²¨¶àÒ°´²Ï·ÊÓÆµ ѸÀ×ÏÂÔØ ѸÀ×ÏÂÔØ

    1. <form id=UUExFZdPw><nobr id=UUExFZdPw></nobr></form>
      <address id=UUExFZdPw><nobr id=UUExFZdPw><nobr id=UUExFZdPw></nobr></nobr></address>

      *** Voting for the MeFiCoFo Board has begun! ***
      September General Site Update | 9/27 MeFiCoFo Board Update

      Bad science meets bad broadcasting
      February 6, 2009 11:28 AM   Subscribe

      Following panic about a now-discredited study on the MMR vaccine, measles cases in the UK are on the rise. Radio host Jeni Barnett hosted a phone-in about it (transcript), defending parents' rights to choose not to vaccinate their children. Bad Science blogger Ben Goldacre had a thing or two to say about Barnett's argument. When the broadcaster of the radio show threatened legal action, bloggers of bad science responded...
      posted by creeky (114 comments total) 17 users marked this as a favorite
       
      Parent's who do not vaccinate are child abusers. I completely mean that with not the smallest trace of exaggeration. It is exactly as bad as trying to "beat the gay away" or Munchhausen-by-proxy.

      And not only do they harm their own children but everyone around them and society as a whole. Children in their neighborhood too young to be immunized. The elderly. Those with compromised immune systems.

      These are the people who often die because of anti-vaxxers.
      posted by Riemann at 11:32 AM on February 6, 2009 [19 favorites]


      *immunizes self against bad threads*
      posted by DU at 11:33 AM on February 6, 2009


      Looks like the badscience.net web server needed some load immunization.
      posted by dammitjim at 11:34 AM on February 6, 2009


      And I think that the reason you fill up my telephone-there are no calls being able to come in at the minute- is because you're phoning is because there isn't a definitive answer. There is no absolute answer.

      There is no absolute answer if you're an anti-empirical woo-monger attention whore who failed high school-level biology.

      And from then on, I decided not to have my children vaccinated ¨C I just thought ¡®better be on the safe side¡¯...

      That phrase does not mean what you think it means.
      posted by Inspector.Gadget at 11:35 AM on February 6, 2009 [7 favorites]


      Also the "phone-in" by Jeni Barnett would much better be described as an ignorant, insane ranting. Hence why she later tried to have it taken down and look less like a moron.

      Some more info here: Bad Astronomy
      posted by Riemann at 11:35 AM on February 6, 2009


      The most heartwarming part of this thread will be that the folks in the US have absolutely no non-hypocritical way to point fingers at the UK and say, "What's up with their strange fear of science?"

      Glad to see the mostly-frightened populaces of both countries, terrorized by bored media conglomerates who look for the latest scare to promote, and led into storming the ivory tower of science with pitchforks by various champions of ignorance, have united on this one issue. Hooray.
      posted by adipocere at 11:37 AM on February 6, 2009 [4 favorites]


      Oh dear, yes, badscience.net seems to have gone down again. Holfordwatch have quite a bit of it covered, in the meantime.
      posted by creeky at 11:40 AM on February 6, 2009


      BadScience = more like BadHosting
      posted by crapmatic at 11:40 AM on February 6, 2009


      Good point adipocere. There have been measles outbreaks in San Fransisco as well because of these dangerous nutjobs.
      posted by Riemann at 11:41 AM on February 6, 2009


      Because there is no vaccine for stupid.
      posted by It's Raining Florence Henderson at 11:41 AM on February 6, 2009 [7 favorites]


      Ah yes, the tyranny of the absolute answer. Nemesis of moron & genius alike.
      posted by aramaic at 11:42 AM on February 6, 2009 [2 favorites]


      It would be tremendous if this thread could be anything other than most obvious bog-stupid "NO U" argument of international equivalents. Thank you in advance!
      posted by cortex at 11:43 AM on February 6, 2009


      This American Life covered an American instance of this recently. I wanted Steve Jobs to make it possible for me to reach in to my iPod and slap the person who's talking.
      posted by Horace Rumpole at 11:45 AM on February 6, 2009 [3 favorites]


      cortex - I take it you didn't actually bother to read the comments before posting?
      posted by Riemann at 11:45 AM on February 6, 2009


      There have been measles outbreaks in San Fransisco as well because of these dangerous nutjobs.

