That is just not true. The severity of most diseases is hugely exaggerated by the W.H.O. and the CDC. There is much to say on this topic, so I will only bring up a few points.
- First and foremost, medicine should ALWAYS be individualized. The parents, not the government, are the ones making the decisions for their children. Furthermore, it is unethical to mandate any vaccine, since it is well-documented that vaccines do injure people and do cause death to some extent. It is unethical to force someone to be injected with a substance that might kill or maim them, no matter the "benefits" to society.
Read more- If vaccines actually worked (protected an individual against a disease by tricking the body into creating antibodies), why would an unvaccinated person pose a risk to a vaccinated person?
- Studies comparing fully unvaccinated children and vaccinated children show that unvaccinated children are generally much healthier than vaccinated children and suffer from fewer chronic illnesses.
- Natural infection of a disease can actually benefit a child. Studies support this. Natural measles infection can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease, among other things. Natural chickenpox infection provides protection against shingles as an adult. In developed countries where people have clean living conditions and are not suffering from things like malnutrition, measles and chickenpox are not major diseases.
- Your kids could also be seriously injured by vaccines. And yes, there is evidence that vaccines can cause autism. It is a lot to explain at the moment.
- Many vaccines are not safety tested against real placebos.
- The vaccine manufacturers have no accountability. They are not held liable for any injuries or deaths their products may cause.
- There is a lot of evidence that vaccines do not work, and if they do, they can make the person more susceptible to other diseases.
Vaccination should always be up to the individual (or the parent of the child, in this case).