Hmmm... Seriously?
Prof Helfand is certainly a very bright man. When this headline showed up on the screen, the first thought was "Professor Helfand did not write that headline. It is typical clickbait."
But then the article made the point (in bold below) and the only thought is... Seriously?
Suggesting that ELIMINATING a religious freedom BOLSTERS NY's commitment to religious liberty is an incredible fallacy.
Let's get to the other point, though. What are the dangers of the Measles outbreak? That people will get the measles and get lifelong immunity? Is it possible that the measles vaccine doesn't work that well, which is why we're seeing so many adults - thought to be immune! - getting it?
The "dangers of the measles outbreak" stem from the grim reality that people who think they're protected based on having multiple injections, multiple doses (more to come, I promise!) are still fearful that they're not protected! Why else would they view the unvaccinated as the enemy of the state? Could it be because vaccine-strain measles is what's going around, and you realize the pharmaceutical companies have pulled a fast one on you, giving you a product that is NOT guaranteed "Safe and Effective?"
As for the Religious Exemption - I doubt Professor Helfand, who is a very knowledgeable Jew - has looked into it. I am sure he does not know much about vaccines, and the concerns those who do not buy into vaccines have shared. See here: https://jewishvaccinestories.blogspot.com/2019/05/fear-v-fear.html
Keep the legaleze. The facts are that NY has now passed a law that says hundreds if not thousands of Jewish kids can't get an education in private schools unless they get injected with a pharmaceutical product.
And other Jews are cheering, because they think those Jews are a. stupid, b, evil, c. immature, and d. have chosen to take themselves out of the Jewish community.
Vaccines have become the measure of acceptance in the Orthodox Jewish community. I see. When did that happen? (It must have been in the Torah delivered by Merck at Mount CDC)
SERIOUSLY??
https://www.jewishpress.com/news/us-news/ny/doing-away-with-the-religious-exemption-will-help-protect-religious-freedom/2019/06/19/
But then the article made the point (in bold below) and the only thought is... Seriously?
Suggesting that ELIMINATING a religious freedom BOLSTERS NY's commitment to religious liberty is an incredible fallacy.
Let's get to the other point, though. What are the dangers of the Measles outbreak? That people will get the measles and get lifelong immunity? Is it possible that the measles vaccine doesn't work that well, which is why we're seeing so many adults - thought to be immune! - getting it?
The "dangers of the measles outbreak" stem from the grim reality that people who think they're protected based on having multiple injections, multiple doses (more to come, I promise!) are still fearful that they're not protected! Why else would they view the unvaccinated as the enemy of the state? Could it be because vaccine-strain measles is what's going around, and you realize the pharmaceutical companies have pulled a fast one on you, giving you a product that is NOT guaranteed "Safe and Effective?"
As for the Religious Exemption - I doubt Professor Helfand, who is a very knowledgeable Jew - has looked into it. I am sure he does not know much about vaccines, and the concerns those who do not buy into vaccines have shared. See here: https://jewishvaccinestories.blogspot.com/2019/05/fear-v-fear.html
Keep the legaleze. The facts are that NY has now passed a law that says hundreds if not thousands of Jewish kids can't get an education in private schools unless they get injected with a pharmaceutical product.
And other Jews are cheering, because they think those Jews are a. stupid, b, evil, c. immature, and d. have chosen to take themselves out of the Jewish community.
Vaccines have become the measure of acceptance in the Orthodox Jewish community. I see. When did that happen? (It must have been in the Torah delivered by Merck at Mount CDC)
SERIOUSLY??
https://www.jewishpress.com/news/us-news/ny/doing-away-with-the-religious-exemption-will-help-protect-religious-freedom/2019/06/19/
Doing Away With The Religious Exemption Will Help
Protect Religious Freedom
By
-
17 Sivan 5779 – June 19, 2019
Last
week New York State eliminated the religious exemption for vaccines. The bill means
that the New York law requiring parents to vaccinate children against a range
of dangerous diseases – and prohibiting children from being admitted to school
without those vaccinations – no longer has a provision that exempts parents
from doing so because of a religious objection.