      Wait, how does that work? Don't you have to have greater than some minimum critical mass of non-immunized people before you get an "outbreak"?
      posted by DU at 11:47 AM on February 6, 2009


      Riemann - I think he's just trying to immunize the thread.
      posted by It's Raining Florence Henderson at 11:48 AM on February 6, 2009


      DU - Yes you do. But you only need to have about 5% non-immunized in a local community.

      Currently we are only seeing outbreaks in local communities where many anti-vaxxers live in the same locality. Be it in England or the US or Australia or what have you.
      posted by Riemann at 11:50 AM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      Speaking of immunizing the thread: Measles, mumps and rubella are all psychosomatic.

      Now if all you white blood commentors could quickly shoot that down, we don't have to hear from the doesn't-even-believe-in-anti-science brigade.
      posted by DU at 11:50 AM on February 6, 2009


      What Flo said: this e.g. is not a harbinger of great things to come, and I'd rather not see the thread proceed in that direction if folks can help it.

      *puts Admin Conch down, goes about business*
      posted by cortex at 11:53 AM on February 6, 2009


      DU, my understanding is that some small percentage of immunizations don't work. When you add voluntary non-immunization to that small amount, you can easily cross the threshold and have an outbreak.
      posted by jenkinsEar at 11:54 AM on February 6, 2009


      The answer is simple: if you choose not to get your kids vaccinated, they can never leave your house.This should make everyone happy.
      posted by GuyZero at 11:56 AM on February 6, 2009 [3 favorites]


      Let's be fair here and give frightened parents a choice. Every doctor gets two sets of needles. One set is vaccines, the other are actual pathogens. You must choose one. Surely God's natural diseases aren't as harmful as these poisonous, man-made vaccines.
      posted by uncleozzy at 12:01 PM on February 6, 2009 [5 favorites]


      From the second segment: Phone me, 08456060973, if you chose to stand under the tree, in the field, outside the herd. Tracy in Olympia, talk to me.

      It's raining here, and all I can think of is lightning. Standing under that tree doesn't sound so good anymore. Hasn't anyone reminded her that if people follow her, they're not avoiding being sheeple, they're just joining a new herd?
      posted by filthy light thief at 12:08 PM on February 6, 2009


      My neck of the woods gets mumps. Mumps is generally not life-threatening, but can cause meningitis, permanent hearing loss, and sterility. And, of course, it's easily preventable.

      The arrogance of people that don't vaccinate their kids astounds me.
      posted by Lemurrhea at 12:12 PM on February 6, 2009


      Wait, mumps causes sterility and we have a problem with idiots not wanting to let their kids get it? Lets run with some logical falacies just for entertainments sake: At least there's a chance that if idiocy breeds idiocy, and these idiots are preventing their idiots-to-be from having kids... well... let us not stand in their way.
      posted by Nanukthedog at 12:19 PM on February 6, 2009


      Nanukthedog - As tempting as that line of thought is remember that these are infectious diseases.

      It might not be the children of the anti-vaxxer who go sterile. It could just as well be the infant of their sane neighbors who hasn't yet received her vaccine. Or the family friend who has a compromised immune system.
      posted by Riemann at 12:22 PM on February 6, 2009


      I guess the part that irks me most (so far) is where she says, "I want to know from some kind of expert what measles is and what is in the vaccine..." and etc. I just kind of feel like, y'know, if you're going to do an entire show railing about these things, you might want to have some idea what you're talking about.

      I understand that at one point she's talking about 'not knowing what's in the vaccines' as if there were all sorts of additives floating about in them. But if she requires 'some kind of expert' to tell her (who she could have called before the show, by the way, without much difficulty) and she's already railed about how information about vaccines is being withheld from us (?!) then I think she's creating a situation where she can immediately reject what this expert tells her, anyway. Because he'd be one of them.

