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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Wed Feb 4, 2015, 08:44 AM Feb 2015

The GOP’s Embrace of Anti-Vaxxers Reveals the Craziness Gap in American Politics

http://www.thenation.com/blog/196857/gops-embrace-anti-vaxxers-reveals-craziness-gap-american-politics



It is grotesque that, in the midst of the current measles outbreak, some leading Republicans are humoring vaccine denialists, but it is not surprising. It is, rather, a near-perfect illustration of the craziness gap in American politics. Vaccine skepticism is one of those issues, like 9/11 Trutherism, where parts of the fringe right and fringe left, each driven by their own distinct fears about authority, curve around and meet each other. Yet only the fringe right finds indulgence among mainstream politicians.

There is a popular perception that vaccine refusal is driven by the sort of affluent, vaguely left-wing parents satirized by the Los Feliz Day Care Twitter feed. (“Vax or no vax, none of our kids had measles, and we only went to Disneyland to protest commercialism and the anthropomorphization of animals.”) But susceptibility to misinformation about vaccines is less about politics than about paranoia, and paranoia, whether towards Big Pharma or big government, operates in many different cultural milieus. A recent paper by Yale Law School’s Dan M. Kahan found that perception of “vaccine risks displayed only a small relationship with left-right political outlooks,” though it is slightly more common on the right. “Respondents formed more negative assessments of the risk and benefits of childhood vaccines as they became more conservative and identified more strongly with the Republican Party,” it said.

A minimally responsible Republican Party would not pander to this sort of thing. But that, of course, is not what we have. Instead, we have Chris Christie answering a question about measles immunization by saying that parents “need to have some measure of choice,” and that “not every vaccine is created equal, and not every disease type is as great a public health threat as others.” (After an uproar in the media, he backed away from this formulation, calling the scientific support for vaccination “pretty indisputable.”)

Rand Paul, meanwhile, described vaccine rejection as an “issue of freedom.” On CNBC, he promoted the long-discredited link between vaccines and autism: “I have heard of many tragic cases of walking, talking normal children who wound up with profound mental disorders after vaccines.”
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The GOP’s Embrace of Anti-Vaxxers Reveals the Craziness Gap in American Politics (Original Post) xchrom Feb 2015 OP
It used to be a Republican meme to beat exboyfil Feb 2015 #1
I'd also caution Democrats Android3.14 Feb 2015 #2

exboyfil

(17,865 posts)
1. It used to be a Republican meme to beat
Wed Feb 4, 2015, 09:25 AM
Feb 2015

up liberals because of their anti-vax sentiment as cover for denying AGW. Well they have added this issue to their portfolio now.

One thing I would be careful of is unilaterally saying that vaccines are always good. We have had problems with vaccines in the past, and we will probably have them in the future (just like with any medical procedure or drug). Still it boggles the mind that in a modern society that vaccines proven safe for generations are being avoided. It really is akin to not quarantining someone with a communicable disease. Both involve sacrificing some of the rights of the individual for the the collective rights of the whole.

 

Android3.14

(5,402 posts)
2. I'd also caution Democrats
Wed Feb 4, 2015, 09:46 AM
Feb 2015

Militant Democratic Party head explosions demanding we round up anti-vaxxers, remove their children and imprison the parents will be a strategic mistake in the coming elections.

Coddling these anti-vaxxer ignoramuses is one thing. Advocating we treat them like Jewish people in pre-war Europe is something else entirely and a strategy bound to backfire.

Reward those who vaccinate. Require those who do not to pay a fine.

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