News and commentary on Religion, especially Southern religion.
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Friday, October 30, 2009
Monday, October 19, 2009
Epidemic fear of flu vaccines endangers all

Amy Wallace at Wired Magazine writes:
This isn’t a religious dispute, like the debate over creationism and intelligent design. It’s a challenge to traditional science that crosses party, class, and religious lines. It is partly a reaction to Big Pharma’s blunders and PR missteps, from Vioxx to illegal marketing ploys, which have encouraged a distrust of experts. It is also, ironically, a product of the era of instant communication and easy access to information. The doubters and deniers are empowered by the Internet (online, nobody knows you’re not a doctor) and helped by the mainstream media, which has an interest in pumping up bad science to create a “debate” where there should be none.
Sanity has yet to prevail and bootless anti-vaccine arguments are still being given undeserved credence. As a result, the necessary change is likely to have a high price. Surgeon/scientist Orac at ScienceBlogs writes:
My prediction is that a lot of children will have to die before the anti-vaccine movement looses its influence. Hundreds. Thousands. Tens of thousands, even. We have a short memory as a society. A mere 60 years ago, people lived in fear of polio. Every summer, in various parts of the country, swimming pools would be shut down based on its appearance. Children were condemned to iron lungs. Thanks to the polio vaccine, that all came to an end. Even more recently, a mere 20 years ago, Haemophilus influenza B was wreaking havoc among children [and vaccines put an end to that].
. . .
As I've said, we have a very short memory. Deadly microbes taught us a deadly lesson over hundreds of years, until we learned how to keep them at bay with vaccines. I fear we will receive a refresher course on how deadly they can be, courtesy of Jenny McCarthyand her allies.
Read the Wired articles here.
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Scared to death of the swine flu vaccine?
Epidemiologist Tara C. Smith gently explains the wisdom of her decision to get swine flue vaccinations for her children. Blogging at Aetiology, she's clear, accurate, devoid of pompous condescension and rich in links to additional information.
Jon Stewart gets the fundamentals right as well, although we don't offer him as a substitute for Aetiology's scientific detail:
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c | Doubt Break '09 | ||
www.thedailyshow.com | ||||
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Eleven more children died of H1N1 last week. There is a single bottom line for the community - with appropriate vaccination, fewer will die and more will live to grow up.
There is going to be far more grief because there are vaccine production problems, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Saturday:
Adding to the seriousness of the situation, manufacturing problems have delayed production of the H1N1 vaccine. Instead of reaching a goal of 40 million doses by the end of October, fewer than 30 million doses will be available, Dr. Anne Schuchat, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said during an afternoon press conference
Look here for a vaccination site.
Don't give up.