Parents Who Don't Vaccinate Kids Tend To Be Affluent, Better Educated (go.com)
schwit1 quotes ABC News: Vaccines are universally backed by respected scientists and federal agencies, but that isn't enough to convince every parent to vaccinate their children. The decision to fly in the face of near universal scientific opinion doesn't come as a result of a lack of intellect, however, as experts who have studied vaccines and immunology acknowledge that many parents who don't vaccinate their children are well-educated. They also appear to be the victims of a widespread misinformation campaign, the experts said.
Daniel Salmon, who is the director of the Institute of Vaccine Safety at Johns Hopkins University, said that existing research suggests that there are some common attributes that many parents who choose not to vaccinate their children share. "They tend to be better educated. They tend to be white, and they tend to be higher income. They tend to have larger families and they tend to use complementary and alternative medicine like chiropractors and naturopaths," Salmon said.
Salman also says outbreaks typically start when an American returns from a visit to Europe, where there are much higher rates of measles than in the U.S. But lower vaccination rates help it spread.
One study in August reported Russian trolls "seem to be using vaccination as a wedge issue, promoting discord in American society," though their campaign on Twitter failed to gain traction.
"I blame Amazon Prime," writes long-time Slashdot reader destinyland. "That 'misinformation' they're talking about is the pseudoscience documentary Vaxxed -- and Amazon is one of the top site's pushing it. The movie is not only free for all Prime members -- Amazon's actually featuring it on the front page showing free-with-Prime movies."
Daniel Salmon, who is the director of the Institute of Vaccine Safety at Johns Hopkins University, said that existing research suggests that there are some common attributes that many parents who choose not to vaccinate their children share. "They tend to be better educated. They tend to be white, and they tend to be higher income. They tend to have larger families and they tend to use complementary and alternative medicine like chiropractors and naturopaths," Salmon said.
Salman also says outbreaks typically start when an American returns from a visit to Europe, where there are much higher rates of measles than in the U.S. But lower vaccination rates help it spread.
One study in August reported Russian trolls "seem to be using vaccination as a wedge issue, promoting discord in American society," though their campaign on Twitter failed to gain traction.
"I blame Amazon Prime," writes long-time Slashdot reader destinyland. "That 'misinformation' they're talking about is the pseudoscience documentary Vaxxed -- and Amazon is one of the top site's pushing it. The movie is not only free for all Prime members -- Amazon's actually featuring it on the front page showing free-with-Prime movies."
Kids in Iron lungs on instagram changes minds
This is a pattern that I recognized. There's a class of people that are smarter than the US average, yet still rather stupid and arrogantly over-confident from an actually smart point of view.
E.g. Randall Munroe of xkcd or Ricky Gervais are famous examples.
They simply LOOK and ACT smart, but they aren't really that smart. They're just not utter and complete morons.
I don't think educated the word that you're looking for. How about uselessly credentialed?
They also appear to be the victims of a widespread misinformation campaign, the experts said.
I suppose this could be a case of 'Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by stupidity.' But I'm going to go out on a limb and call BS. The affluent expect your little snot-dribblers to get vaccinated. No matter how small the risk. Just so their precious ones can benefit from herd immunity.
Have gnu, will travel.
Pompous, sanctimonious rich women think they know better than all the plebs? Gasp...who'd have thunk it!?
Because if they'd leaned "conservative", the article would have been gleefully shouting it from the rooftops.
Don't think the media is biased? Why'd CNN label Democrate Ralph "Was he the one dressing as a Klansman or the one in blackface" Northam as a Republican?
Funny how the Washington Post there conveniently forgets to mention Governer "post-birth-abortion-is-OK" Northam's party...
They would rather a dead kid than anautistic kid. Itâ(TM)s less work.
Either this 'study' is deeply flawed, or it's actually the product of the Russian trolls it speaks of, since this makes precisely zero sense, someone not vaccinating their kids against common diseases is among the obvious definitions of 'unintelligent'. Don't really give a damn what anyone thinks of what I just said, either, so don't bother.
