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  3. Should parents who refuse childhood vaccines be liable if their choice harms someone else’s kid?

Should parents who refuse childhood vaccines be liable if their choice harms someone else’s kid?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Canada
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  • L leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com

    Parents who don’t vaccinate their children without a good medical reason should be treated as any other parent who intentionally abuses, harms, mistreats, or abandons their children, simple as that.

    If they harm other people on top of that, then that should probably count as attempted murder plus aggravated assault and battery, or some equivalent.

    It’s a shame that rampant wilful idiocy with intent to cause harm and mayhem isn’t a criminal offence, though, because they should also be charged with that.

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    voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
    wrote last edited by
    #57

    Completely agree. I said more in my own comment, but if you’re interested, here’s the relevant criminal code that backs up what you’re saying; https://www.criminalnotebook.ca/index.php/Failing_to_Provide_the_Necessaries_of_Life_(Offence)

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    • Y yezzey@lemmy.ca

      I don’t disagree with this mindset, but I do want to say that it should be on the plaintiff to prove your child caused the problem rather than the defendant to prove they did not. Proving a negative is damn near impossible in court.

      If your choices raise everyone else’s risk, it’s fair that you carry some of the burden. Courts deal in probability every day.

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      voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
      wrote last edited by
      #58

      No, we can’t start throwing out burden of proof when it suits us.

      I’ve argued elsewhere in this thread that the solution is to obligate parents to provide vaccinations, just like they’re obligated to provide food, water, clothing, shelter, etc. This is the basic legal duty of care that all parents have towards their children, and it should extend to vaccines. This is both a logical application of existing law - rather than requiring new law - and incredibly simple to prove in court. If parents are obligated to vaccinate their kids, all a cop or social worker has to do is ask for the proof of vaccination. There’s no balance of proof to consider, and no knotty problems of untangling exactly how someone else’s kid got sick.

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      • B bastion@feddit.nl

        Nah. It’s not concerning that otherwise intelligent people can’t figure out how to deal with their own lives without resorting to controlling others.

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        howrar@lemmy.ca
        wrote last edited by
        #59

        Anyone have tips on how to not get stabbed without forcing other people to stop stabbing?

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        • trickdacy@lemmy.worldT trickdacy@lemmy.world

          Yeah, honestly you are an anti-vaxxer if your personal feelings (or crackpot theories) negatively affect your perception of vaccine science even slightly. What you’re expressing here is an idea that has killed countless people and it will only get worse. Everyone should thank you for bringing back measles though, because your valiant freedom fighting “helped” us in that way.

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          bastion@feddit.nl
          wrote last edited by
          #60

          Crackpot theories… …like… … how evolution works? …or how regressive evolution works?

          Diseases have killed countless people, and we have multiple vectors (and should have multiple vectors) for addressing them.

          We have technology, as in vaccines. This is a good thing.

          We have social behaviors including social pressure (which is, unfortunately, often compulsive and not well-aimed by the people that exercise it, but such is life).

          We have individual immunity, and the direct biological pressure for health and general genetic robustness, which is also a good thing, even though it kills some of us.

          the cool thing is, we’re now at a point where there are lots of anti-vaxxers who are totally willing to throw their lives away for the benefit of the species. …and, their surviving genetic lines and the rest of the species, as their children interbreed with the rest of humanity, will be better off for it. That’s true, whether you like it or not. It’s also true that forcing vaccination rather than simply providing and incentivizing vaccination is a terribly, terribly flawed strategy which causes far more issues than it fixes.

          I understand that you’re making social-pressure arguments, and that they are valid in the context you’re in. But they aren’t the end-all be-all, and they’re not fundamentally scientific (or even logical) just because you’re trying to support science by using them.

          I also know this whole conversation brings up tons of uncomfortable topics, for which I’ll probably get yelled at. I just don’t care, because being more forceful about an argument, or getting the last word, really has no bearing on the truth of that word.