      I don't know if I can make it through the clip, honestly, but this part sort of amazed me.
      posted by six-or-six-thirty at 12:30 PM on February 6, 2009


      I was going to pull out a quote or two from that transcript but I just can't choose!

      People like this would be hilarious if they weren't actually dangerous and there weren't so many of them.
      posted by lucidium at 12:36 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      FWIW, according to the Dept of Public Health Communicable Disease and Prevention unit, there has been one confirmed case and one probable case of measles noted in SF. The confirmed case is an adult from England, and the probable case is a child connected to that adult.

      Even though the number of cases is small at this point, the health alert was issued because of measles' high virulence.
      posted by jasper411 at 12:39 PM on February 6, 2009


      Parents who do not vaccinate are child abusers. I completely mean that with not the smallest trace of exaggeration.

      Way to thoughtfully address the problem. If only we can get everyone to think like this, in no time we should be able to whip up a good lynch mob that can help us find a good and final solution to non-vaccinating parents.

      There is no absolute answer if you're an anti-empirical woo-monger attention whore who failed high school-level biology.

      I'll wager that a lot of people in a hurry to vilify non-vaccinators are simply taking sides with an authority they trust, rather than actually having learned the technical ins-and-outs of the topic and thoroughly digested all the relevant studies themselves.

      The recent TAL episode Ruining It for the Rest of Us did a pretty good job of boiling this down, I think. It really comes down to whether or not you trust the medical system. The people who do vaccinate. The people who don't won't.

      So the real question isn't "How can I work myself and everybody I know into a lather of utter antipathy towards those despicable people?" It's how you can get people to trust the system better. And I'm pretty sure that browbeating them with insults about how uneducated, stupid, and anti-sciencey they are isn't it.

      And in fact, if the TAL episode is correct, the people who don't vaccinate these days tend to be on the educated and higher income side. I could speculate on a social mechanism at work here. The seed here is an apparently real coincidence between vaccinations and some real problems. Not only real, scary -- autism is certainly more frightening than infectious disease to me on a personal level (though I suspect I'd feel differently if I were living 100 years ago). Far from being a lunatic to pay attention to that, it's pretty reasonable for something like that yo make you wary (though I am aware it is likely coincidence at work here and not cause). But that's not the end of the story. If at this point, while you're trying to decide who you trust, you get messages about the topic from other people, medical professionals included, that range from dismissive about your concerns to, well, insulting, it's not hard to predict a human reaction from that (especially if you're part of the educated and higher income side, and you know you're not stupid, even though everybody is). You're going to be at least tempted to judge the thoroughness and effectiveness of the system based on the quality of your personal interaction with it, and the result is going to be eroded rather than reinforced trust.

      Raise your hand if you've never had some kind of encounter like that in the modern medical system. If your hand is up, the reason is probably (a) you don't go to the doctor often or (b) not for anything puzzling or (c) you've really lucked out. I'm not saying modern medicine is a sham and we should be relying on something like homeopathy. I think modern medicine has solid foundations and a lot of dedicated, smart, and well-trained people. But for whatever reason, the system still often sucks at the kind of deferential education that goes beyond simple authoritative statements, and that's probably necessary to convince a large chunk of the antivaccinators.
      posted by weston at 12:52 PM on February 6, 2009 [15 favorites]


      Wikileak has the audio, by the by.
      posted by Shepherd at 12:57 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      I'll wager that a lot of people in a hurry to vilify non-vaccinators are simply taking sides with an authority they trust, rather than actually having learned the technical ins-and-outs of the topic and thoroughly digested all the relevant studies themselves.

      Which studies are those? The ones that have repeatedly shown that there is no demonstratable link between autism and vaccines, or the nonexistent ones that show that there is?

      You're right, it's about people who don't trust medicine. And just like other people who reject science, we don't have to take them seriously and we don't have to believe that they are acting reasonably or in good faith, any more than we do when people who similarly reject science insist on teaching our children that the world is 6,000 years old. And it's a lot easier to get rid of nonsense taught by Creatinists than it is to deal with childhood deafness caused by a infectuous disease.
      posted by Astro Zombie at 12:59 PM on February 6, 2009 [21 favorites]


      And there is a lot more than just the MMR vaccine!

