TheRiov wrote:
Taskiss wrote:
There's no threat from folks that aren't sick, no matter how you spin it. None. Zero. Your freaking imagination is where the threat lies, and when you have to apply hypotheticals to turn reality into something resembling the point of your argument, you've failed miserably. And make no mistake, you've failed miserably.
AH you mean like... say ... a carrier of a disease who isn't 'sick'? Or someone who is HIV positive but asymptomatic?
Please go babble your uneducated, uninformed drivel somewhere else. You don't actually understand any of this, as demonstrated by your repeated, factually untrue, statements. There are no hypotheticals here. ALL of the diseases we immunize against are because of ACTUAL, REAL, Historical diseases that swept through the population. You don't know the history of these diseases, and their historical effect on the population.
Vaccines save lives. They prevent epidemics. They dramatically decrease the rate of viral mutation and the chance that a virus could develop a new vector for transmission.
Flu vaccine? The single most deadly pandemic, the Spanish Flu during 1918 killed between 20 and 100 MILLION People worldwide, and approximately 1 billion humans contracted it (1/2 the worlds population at the time).
I say again. THIS. IS. NOT. HYPOTHETICAL. Your uneducated attempts to characterize it as such is only evidence of your ignorance. No vaccine is 100% effective. So even those who do get vaccines are at risk from those who have not received them should a disease enter the population.... like they always do.
There are SOME arguments against vaccination that are sound. You're making none of them, and instead inventing 'facts' to justify your position.
I've got no beef against vaccinations and agree that they save lives. Perhaps you haven't read my first post?
Quote:
There's no threat from folks that aren't sick
All that spin, though, and you still haven't touched that.
There are going to be folks that disagree with you about giving drugs to a healthy kid, and there may be SOME arguments that are sound, but yours aren't. You, being you, see the benefits of herd immunity as being better. It's only better for society for everyone to get vaccinated. Some folks see the benefits to the individual by not vaccinating as being better and you really can't argue, 'cause strictly for the individual, they are.
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/imz-manager ... hptr13.pdfQuote:
As in Hardin’s common, the very existence of this common leads to tension between the best interests of the individual and those of the community. Increased immunization rates result in significantly decreased risk for disease. Although no remaining unimmunized individual can be said to be free of risk from the infectious disease, the herd effect generated from high immunization rates significantly reduces the risk for disease for those individuals. Additional benefit is conferred on the unimmuni zed person because avoidance of the vaccine avoids the risk for any adverse reactions associated with the vaccine. As disease rates drop, the risks associated with the vaccine come even more to the fore, providing further incentive to avoid immunization. Thus, when an individual in this common chooses to go unimmunized, it only minimally increases the risk of illness for that individual, while conferring on that person the benefit of avoiding the risk of vaccine- induced side effects.
Bottom line - Jacobson v. Massachusetts. The state can't forcibly vaccinate folks.