raised a 3rd world country where measles are an ongoing concern, then the odds are highly in favor of immunizing. However, for a child being raised in an upper middle class to upper class family, rarely in public outside the house, and the household has both parents and full-time baby sitter fully immunized with MMR vaccine for decades, the odds are in favor of delaying even a relatively benign vaccine like MMR to after 1yr old, when the child's brain is better developed. I did not give my child MMR until she was 4 and ready to attend pre-school.

Yep - also the risk associated with developing chronic auto-immune conditions through over-vaccination needs to be considered. Lifelong RA or diabetes is far more expensive than medical care for an acutely sick child and interestingly juvenile auto-immune conditions have dramatically increased with the increase of the vaccination load. For a while it was blamed on "other" environmental factors, but environmental conditions have mostly improved, so they are now investigating the link to vaccination closer. They also are exploring a potential marker for the risk of adverse events from vaccination which could help better with making the decision whether to vaccinate or not for specific vaccines.

15   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 12:26pm  

HydroCabron says

Shut up, bitch.

What an ironic expression coming from someone who has a dog for avatar.

By citing the irrelevant numbers, you are only proving your own poor logic ability. Take the first item in your list for example, Smallpox, unless you are planning on giving birth to a child between the years of 1900-1904, after cranking up your time machine, it's pointless to get a smallpox vaccine for your newborn. Guess what? Most people born in the last 30 years indeed have not been afflicted with the smallpox vaccine that leave unsightly scars on their arms.

16   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 12:34pm  

Call it Crazy says

Do you have any idea what the recommended age for the MMR is

Of course. That's my point idiot.

17   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 12:36pm  

Reality says

The benefit vs. risk analysis of whether giving an infant measles vaccine is highly dependent on the infant's environment. If the infant is being raised a 3rd world country where measles are an ongoing concern, then the odds are highly in favor of immunizing. However, for a child being raised in an upper middle class to upper class family, rarely in public outside the house, and the household has both parents and full-time baby sitter fully immunized with MMR vaccine for decades, the odds are in favor of delaying even a relatively benign vaccine like MMR to after 1yr old, when the child's brain is better developed. I did not give my child MMR until she was 4 and ready to attend pre-school.

Again--you completely missed the point. If there weren't a bunch of anti-vaxxers around, it would be OK to wait until the child is 4. But now, babies are getting it at daycare when they're under 1.

18   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 12:38pm  

This actually brings up a good question for the vaxers: why aren't you giving yourself a Smallpox Vaccine now? and putting an unsightly scar on your arm?

19   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 12:40pm  

tatupu70 says

Again--you completely missed the point. If there weren't a bunch of anti-vaxxers around, it would be OK to wait until the child is 4. But now, babies are getting it at daycare when they're under 1.

What the hell are they doing putting babies in daycare before they are 1 year's old? The parents in that case should be shot, in order to immunize against far greater problems for the rest of the society: such as kids growing up to be criminals due to lack of parental supervision and care.

Not even the CDC recommends MMR before 1 year's of age. Vaccines have side effects: overloading immune system causing autoimmune disease, chemicals damaging a fledgling brain, as well as one guaranteed downside: pain infliction on a child who is not yet fully verbal and doesn't quite understand why the parents are not protecting him/her from the prick.

20   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 12:45pm  

Reality says

What the hell are they doing putting babies in daycare before they are 1 year's old? The parents in that case should be shot, in order to immunize against far greater problems for the rest of the society: such as kids growing up to be criminals due to lack of parental supervision and care.

OK--so your solution is to never bring the baby out of the house? Great plan. It was daycare this time. Next time it could be at the grocery store. Or an airplane.

Reality says

Not even the CDC recommends MMR before 1 years of age. Vaccines have side effects: overloading immune system causing autoimmune disease, chemicals damaging a fledgling brain, as well as one guaranteed downside: pain infliction on a child who is not yet fully verbal and doesn't quite understand why the parents are not protecting him/her from the prick.

No kidding. That's my point!! That's why you need to eradicate the disease so that babies can't get it BEFORE they are immunized.

21   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 12:50pm  

tatupu70 says

OK--so your solution is to never bring the baby out of the house? Great plan. It was daycare this time. Next time it could be at the grocery store. Or an airplane.