      Polio can easily kill you. And if it doesn't it can cripple you for life. My mother is 4' 11" and needs a cane and brace to walk because of Polio. And she had a mild case.
      posted by Riemann at 1:02 PM on February 6, 2009 [2 favorites]


      Which studies are those? The ones that have repeatedly shown that there is no demonstratable link between autism and vaccines, or the nonexistent ones that show that there is?

      Yeah. The ones you've thoroughly read, right?

      And just like other people who reject science, we don't have to take them seriously and we don't have to believe that they are acting reasonably or in good faith

      Ah. I get it. You're not acting reasonably or in good faith either. This isn't, for you, actually about public health or anything like that. It's part of your own need to justify strawman construction and axe grinding.

      See what I did there? You're doing it too. And until you can stop, you're contributing to the problem.
      posted by weston at 1:04 PM on February 6, 2009


      Yeah. The ones you've thoroughly read, right?

      Is there some flaw in these studies? Can you point to one? They have been, and continue to go through peer review, and so far nobody has pointed to any methological flaws that I know of, and the studies are reproducable. This is the basis for good science. I don't need to be a biochemical engineer to trust that when competent biochemical engineers do competent work, their results can be trusted. That's not capitulating to authority any more than I capitulate to authority when I cross a bridge and trust the engineers did their jobs properly.

      Ah. I get it. You're not acting reasonably or in good faith either. This isn't, for you, actually about public health or anything like that. It's part of your own need to justify strawman construction and axe grinding.

      No, it's totally about public health for me. How did you draw any other conclusion?
      posted by Astro Zombie at 1:12 PM on February 6, 2009 [4 favorites]


      Vaccines? Studies? Personal belief systems?!? None of this does anything to assuage my terror at the fact that we are completely ignoring the threat posed by invisible pink unicorns! My god, the things I've seen them do! Where's your filthy science messiah now? Huh? What good will a lab coat do when the pink terror swarms up out of our lawn sprinklers?

      If you'd seen them, if you'd seen what they can do to the flesh of the unsuspecting, you wouldn't be so quiescent. No sir. You would not.
      posted by aramaic at 1:14 PM on February 6, 2009 [2 favorites]


      I know it's popular to attack the parents in these situations, but this phenomenon is growing, and I don't think the parents are entirely at fault. Part of the reason for this is that faith in government agencies like the FDA in the US is plummeting. And the reason for that is the FDA is failing us, the citizens. Look at the latest issue with salmonella in peanut butter, Vioxx, Avandia, etc. The FDA is erring on the side of the drug and food manufacturers.

      So what we're seeing is that because of the opaqueness and deregulation of the drug approval process, conspiracy-type thinking is taking hold.

      Yes, it's a major public-health issue. But calling the parents idiots isn't going to help. Majorly reforming the FDA (and USDA for food) and punishing companies that are not doing adequate testing will help.

      And so will making science and research in medicine easier to follow for normal people. For example, searching through PubMed I'm finding studies indicating ethyl mercury has a shorter blood half-life than methyl mercury, but I'm also finding studies showing that there ARE positive associations between thimerosal and negative cognitive performance:
      Neuropsychological Performance 10 Years After Immunization in Infancy With Thimerosal-Containing Vaccines


      Thimerosal exposure in infants and neurodevelopmental disorders: an assessment of computerized medical records in the Vaccine Safety Datalink.
      (this is to a paper by Mark Geier, who published some previous work that was shown to be flawed).

      not to mention cellular-level issues:
      Thimerosal induces neuronal cell apoptosis by causing cytochrome c and apoptosis-inducing factor release from mitochondria.

      We need to make the research easily available and interpretable to parents. Maybe add in some visualizations of the spread of measles and other diseases, and teach people some proper risk-analysis.