Randall Munroe seems fairly well educated in technical areas. Did I miss something? And, from my understanding,he's open and upfront that his comics aren't based just on his knowledge but that he has to do research fro them.
And I never heard anyone claim Ricky Gervais is particularly smart. Maybe you were confused by his accent into thinking people thought he was smart?/p:
Your ad here. Ask me how!
The article claims that:
Which is asinine. There's many ways to be smart, and many entirely different ways to be educated. A degree in business administration or economics gives you no insight into not getting fooled by dumbass anti-vaxxers or various conspiracy theories. In fact, it may make it easier, since they're "educated" and don't think they can be fooled! It's just as easy to trick so-called "educated" people as it is non-educated people. The only difference is the bait you use.
One of the reasons this anti-vaxxer stuff gets spread is we live in a world where we're taught that science is things printed in books, arguments that "sound right" rather than actually being educated on critical thinking skills, evidence based, and degrees of certainty.
Higher educated, does not mean not stupid.
Remember when it was just the religious right that was anti-science? Ah, those were the days. We could just mock them behind their backs and call then neanderthals. Ha ha. Oh, nostalgia.
Turns out "religion" had nothing to do with it after all. A certain percentage of people will just believe whatever they want to believe, regardless of ethnicity, religion or economic status. Looking back, wasn't that always the case?
Was the one. Jenny something. But she stoopid monkey.
There's education, then there's education.
Having a B.A. isn't the same as having a B.S.
Sort like all the D.O. "doctors" who aren't M.D. doctors.
I'm not saying that D.O.s and BAs aren't useful for many, many, things or that most people with those degrees are stupid. Some just seem to lack the ability to figure out what is a fact and what is wishful thinking.
How you "feel" about something doesn't impact the facts.
There's plenty of issues people have with vaccines that are based in science
Like what, exactly?
I don't respond to AC's.
MacOS model's NOT done yet so you can STOP IMPERSONATING me on /.!
Proof portfilter err = stopped by my work https://news.slashdot.org/comm...
* IMITATING me as you do proves you WISH you were ME though!
APK
P.S.=> Hopefully, this 'sinks in' to your DULL BRAIN @ last, finally (for the 100th time now)... apk
It is an obvious selfish decision made by "educated" parents. Why put your own child at any sort of risk with vaccines when you can get the benefits of herd immunity by having everyone else vaccinate their children. The decision they are looking at is whether the risks associated with vaccines are greater than the benefits they provide for their children and historically, because all the other children are vaccinated, the answer seems to be no. However, as more and more parents make the same selfish decision in these affluent neighborhoods to not vaccinate their children, this formula is going to change and the children of these selfish parents are going to get exactly what they deserve.
I've met people who have plenty of fancy letters after their names, and they're dumb as rocks. They studied deep in a single field, but can only regurgitate knowledge, not integrate and extrapolate.
The more life I experience, the more I realize just how truly rare intelligence is.
Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
Just because you inherited money and your dad paid for a new library at Harvard doesn't mean that you aren't a stupid fuck.
Looking back, wasn't that always the case?
No, I don't think it's that simple. Religion, by definition, is deliberate ignorance: believe something that has no basis in reality because it has no basis in reality. I don't know a whole heck of a lot of truly smart people who are also religious. I honestly don't know if I know any.
But, religion is becoming passe. It's dying off quickly in more educated, modern societies (ie: Europe). Without religion, some people still have some sort of innate need to believe in something irrational, because the idea of "this is all there is" is just too much (or not enough?) for them. I think that these people who need something else, but who can't buy into the magical sky wizard thing are grasping at all sorts of things, and some of those things are online Internet conspiracies.
Personally, I think that life as we know it is plenty interesting enough for me, so I don't understand why so many people need to look past that and believe in some sort of silly mumbo jumbo.
I don't respond to AC's.
Fantastically rich and no doubt quite intelligent, yet he decided to use alternative medicine to treat his cancer instead of listening to doctors.