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          • Y yezzey@lemmy.ca

            Canada just lost its measles-free status. So here’s the question…

            If an unvaccinated child spreads measles to someone else’s kid, why shouldn’t the parents be liable in small-claims court?

            I’m not talking about criminal charges, just basic responsibility. If your choice creates the risk you should have to prove you weren’t the reason someone else’s child got sick.

            Is that unreasonable?

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            anonymous111@lemmy.world
            wrote last edited by
            #61

            I think there are a few issues:

            1. How do you prove kid A gave kid B measels?

            2. Why isn’t kid B vaccinated? Because they don’t need to be, group immunity. Well that is no longer true with anti vax so…

            3. Kid B then gives kid C measels, so kid B’s parents are now liable.

            4. Your in small claims court. You have to prove damages. So you’re going for loss of earning for an adult looking after the kid + pain and suffering. Is that payout going to be worth filing papers, legal advice etc.

            You’d be better passing a law to mandate vaccines, but that won’t be politically viable.

            Just my thoughts - am not Canadian.

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            • V voroxpete@sh.itjust.works

              Completely agree. I said more in my own comment, but if you’re interested, here’s the relevant criminal code that backs up what you’re saying; https://www.criminalnotebook.ca/index.php/Failing_to_Provide_the_Necessaries_of_Life_(Offence)

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              leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com
              wrote last edited by
              #62

              Failing to Provide the Necessaries of Life

              I’m not fluent in legalese, but that seems about right, yes.

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              • D dubyakay@lemmy.ca

                To partake in society you have to accept societal contracts. One such contract is to not be a dick to others. If you don’t vaccinate yourself against certain things, you are liable for spreading the disease. And thus you are being a dick. And thus you break the contract.

                If you excuse yourself from society going forward though, I see no problem with your stance.

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                bastion@feddit.nl
                wrote last edited by
                #63

                I reject societal contracts that do not support individual and body sovereignty. Of course, you can do with that as you will, because… …well… …sovereignty. Just know that if you take body sovereignty from people in one area, you empower the government to make decisions about your body, as well.

                …and as we all have seen, the benevolence of the government is largely dependent on what party is in power, and what societal dynamics are in play. it’s… …unreliable, at best.

                I literally called it, the day Democrats started pushing forced vaccinations, that the Republicans would go for reversal of abortion law. …and they fucking did, and they fucking succeeded in many ways, and that is direct consequence of permitting the government to violate body sovereignty, even when the voiced arguments do not pertain to it.

                So, you can have your contiguous society, with forced social contracts rather than ones people actually are willing to agree to. …and you’ll also have the consequences, whether or not you can cognize how bad that will be right now.

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                • Y yezzey@lemmy.ca

                  Kids shouldn’t be getting measles in the first place. No measles, no problems you described. No anger here.

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                  Rodsthencones
                  wrote last edited by
                  #64

                  Bacteria and viruses spread. It’s what they do. We need a way to adapt to them. Vaccines are good, being healthy probably helps more. What we need is real food, housing and health care and education. Instead we have arguments about vaccines. Sad really.

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                  • M mojomcjojo@lemmy.world

                    Felony murder, in my opinion.

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                    RodgeGrabTheCat 🇨🇦🏴‍☠️
                    wrote last edited by
                    #65

                    Even if the child dies, withholding a vaccine would have to be made illegal. You need to be committing a felony first, someone dies, then get charged with felony murder.

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                    • F falschgeldfurkan@lemmy.world

                      Thanks, appreciate the write-up! I’m just wondering that myself, my question wasn’t meant as an anti-vax post.

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                      bassgirl09@lemmy.world
                      wrote last edited by
                      #66

                      You’re welcome! 🙂

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                      • Y yezzey@lemmy.ca

                        We are not litigious as Canadians, but maybe we should be in this aspect.

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                        savethetuahawk@lemmy.ca
                        wrote last edited by
                        #67

                        Because we have loser pays laws for civil suits.

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