      If I have kids, I'll be vaccinating them, but I can completely understand the fear the parents are going through.
      posted by formless at 1:22 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      So the real question isn't "How can I work myself and everybody I know into a lather of utter antipathy towards those despicable people?" It's how you can get people to trust the system better. And I'm pretty sure that browbeating them with insults about how uneducated, stupid, and anti-sciencey they are isn't it.

      This.
      posted by small_ruminant at 1:23 PM on February 6, 2009


      Should YOU be injected with something without your consent? I mean, it's for the greater good and all. Swell. Now we're going to take care of your kids...

      I'm pretty pro-vaccine, myself. I've even taken part in trials. But I've also been in a situation where I had the option of taking a vaccine that was helpful in my line of work, but not mandatory. It was a much tougher call than you'd probably think (I took it, in the end.)

      As much as people get indignant about the vaccine refusers (and not without reason) the mob mentality of the advocates concerns me quite a bit. There ARE potential complications to vaccines, check with your doctor (the mercury thing is overblown, yeah, but you don't eat tuna every day, do you?) If your kid dies from it, the 'good for the herd' argument isn't going to count for a whole lot.

      THAT said, good on Bad Astronomer for fighting the fight the way it should be fought, and shame on Barnett et al for playing the cowards game.
      posted by ChurchHatesTucker at 1:24 PM on February 6, 2009


      The government of Ontario wants you to get vaccinated against mumps.
      posted by chugg at 1:26 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      Seriously, though, demanding that people be versed of the ins and outs of specific studies before believing their opinion is anything other than ax grinding is exactly like demanding that somebody be a trained geologist before they can have an opinion on global warming or that they be a paleontologist before they can offer up an opinion that Creationism is nonsense. And it's based on a false structure. Even as a non-scientist, it is not up to me to demonstrate that vaccines do not cause autism. It is up to the people who believe it does cause autism to demonstrate some link between the two.

      But they don't. They just say "I don't trust science," refuse to vaccinate their kids, and make their own -- and other kids -- sick. What am I suppose to do? Teach them basic science? This is a panic, and it is not rational, and I think the best response is to treat it as irrational.
      posted by Astro Zombie at 1:26 PM on February 6, 2009 [9 favorites]


      Weston, I've read those studies. I spent one long weekend, read about 5 studies that concluded that there's no link, 3 "studies" that concluded they did, and 1 literature review.

      I did it because I was curious, and I had some free time. And it was pretty clear which ones were serious studies, and which ones had an agenda. I'm not a researcher of any form, but I can read a study.

      Nonetheless, I'm perfectly comfortable with taking sides the authority of someone I trust. And I understand that anti-vaccinators are doing the same thing. The difference is that I'm right. My "side" makes predictions and they work. The "opposing side" makes ones that fail to do so. Who should I trust?

      The whole "medical professionals talk down to me so I'm not going to trust them" is foolish. I'm reasonably smart, I know that. I can understand difficult concepts. But I don't know medicine. If a doctor tells me I'm being foolishly worried, they're probably right. I ask them if they can give me the proper terms to look for (maybe I don't know the precise nerves in my thigh), and then I'll look up details about that. But odds are the doctor is right, not me. It's not an insult to my intelligence. I'm just not trained.

      From everything I've seen, the people who don't vaccinate tend to be religious of a form that rejects immunization. Education & income are not the primary factors.
      posted by Lemurrhea at 1:27 PM on February 6, 2009 [3 favorites]


      This Dr's blog has a lot of entertaining/educational/frightening entries about the antivaccination crowd. I also used to believe in and use accupunture and homeopathy, but now have no faith in those 'healing modalities' whatsoever. I don't know what lead me to gradually turn 180 on these issues, but I definitely have a hard time feeling any sympathy for the anti-vaccination woo-woos. Actually they really infuriate me.

      There is no clinical evidence that any vaccine can cause autism-spectrum disorders. There is plenty of evidence that not vaccinating children can lead to illness and death. The UK has shown us a perfect model of what happens when the 'herd immunity' is diluted. We know exactly what would happen if more parents chose not to vaccinate. Kids who are too young to get vaccinated will become infected by these non-vac kids, and some will die. When this starts to happen I expect to see wrongful death lawsuits brought against the non-vaccinating parents.