I rarely brought my child out of the house into enclosed public space with re-circulated air. There are tons of diseases that do not have vaccine. Which part of MMR not recommended for child under 1 years old don't you understand? You are obviously unfit to be a parent.

tatupu70 says

No kidding. That's my point!! That's why you need to eradicate the disease so that babies can't get it BEFORE they are immunized.

LOL, so did you take the Smallpox vaccine? Did you insist your kids take the Smallpox vaccine? Eradicated and nearly eradicated mean that for many kids in the appropriate parental environment the vaccine is no longer necessary.

22   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 12:53pm  

Reality says

I rarely brought my child out of the house into enclosed public space with re-circulated air. There are tons of diseases that do not have vaccine. Which part of MMR not recommended for child under 1 years old don't you understand? You are obviously unfit to be a parent.

Unlike you I understand it completely. I understand why it's important for society to get vaccinated to protect babies from catching the disease before they are able to get the vaccine.

What part of that do you not understand?

23   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 12:56pm  

tatupu70 says

Unlike you I understand it completely. I understand why it's important for society to get vaccinated to protect babies from catching the disease before they are able to get the vaccine.

What part of that do you not understand?

You apparently don't understand the simple logic that when the disease is non-existent or nearly non-existent, the reward/risk ratio of vaccinating against it drops precipitously.

That's why I asked you, did you get yourself or your kids vaccinated with the grand-daddy of all vaccinations: the Smallpox Vaccine. And why not?

24   HydroCabron   2015 Feb 6, 1:06pm  

Reality says

Guess what? Most people born in the last 30 years indeed have not been afflicted with the smallpox vaccine that leave unsightly scars on their arms.

Google "smallpox victim" - not that you will - and click "Images". Enjoy.

Consider the diphtheria line in that chart, stupid:

Diphtheria - 175,885 annual cases before; 1 case after vaccine introduced

The mortality rate for diphtheria is 5-10%. Assuming 5%, that's 8794 baseline deaths per year before vaccination.

25   HydroCabron   2015 Feb 6, 1:19pm  

Reality says

That's why I asked you, did you get yourself or your kids vaccinated with the grand-daddy of all vaccinations: the Smallpox Vaccine. And why not?

Smallpox no longer exists outside of lab storage. The remote chance of side effects from the vaccination dwarfs the far more remote chance of getting the disease.

This argument does not apply to any of the diseases we currently vaccinate for: in all cases, the chance of getting the disease is far higher than the possibility of side effects. In particular the possibility of non-existent side effects, such as autism, is 0.

26   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 1:24pm  

HydroCabron says

Reality says

Guess what? Most people born in the last 30 years indeed have not been afflicted with the smallpox vaccine that leave unsightly scars on their arms.

Google "smallpox victim" - not that you will - and click "Images". Enjoy.

Perhaps you are into those sick porns. I'm not.

Consider the diphtheria line in that chart, stupid:

Diphtheria - 175,885 annual cases before; 1 case after vaccine introduced

The mortality rate for diphtheria is 5-10%. Assuming 5%, that's 8794 baseline deaths per year before vaccination.

So are you living in the 175,885/yr age or the 1/yr age? Is diphtheria like cancer that you can develop spontaneously? or is it a communicative disease that you have to get from someone else?

If you are looking or some "stupid" "bitch" you can look in the mirror.

27   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 1:24pm  

Reality says

You apparently don't understand the simple logic that when the disease is non-existent or nearly non-existent, the reward/risk ratio of vaccinating against it drops precipitously.

So, you agree that for diseases that are NOT non-existent or nearly non-existent, vaccination shouldn't be a choice?

28   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 1:29pm  

HydroCabron says

Reality says

That's why I asked you, did you get yourself or your kids vaccinated with the grand-daddy of all vaccinations: the Smallpox Vaccine. And why not?

Smallpox no longer exists outside of lab storage. The remote chance of side effects from the vaccination dwarfs the far more remote chance of getting the disease.

This argument does not apply to any of the diseases we currently vaccinate for: in all cases, the chance of getting the disease is far higher than the possibility of side effects.

If you live in a ghetto, perhaps. In that case, the most cost-effective immunization is really sterilization of the would-be parents. Sterilization (duration specific or permanent) should be mandatory condition for receiving welfare.

In particular the possibility of non-existent side effects, such as autism, is 0.

Auto-immune disorder is a non-zero risk, damage to brain is not a zero-risk, hence even the CDC has recommended minimum ages for a variety of vaccines. Vaccines are not nearly as safe to new borns as the vaxers make them out to be. Also, the emotional impact of pain inflicted on a child too young to understand why parents are not protecting him/her from the hurt is 100%.