Ok cut the nonsense. All the libtards think that getting vaccines means getting a particular batch of vaccines selected without question from a provider. All bullshit. Every school district and health organization has policies and recommendations and every vaccine is available in different ways from different companies itâ(TM)s and can be administered by different providers. I would ask that you idiots please stop talking about vaccines as though they were some monolithic thing that everybody gets from big brother. Do you get a smallpox vaccine? No, smallpox was eradicated. Do you get a chicken pox vaccine when you already had chicken pox? Probably not. The efficacy of having had chicken oox is better understood than the efficacy of the vaccine. Do you get your second dose of gardasil as a child? No, you get it later in life assuming you even want it or some guideline has not changed. There is literally no such thing as vaccination. There are vaccinations. Some people get some of them sometimes. Cue corrupt libtard arguments.
We need to insist on the application of public domain and GPL style vaccine development, not the proprietary intellectual property model of patented & limited access vaccine technology. Jonas Salk put his vaccine in the public domain because he was against the proprietary model and we should recognize this as a predecessor to the free software movement. If people really believe the proprietary vaccine model is superior they should have to prove it.
Is it really plausible that the same big pharma industry that happily hikes the price of insulin multiple times per year is at all committed to maximizing vaccine quality -- especially since they can get mandatory purchase policies on their products?? If you had a product people were already forced to buy in batches regularly, would you really bother to try your best to improve it to the max?
That to me seems completely ridiculous. As tech improves it is easier to create extremely fine grained contaminant detectors. If the vaccine industry were not simply a mandatory / proprietary pharma model, there would be public listings giving in depth data about contaminants detected amid tens of thousands of tested vaccine vials, and you could simply have the pick of whichever variety of openly developed and patent-unencumbered vaccine you would like to choose. Unless this kind of model is adopted the quality will never significantly improve. It's an incredible amount of vendor lock in and a totally unworthy system for a serious public health issue and generally useful set of technologies. (and smash all science journal paywalls, demand open science and an end to all patents of critical technologies)
--hongpong.com
Sorry to drag social media into the fray again, but it may have undue influence. The poorest, most ignorant people don't use social media much. When the doctor, or some authority, tells them to get vaccinations, they obey.
But those steeped in social media see lots of opinions, lots of controversy, lots of fake news. When an authority tells them to get vaccinations, they think they know better.
'All's fair in love and war', they say. Raising children is a very emotional activity. Parents tend to be protective and sometimes paranoid about obscure threats to their children. Rationality is sometimes overlooked when they find urgent online pleas to avoid vaxxing.
I work with illiterate adults, helping them to be readers. They are very docile and will do what doctors tell them to do. The rest of us are too smart to fall for that blind obedience trap.
...omphaloskepsis often...
It seems like this is true. The problem with that is they don't bother to learn enough basic biology to truly understand how a persons immune system work. Has anyone every met a parent with a medical or a biology related degree who thinks vaccination is bad?
Educated in which disciplines? Biology/medicine/health sciences?
Well educated? Apparently not.
Everybody knows that conservatives are stupid and uneducated, so this study shows antivax sentiment to be a lefty phenomenon.
For extra fun, now let’s refine the study to give us results by type of education. Wanna bet that the antivaxers are not the ones with STEM degrees, but that such sentiment correlates highly with degrees in critical trans theory? Additionally, filter for academic culture: Harvard vs MIT, Berkeley vs Caltech.
If you don't get your kids vaccinated you should be required to pay for insurance that will pay out for medical care to anyone infected when your kid gets sick and passes on the disease.
"Parents Who Don't Vaccinate Kids Tend To Be Arrogant"
Too bad the kids won't live long enough to share said affluence and education.
Education != intelligence
Anyone can be educated but not everyone is intelligent.
This misinformation is coming from all sides. You have the lefty alt-health nuts, the Alex Jones crowd, the religious fundamentalists, high ranking government officials from both parties and demagogues from both parties.
