Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Complete the recommendations listed in the study you are referencing. This should never end - there should always be people looking into better ways of doing things. If further research falls flat, and vaccination rates continue to drop, eventually I would support a more authoritarian approach. Doing it now is not warranted.
This is somewhat more reasonable, but it is astounding how much it takes to drag even this clarification out of you. How much further research are we talking about, and what if the vaccination rate and the measles rate worsen significantly in the meantime?
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And who are these folks that are "taking a look to see if something will work better"? Who is? What are they looking into? Where did you learn about this? Did I miss it in one of RD's links? If so it ought to be very easy for you to point out instead of just making vague allusions to.
Bob. Oh yeah, and Jim.
Yes, somehow it's unreasonable of me to challenge vague assertions of unspecified people allegedly doing something or other. Make sure you get that emoticon out there, somehow or other it makes your silly response more convincing.
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You're again suggesting we should just give up because it's too hard.
Yes, I am. The evidence indicates that from a cost/benefit standpoint it is indeed too hard to convince people who are obstinately opposed to vaccinations that they are a good idea. So what?
No, it doesn't. It says current efforts don't appear to be working. Further study is needed.
And in the meantime we are now having outbreaks of a formerly-eradicated disease. Further study takes time and money; if we're going to invest that time and money we ought to at least make some effort to explore the feasibility of other methods besides additional education as well - no study has been done on that yet.
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This is not a sports competition or SEAL qualifications; do you think you're going to shame people into agreeing with you with this bullshit? Complaining that other people are saying something is "too hard" is meaningless. From a public policy standpoint, when something is too hard - that is, the benefit does not outweigh the cost, it is impractical, it is counter productive - you **** quit doing it.
That hasn't been shown.
It needs to be shown that ineffective or counterproductive aspects of public policy should be discontinued or changed? What do you want done with your tax dollars?
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"Not likely" is in dispute. On everything else we agree.
If "not likely" is in dispute, on what basis do you think more or better education is likely to work? "Likely" would be the position that disputes "not likely" would it not? Yes, more study is needed, but
all the study so far gives us no reason to dispute that.
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Shuyung didn't ask me a question, and I'm not refuting anything he said, specifically. I'm simply echoing the conclusions of the study cited - more research is needed. Shuyung, is there something you need a response to?
You weren't echoing the study until the beginning of your latest post. Up to that point you were simply insisting that more and better PR was needed and that doing otherwise was lazy, whining about "rights" and that people needed to just "make it work". You've been slowly sliding the goalposts over to this position for 2 pages now.
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You specifically have not addressed the fact that we have vaccination rates in some respects lower than some third world countries despite generally better education and readily, publicly available explanations of what's in vaccines and free and appropriate public education that explains to children how they work.
Considering I'm not arguing anything relating to this, and RD already covered this, why do I need to address this?
Because you earlier indicated that:
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The average person does not know what's in the substance being injected into them or their kids, and what it does to them. Education and outreach is key.
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Anti-vaxxers are concerned about the chemical makeup of what is being put into their children.
These are your words, and this general sentiment, that anti-vaxxers are simply uninformed and need to be informed better appear to form the underpinning of your position.
Yet this has been shown to be false. Sure, we can do "more study", but we cannot base that study on the premise that people are simply uninformed - the evidence indicates that they are uninformed because they want to be, not becuase of a lack of information, so if you are calling for more study you are doing so on the wrong basis, and if actually implemented that would probably lead to the wrong studies being done.
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So what?
So why should we think it is? Ok, more study is needed, but the study already done doesn't give us any reason for optimism. The empirical evidence from non-study sources gives us even less cause.
We shouldn't just go out and start forcibly injecting people but it is not out of line to start considering what such a mandate might look like and addressing the practical problems it undoubtedly would have. Then it could be compared on a cost-benefit basis to the merits of additional education or mixing the two approaches, or possibly other options that have not yet been discussed.
You know, like rational people, rather than just rejecting ideas out of hand as "lazy".