29   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 1:31pm  

tatupu70 says

Reality says

You apparently don't understand the simple logic that when the disease is non-existent or nearly non-existent, the reward/risk ratio of vaccinating against it drops precipitously.

So, you agree that for diseases that are NOT non-existent or nearly non-existent, vaccination shouldn't be a choice?

Vaccination is a choice, sometimes a bad choice. Let's keep it a choice instead of a mandate.

30   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 1:33pm  

Reality says

Vaccination is a choice, sometimes a bad choice. Let's keep it a choice instead of a mandate.

So, you're OK with babies dying from measles then?

31   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 1:36pm  

tatupu70 says

Reality says

Vaccination is a choice, sometimes a bad choice. Let's keep it a choice instead of a mandate.

So, you're OK with babies dying from measles then?

So you are okay with babies dying from adverse reaction to vaccines then?

What's next? You are okay with people dying from automobile accidents if you don't agree to banning cars?

32   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 1:47pm  

Reality says

So you are okay with babies dying from adverse reaction to vaccines then?

What's next? You are okay with people dying from automobile accidents if you don't agree to banning cars?

OK, let's back up. First, why don't you answer my question, then I'll answer yours.

33   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 1:52pm  

No. Counter-arguments work like a LIFO Stack, not a FIFO Queue. A counter-argument is like a sub-routine; it has to be resolved first to produce the answer to the topic that launched it.

34   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 2:33pm  

Reality says

No. Counter-arguments work like a LIFO Stack

OK--what is a greater risk: unvaccinated babies getting measles or the side effects of vaccinating children per the current vaccination guidelines?

35   tatupu70   2015 Feb 6, 2:33pm  

Call it Crazy says

You mean to tell us there are many babies dying from the measles. Care to share the official totals with us?

So, it's only a problem if "many" die? Would you feel that way if your child was one of the "few" that needlessly died?

36   HydroCabron   2015 Feb 6, 2:53pm  

tatupu70 says

Would you feel that way if your child was one of the "few" that needlessly died?

'Course not. Beats having a drooling autistic kid to take care of.

37   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 3:03pm  

tatupu70 says

OK--what is a greater risk: unvaccinated babies getting measles or the side effects of vaccinating children per the current vaccination guidelines?

Did your parents give you too much vaccine too early and caused mental retardation? Do you think "the current vaccination guidelines" are carved into the stone tablets that Moses brought down from Mt. Sinai?

Do you think there are more kids born into the ghettos or born into upper middle families? To which kids/parents do you think those "government guidelines" are written for? The gullible parents or the ones with analytical insight? Here's a hint: do you think most TV ads are made for couch potatoes or made for Einsteins who do no watch TV's?

Delaying my kid's MMR to 4yo had zero effect on other kids, especially those in 3rd world and in ghettos, simply because she was not exposed to the ghetto, 3rd world or early 20th century that you vaxers love so much. So the marginal benefit of giving her vaccine at 1 vs. at 4 was 0, whereas side effect would be 100%!

38   zzyzzx   2015 Feb 6, 3:06pm  

I liked the related articles better:
Soccer Mom To Suck Off World's Greatest Dad
http://www.theonion.com/articles/soccer-mom-to-suck-off-worlds-greatest-dad,9109/

Horrified Teen Stumbles Upon Divorced Mom's Personal Ad
http://www.theonion.com/articles/horrified-teen-stumbles-upon-divorced-moms-persona,681/
The only remarks came from Jared Ricks, a fellow junior at Commonwealth, who heard about the ad from Phillips.

"Yo, D, I left a voicemail for your moms but she ain't called me back," Ricks said. "I told her I like long walks and hot fucking."

39   Reality   2015 Feb 6, 3:06pm  

tatupu70 says

Call it Crazy says

You mean to tell us there are many babies dying from the measles. Care to share the official totals with us?

So, it's only a problem if "many" die? Would you feel that way if your child was one of the "few" that needlessly died?

I would be very angry if my child were one of those who needlessly suffer from too much vaccine too early. The fact that the vaccine makers want legal immunity for their products is evidence enough that their products should be only used with extreme caution.

40   FortWayne   2015 Feb 6, 4:10pm  

It's fine, the stupid once will die out.

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