... means are funny: "there are lies, damned lies, and statistics" :P
...vaccine does not produce autism, GMO does. That's why Monsanto is a company full of dicks.
Feels like it's an article to mix a previous event
https://www.vox.com/science-an...
With how "White people" are more prone to fake news
If the plebeians can't afford it, it must be superior! Just like I am! Oh, ho ho ho ho! /s
Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
Note the lack of argument. They cant even come up with a strawman for this one.
OMG! Every bad decision made by an American is Russian fault.
in later life
There are a lot of highly educated morons around. Some of them even have high intelligence. Does not matter. The problem is one of wisdom, in the sense of what to apply education and intelligence to. A lot of humans will just prefer their misconceptions even when they are educated end intelligent enough to easily verify what is actually true and what is not. The human tragedy at work: They could know better, but they _chose_ to not find out what is true.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
Damn, that hurts.
By themselves, yes, it's somewhere in the area of the Dunning-Kruger effect.
But the key factor here, is that there actually are people dumber than them. They are the top x% of people, intelligence-wise. But they still have a long way to go, to be actually wise (=intelligent + educated + experienced).
That's why Randall Munroe qualifies. He's certainly not a stupid person. He's probably in the top 3% of the smartest people in the USA. ... and often holds quite ridiculous views based on simply not thinking things through to the end, but half-assing it ... but because he's acting highly educated and saying things that are way above the audience's intelligence, he's seen as smart. Which gives him over-confidence that isn't actually warranted.
But he's still quite removed from being actually that smart. He often tries to discuss topics, that are way out of his league... e.g. the entire "what if" series
And Ricky Gervais is an example, because while that guy with the "perfectly round head" certainly talks silly things, he laughs at him as if he himself has eaten wisdom by the by the ladle. Even though his own views are... at best ... that of a pseudo-educated smartass Joe Sixpack. Full of socially conditioned beliefs that he never checked and whatever is the view of the "common man on the street". But he thinks he's way smarter because he has an "idiot" to laugh at. ... Any actually smart person, like Richard Feynman or Stephen Fry, could in theory laugh at him in the same way. ... Except they won't, because they're too smart and hence self-doubting to be arrogant dickheads.
no vaccines cause your kids to become upper middle class white college educated adults.
This surely is the low cost solution fiscal conservatives are looking for.
What are you even rambling about? What do self-brainwashed women in Facebook New Mom groups believing vaccines cause [insert disease here] have to do with libruls or being selective about which vaccines you want?
It's not the dumb fucks but the selfish assholes. Gotcha.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
At one point it's Salmon, and later it's Salman.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
if you keep shouting libtards loud enough you don't need an argument... or coherent speak patterns, all you need is hamberders and covfefe...
....and you're the definition of a partisan piece of shit. I don't give a fuck if they're conservative or liberal, anti-vaxxers are fucking idiots.... like you, only for a different reason. And no, they're not "almost all" liberals, only a stupid fucking idiot would say that when you have all these religious conservatives refusing to vaccinate their kids against HPV. But then, you are a partisan piece of shit.. so there's that.
Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
Years ago, I read a fictional story about how a common cold vaccination caused more horrific diseases. It turned out the common cold was the bodies way of combating other more terrifying diseases and with vaccinations, the body lost its weapon.
Sometimes I wonder if the story could be right regarding vaccination in general seeing how we are seeing more and more new and old diseases cropping up.
Apparently an unnamed top site owns Amazon.
My kid ha an autoimmune disorder which means herd immunity probably keeps him alive. The ignoramuses who do not vaccinate arenâ(TM)t just a threat to their own children. They threaten the lives of mine. Now, please explain to me again why itâ(TM)s none of my business
I'm waiting for Andrew Wakefield and Jenny McCarthy being classified as mass murders for the number of deaths that those two have causes for starting and perpetuating the Anti-Vax movements.
Show me someone in to the TOP 100, no, TOP 1,000, no, TOP 10,000 in their field, that has not been vacc. Show me this data, show me this data, you can't.