The
religious exemption provision had come under fire in light of the recent
measles outbreak; according to the Center for Disease Control,
there have been over 1,000 measles cases reported in the United States this
year, with outbreaks persisting in both New York City as well as in Rockland
county. This ongoing public health emergency, combined with reports of the
presence of a persistent, if quite small, minority within the Orthodox Jewish
community advocating against vaccination, led to increased pressure and urgency
to eliminate the Public Health Code’s grant of a religious exemption from
vaccinations.
Let me
be clear: the elimination of the religious exemption from vaccination should be
celebrated unequivocally. First, it represents a vital safeguard
against the dangers of the measles outbreak. Second, and somewhat
counterintuitively, it also bolsters New York’s commitment to religious
liberty.
Legal
protections from religious liberty come in two categories. The first, like the
religious exemption to vaccines, are narrow statutory carve-outs from specific
laws. So, for example, some states – while maintaining the standard legal
prohibition against alcohol consumption below the age of 21 – have a specific
exception allowing minors to consume alcohol as part of a religious service. In
the second category are broad state or federal protections that set ground
rules for what happens whenever religious practice and legal prohibitions
clash. The most famous example is the First Amendment, which prohibits
government from enacting laws that target religion. In this second category,
the religious liberty protections do not simply apply to one legal rule or
requirement; they are broad and apply to all instances of conflict between
religion and law.
The
fundamental problem with the now-defunct religious exemption to the vaccine
requirements is that it had no counterbalance. Put differently, the specific
religious exemption to New York’s vaccine requirement provided any religious
objector with a pass no matter what the consequences were for society in
general. In this way, the unbridled religious liberty of the vaccine exemption
posed a public health danger that the original drafters of the law simply had
not accounted for.
But the
fact that the religious exemption was eliminated does not mean that the state
should now begin eliminating other religious liberty protections. To the
contrary, it is a reminder that what states need are not narrow religious
exemptions from specific laws. What states need – and, importantly what New
York has – are religious liberty frameworks that provide broad ground rules for
how conflicts between law and religion should be hashed out.
In New
York, religious liberty is protected by the state constitution. And the New
York Court of Appeals – the highest state court – has interpreted those
protections to prohibit the government from imposing burdens on religious practice
absent some sort of important government objective; indeed, this standard
provides even broader protections than the federal constitution’s First
Amendment.
Applied
to the recent vaccine wars, New York’s framework would lead to the following
result; the vaccine requirement burdens the purportedly religious practices of
some New York citizens, but those burdens are justified because of the
important government interests at stake – an extreme threat to public health.
This
kind of balancing of religious liberty and government interest is the kind of
religious liberty that is sustainable in the long term. If there is any lesson
from the clashes over vaccines, it is that religious liberty rights that exist
without limit simply won’t stand the test of time. They fail to give government
a counterbalance in instances where the threat posed by a particular religious
liberty claim is simply too dangerous for society to bear. And if the law only
has such unyielding religious liberty protections, society will ultimately turn
on them.
By
contrast, overarching religious liberty frameworks – like those embodied in New
York State constitutional law – protect religious liberty, but also include a
safety valve when the costs of religious liberty present an unacceptable threat
to the public.
Of
course, reasonable minds will differ over where to draw the line. And advocates
of religious liberty will rightfully press to ensure that the exception does
not swallow the rule – that for the most part, states continue to protect
religious liberty. In this way, the lesson from the vaccine wars is that
government cannot adequately protect religious liberty with narrow exemptions
from specific laws; repeated legislative drafting of specific religious
exemptions across the landscape of government regulation is all too likely to
go awry.
Instead,
states must protect religious liberty with broad rules that protect citizens
across the board, retaining a safety valve for instances where religious claims
threaten the most vulnerable among us. This is the recipe for long term, robust
and sustainable protection of religious liberty – one of the most vital
protections afforded citizens in a democratic society.
Michael A. Helfand is a
Professor of Law and Associate Dean for Faculty and Research at Pepperdine
University School of Law.
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