Anti-vaxxers reportedly thrashing science in at least three states
DOI: 10.1063/PT.5.8109
Earlier this year, journalists and pundits across the political spectrum pounded vaccine antiscience. As reported
Consider North Carolina, where journalists and others expressed hopes last month for a bill that, as a Charlotte Observer editorial
When state Sen. Jeff Tarte … and two colleagues filed a bill last month to change state vaccination policy, they thought they would initiate a needed conversation about public health concerns.
Wrong. Instead, they unleashed the fury of the anti-vaxxer movement. It forced them to withdraw the bill last week. Good intentions were “lost in the noise,” Tarte said.
The proposal would have required children to receive vaccinations before enrolling in school and removed religious exemptions. Maybe that was going a bit too far, but Tarte said it was an effort to be proactive and possibly head off outbreaks of measles and other diseases as the number of unvaccinated children in North Carolina ticks up.
Opponents overwhelmed the senators with claims that vaccines contain poisons, the threat of diseases is overstated and God is against vaccinations. Tarte concluded it was impossible to have reasonable discussions on the subject. Good try, though.
On the opposite US coast, a San Jose Mercury News article
At the Los Angeles Daily News, the opinion editors are using strong language
It’s no exaggeration to point out that the sadly misguided anti-vaccine groups such as the California-based Million Mamas Movement have more in common with the Taliban and other reactionary groups worldwide than they do with medical common sense. The Taliban are thwarting the once very nearly successful effort to eradicate polio from the planet with conspiracy theories about evil Western ways; the parents who buy into the anti-vaccine propaganda here are doing the same thing with other diseases.
If you set aside places where the Taliban operates, are things more sensible overseas? On 7 April, the international science-news clearinghouse SciDev.Net
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Steven T. Corneliussen, a media analyst for the American Institute of Physics, monitors three national newspapers, the weeklies Nature and Science, and occasionally other publications. He has published op-eds in the Washington Post and other newspapers, has written for NASA’s history program, and is a science writer at a particle-accelerator laboratory.