Vaccination manufacturers don't make data available available, or at least actuarial data that any insurance company would trust. Insurance companies will insure almost anything - a jewelry store in Vancouver, BC, pays insurance against more than some number of centimeters of snow falling in January, and if that happens, the insurance company refunds all their customers purchases from December (actually happened once). However, after our first-born had a major reaction as a child to a vaccination and needed an inhaler for a couple of years (luckily it cleared up, or so we think) for our second child I asked what the odds of such reaction. The doc was quick to tell me "one in a million or less". I asked whether the pharma company or any insurance company will insure me with those odds - I'd give them 2:1 on their money, $100 for $50M payoff, heck, I'd settle for lifetime healthcare paid by the pharma in case my kid has a reaction (lifetime value likely much less than $50M). Guess what, no takers. So I call bullshit on the number, and sorry, will not be using product pushed by doctors which will not provide me with real risk data. If the data was real, the pharma could make tons of money insuring against such reactions, and parents would be comforted that they are covered in case their kid ends up the "one in a million".
For those ready to mod this down, care to provide a source where parents can insure against vaccination side effects at the claimed 1:1,000,000 ratio of premium to claim benefit?
So you didn't even manage to read the post. That is bad form even for /.
Ahh yes... "Educated". Critical thinking not required.
Is as stupid as trump telling his intelligence heads he knows more than they do. Vaccination should be required except when allergic. Only reason that should be considered. You got an objection, then society shall ostracize you from ALL public interaction. You can stay in your hole and get uber eats delivered.
"They also appear to be the victims of a widespread misinformation campaign."
I call that bulls***. When a vaccine contains mercury, formaldehyde and other well-known dangerous substances, some which can cause death, smart people know to run, not walk the other way.
The CDC itself reports that those inoculated are contagious, but are the uninoculated spreading it? No, it's those who were inoculated.
And since when does the government have ANY authority to force its citizens to be vaccinated or receive their prescribed medical treatment?
They don't.
Do you get a smallpox vaccine? No, smallpox was eradicated.
Unless you are working in labs that maintain samples of smallpox for research, this is probably true. That said, if a new outbreak ever occurs somehow (e.g. cross-species transmission), then being able to rapidly ramp up those immunizations could be pretty important.
Do you get a chicken pox vaccine when you already had chicken pox? Probably not. The efficacy of having had chicken oox is better understood than the efficacy of the vaccine.
Actually, that's untrue. People who have previously been infected by chickenpox need a vaccine booster later in life. The chickenpox virus is never completely eliminated from the human body, and as a result, it can resurface in the form of shingles, a painful and debilitating condition that affects a million people per year in the United States alone. Given that the chickenpox vaccine was not approved for use in the U.S. until 1995, exactly zero percent of the main at-risk age group (elderly) were vaccinated as a kid, which is to say that (approximately) all cases of shingles occur in people who had chickenpox, not the vaccine. But periodic booster vaccination can prevent it from occurring/recurring.
Do you get your second dose of gardasil as a child? No, you get it later in life assuming you even want it or some guideline has not changed.
Huh? Like all vaccines, protection lasts for a period of time.
I would ask that you idiots please stop talking about vaccines as though they were some monolithic thing that everybody gets from big brother.
Vaccines aren't all the same, but they are pretty darn similar except for the virus itself. They confer an immunity to a particular virus and similar viruses for a period of time. They must periodically be supplemented by a booster if continued immunity is required, and mutation of viruses can result in less or no protection (e.g. influenza). The only questions you need to ask are:
That's it. There's really only a single factor to consider when deciding whether to be vaccinated. People who go to countries that have more viruses need more immunizations. People in the U.S. need fewer (but still more than none). And when groups of people refuse to get immunized, the herd immunity of the society they live in is reduced, and everyone is at greater risk of dying from what would otherwise be an entirely preventable disease.
Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.
Sure, that one way to look at it. But instead think about it this way: Almost HALF of the united states citizens voting in the last election picked an obviously stupid con man who we knew lied constantly and stiffed anyone he could. Whether that's education or intelligence, half of us are not capable of assessing obvious reality or controlling our emotions enough to vote in our own self-interests.
So above average education (at the 51% mark) means still pretty stupid in the United States, whether that's stupid in terms of intelligence or stupid in terms of education doesn't matter. At least half of Americans are stupid.
So sure, you can harp on the difference between intelligence and education, but you can also point out that "average education" has gotten pretty piss poor here. We should be able to hit people with enough education in grade school to give them the ability to think at such a base level. And we fail with at LEAST half.
After all, we don't know how many people voted against Trump for stupid reasons. It could be that more than half of people who voted for Hillary did so because they liked her teeth or her hair. So we might be 75% stupid in the US. Or even a higher percentage.
Maybe only people at AROUND average education are able to read at all. The group able to read but not able to read remotely critically might be a 30% wide swath centered around the 55% mark.
We should be looking at this and seeing a failing in our education system. But go ahead and assume people who reach roughly average education level are the dumbest folks, and that all geniuses have either PhD's or GEDs, no exceptions, if that's what floats your boat.
How's that education working out for them I wonder?
More affluent families tend to have women at home who can afford maids and cooks and have way too much time on their hands. Among other things they have oodles of time to contact mayors, principals, senators etc.. The also have time to read absurd books and magazines and watch the latest idiotic feel good shows on TV. What they get is directly opposite being educated and it implies a fairly weak mind to believe the nonsense. They also accept no responsibility for the deaths and horrors that they cause. The flaw in the system is that everyone has a right to an opinion yet no one has responsibility for the great harms done by their opinions. The lower class could be manipulated by Trump. This upper middle class falls victim to junk science. So if they get cancer they may just read the National Inquirer rather than rushing to an oncologist. And why not ? The National Inquirer seems to have a new cancer cure every fifteen minutes or so.
It's so weird that your'e such a faggoty, child-molesting, cowardly bitch who balls up in the fetal position and sucks his own dick while chanting, "make the bad man stop" instead of being a man and posting under your real name. Loser!
— gerald butler's impersonator
Our kids get some vaccines, but do not get others. Source: two parents working for largest pharmaceutical company, Scientist, Phd in biochemistry. As mentioned, some vaccines are time tested as such are ok to use. However, many vaccines is just a disgrace: we never vaccinate against flu (no evidence you will get the same strain), also, as an example, no need to vaccinate the newborns against hepatitis B (hepatitis B is a risk for sex workers, prison inmates, police). Gardasil is to encourage your daughter for the dick carousel....The bottom line, is that educated parents can navigate among the nuances of vaccination, however hardcore anti-vaxxers are plain idiots, just as the idiotic bureaucracy trying to shame all who do not comply with their unsophisticated vaccination schedules.
Perhaps more educated. Definitely not better educated.
You don't get to be the head of pediatric brain surgery at Johns Hopkins before you're freaking 40 by being Dr. Nick. He's a brilliant brain surgeon....but any other topic and Ben is dumb as a sack of hammers.
...cunts.
Maybe you should ask why human and animal DNA are even allowed in certain vaccinations, when you know full well that this can be dangerous to certain people. And why are aluminum adjuvants used when the CDC admits that they cause auto-immune diseases and issues in certain people.
Talk to the actual researchers before jumping to conclusions on how safe vaccines are.
And oh yes, you do need some shots, but why do kids now get way more vaccinations than anyone did 40 or 50 years ago?
General statement, ironic as is Affluent parents are probably Vaccinated.
I am guessing some of the more educated people are more likely to overthink things, and fall into the trap that "I am smart, I know better slash I can work things out for myself". Combine a solid lack of knowledge regarding how disease spreads, how immunity works, herd immunity and statistics - with an unhealthy dose of scepticism regarding how "the man" is trying to get you to put things in your bloodstream that you don't know what contains - plus the entirely failed statistics of "some random child somewhere in America had a vaccine and got sick" combined with a lack of understanding of causality - and you get those anti-vaxxers. Plus there is the idea that being subjected to a disease somehow makes your immune system "stronger".
So you take a cocktail of misunderstandings how the world works, put that in a container (brain) which totally overestimates its own abilities to figure out things in a complex world - and voila, out comes an idiot decision.
Plus there may also be an unhealthy dose of "we are smart people, we have good hygiene, we have strong genes ... my children don't need vaccines (and thus implicitly: like those other filthy kids)".
Truly smart people understand how little they know and why. I wouldn't say those anti-vaxxers are very educated people. They have lots of credits, yes. But their understanding of the world is fundamentally flawed.
Because 3% being affected is better then then the alternative of letting the desease go rampant and affect everybody to a much greater degree , even unto permenent debilitation, or even death. including the 3% that we're being affected adversely by the vaccine. It's still better then without it. But if rich white Americans want to help stamp out their culture, all I can say is thank you very much. It's about time they'll help clean up your mess.
But so do the precious entitled white middle class kids of anti-vaxx parents who also want a free ride on herd immunity.
Why do we have more vaccines than we did 30-40 years ago?
Is this a serious question or did the pox eat your brains?
It's called medical progress...
That's like asking, hey why don't we use leeches anymore??
(I am aware they are still used for very specific applications today.)
Vaccinations should not be mandatory but self-injecting vaccines should be available for same day delivery on Amazon prime.
--- Liberty in our Lifetime
So, of course, having children with an outlier condition entitles you to demand that the rest of the world rearrange itself to accommodate their specialness.
I'll bet you're an entitled liberal. Amirite?
More educated and affluent parents have had plenty of exposure to science and scientists, likely have at least some education in science, and in fact, may well be scientists themselves.
Therefore, they're well familiar with the fact that science, for all it's benefits, is also a playground for fraudsters and charlatans, countless "peer reviewed" studies are in fact useless, and that scientists, like everyone else, may have their own agendas and are not necessarily any more honest than your typical used car salesman.
In other words, they're smart enough to understand, "Scientists say so!" isn't necessarily the gold standard for veracity, and their chances of doing the right thing by their children is probably at least as good by ascertaining the facts as best they can, and making an independent and informed judgement as it is by blindly following the pronouncements of authorities of dubious integrity, and who's "informed scientific opinion" has a way of shifting with the political winds.
In other words, it comes down to trust and integrity. Are you better off forming your own conclusions, or do you want to trust the judgement of "experts" who have a history of having sold us plenty of bills of goods in the past? Given that the scientific community long ago forfeited their objectivity and integrity, if they ever had any, accepting anything on the pretext of "Scientists say so!" is absurd. Sure, it may be on the level, but then again, maybe not so much. Simply accepting something as true because a scientist said it is ridiculous.
Note that I say this as someone who works in a research laboratory with plenty of scientists, including several who have won Nobel prizes. I can guarantee that scientists aren't any less prejudiced and irrational than the rest of the human race. It's high time for the world to get used to the reality that while official science is often a useful source of information and insights, it's not exactly the gospel, and has on no small number of occasions to been demonstrated to be flat-out wrong. At best, it's merely the best interpretation of information available at present, and too often it's not even that. And it's always subject to revision.
Nowhere is it written that scientists current interpretation of reality is necessarily any better than anyone else's. Nor should it be, because it isn't. And that's something that these educated and affluent parents, having been exposed to scientists and scientists, understand perfectly well. Your layman who has been conditioned all his life to regard scientists as high priests and science as gospel, well, not so much.
Firstly, chickenpox is a mild disease, especially for children. There's no need for paranoia. Regarding shingles, the problem with the chicken pox vaccine is that it destroys the NATURAL "herd" immunity. Previously parents and grandparents would be re-exposed and get natural boosters.
Natural immunity is ALWAYS better than induced immunity. There are two types of T cells. T1 and T2. You need a balance of both to have a good immune response. Almost all vaccines only stimulate the T2 system, making "anti-bodies". There's a reason why so many kids these
days have auto-immune diseases; it's because their immune system is unbalanced and out of wack, overstimmed.
There is also the issue of "antigenic original sin".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Original_antigenic_sin
I quote:
"the body's immune system to preferentially utilize immunological memory based on a previous infection when a second slightly different version of that foreign entity (e.g. a virus or bacterium) is encountered. This leaves the immune system "trapped" by the first response it has made to each antigen, and unable to mount potentially more effective responses during subsequent infections. The phenomenon of original antigenic sin has been described in relation to influenza virus, dengue fever, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and to several other viruses."
Then there is Biblical Original Sin, humans thinking that they can play god. The same thing happened at the Tower of Babel. The body is complex. The environment is complex. It is complete hubris to think that we can wipe out all pathogens. The fact is that our DNA can even rarely benefit from appropriating DNA from pathogens! It's a system of life. And, besides, look at what overuse of antibiotics has done; it's led to a class of superbugs which are almost impossible to defeat.
There are sound religious, scientific, and social reasons to be skeptical of vaccines. To be blind to this is to be blind to reality. The vast majority of slashdotter's these days are mindless drones who obviously show signs of vaccine damage in their inability to think for themselves.
Aconite is well-known to modern medicine. Given it's toxicity, it's not used for medicinal purposes in the West.
Vaccines are drugs. Are we suppose to believe these drugs are perfect?
If so, why are the pharma corporations legally immune from any harm caused by vaccines?
This should be a red flag for Pro-vaxxers.
BTW there is no evidence that vaccines cause herd immunity.
They may be "well-educated" but certainly not regarding vaccinations...
Aconite is well-known to modern medicine. Given it's toxicity, it's not used for medicinal purposes in the West.
Yes, the therapeutic dose is not far from the toxic dose. But using the patches, it becomes pretty difficult to poison yourself.
Bear in mind, for myself, almost any amount of opioids are toxic. This represents a real problem for me with long term pain management.
I suppose there is always the 45 caliber pain killer if it gets to be too much. That one always works.
The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
And why are we supposed to care?
Does not count anymore.
Slashdot is full of pharma trolls, or people who have been gaslit to think they know all about vaccines.
I came here to see all the pro-vaccine comments modded up, and any dissent to be mocked and modded down.
Was not disappointed.
What's this got to do with Liberals and Conservatives? Vaccine conspiracy nonsense is common across both Poles and instead tends to follow a pattern wjwre the centre is more pro vax and the heavily polarised folks more likely to harbor vaccine conspiracy theories.
Ie people that rant about liberals being the source of all woes, or conservstives being the source of all woes. Folks like you
Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
This isn't at all surprising. We've conflated the ability to study text and memorize facts for the purposes of a degree with actual intelligence and applauded degree holding idiots for far too long. This is why every 20-something with a gender studies degree also believes they're an expert in politics, international trade, finance, science, etc. They go on youtube or some forum filled with like-minded individuals and find a litany of "facts" that are nothing but non-causal correlations, which they then proceed to repeat endlessly to anyone who'll listen as though they represent actual science; spreading ignorance on the basis of nothing but their own falsely inflated sense of intelligence and bolstered by the popular opinion that if they have some degree, any degree, they must actually be intelligent. Generations of students being taught to remember answers instead of how to discover them coming home to roost.
So the anti-vaccinators claim that vaccines cause autism. Well, now that we have several decades of the anti-vax movement, a simple test would be to see what rates of autism exist among them. That would either prove or disprove their claims. Of course, if it disproves them, some of them will still believe, but maybe some of them will leave the movement and others might not join.
Ridiculous. Parentes are better educated but their children are helping to bring old diseases back into the mass population.
Better educated and stupid!
If you want to be better educated, white, and earn a higher income, then you should not vacciniate your children. Scientist finally delivered the proof.