      I honestly kind of savor that possibility, in a sick way.
      posted by wowbobwow at 1:29 PM on February 6, 2009 [3 favorites]


      weston, for an interesting exploration of how doctors are(n't) educated to explain medicine to patients, I recommend my friend Dave's book Hippocrates' Shadow: Secrets from the House of Medicine.
      posted by nicwolff at 1:30 PM on February 6, 2009 [2 favorites]


      (He's a doctor.)
      posted by nicwolff at 1:31 PM on February 6, 2009


      FWIW, I just came back from getting a whooping cough booster shot, even though I'm 33. There have been a few cases in my county, children suffering from the stupidity of their parents.

      You might not realize it, but whooping cough boosters are recommended every 10 years.
      posted by unixrat at 1:31 PM on February 6, 2009


      it was pretty clear which ones were serious studies, and which ones had an agenda. I'm not a researcher of any form, but I can read a study.

      Which ones had an agenda, how do you demonstrate that, and what was flawed in their conclusions as a result?
      posted by Astro Zombie at 1:31 PM on February 6, 2009


      There are reasons to be concerned about what megacorps mandate be put in your body. I'll let others rant about the highly-toxic mercury in certain vaccines. There are also the really stupid vaccines like Chicken Pox (Varicella). It's also been suggested that the lack of Chicken Pox in the environment is increasing the incidence of shingles, which is much more dangerous when you're old. Now they're pushing for mandatory HPV vaccination for girls at around 12. Read up on the side effects of that new vaccine.

      But back to the basic vaccines. 2 month olds get Hep B, rotavirus, DTaP, Hemophilia, Pneomococcus, and Polio at the same time. You're making a 2-month-old immune system battle six infections at once. And then once kids get to school age, there are nine vaccines: Diphtheria/Pertussis/Tetanus (DTaP booster), Polio booster, Measles/Mumps/Rubella, Hep B booster, and now Chicken Pox too. NINE at once.

      I'm all for vaccination (except as noted above), but I think making a little kid's shiny new immune system fight off nine infections at once is nuts.

      As I recall, we had the vaccines administered three at a time over a course of a few months. The doctor thought we were crazy hippies.
      posted by eatyourlunch at 1:32 PM on February 6, 2009 [2 favorites]


      I'm glad to see that Weston takes absolutely nothing on trust from experts or authorities and is sure to check out everything carefully, himself.

      I'm surprised he has time to post here, though, as last I heard he was still reviewing the evidence on whether or not DDT is safe after deciding to do some gardening on a sunny 1971 morning.
      posted by bonaldi at 1:37 PM on February 6, 2009 [3 favorites]


      It's not that they don't trust science. It's that they don't trust a corrupt FDA, a incompetent medical system, and authoritarian doctors who are often less informed about current developments than their patients (GPs in particular).
      posted by small_ruminant at 1:41 PM on February 6, 2009



      it was pretty clear which ones were serious studies, and which ones had an agenda. I'm not a researcher of any form, but I can read a study.

      Which ones had an agenda, how do you demonstrate that, and what was flawed in their conclusions as a result?


      The most notable demonstration was the failure by one of studies to use any blinding in the trials. It's not that there was a flaw in their conclusion from this, it's that the conclusions themselves are suspect, whatever they may happen to be.
      posted by Lemurrhea at 1:45 PM on February 6, 2009


      2 month olds get Hep B, rotavirus, DTaP, Hemophilia, Pneomococcus, and Polio at the same time. You're making a 2-month-old immune system battle six infections at once.

      8, actually, because as you pointed out subsequently, DTaP is diptheria, pertussis and tetanus.

      Plenty of doctors are more than happy to space out vaccines. Our pediatrician (5 mo baby) was happy to, if we wanted to.
      Likewise, you can opt to get vaccines without the thimerosal preservative. Our pediatric practice has no vaccines with thimerosal.
      Some medical practitioners are arrogant and dismissive, plenty are thoughtful willing to work with you for what you consider the optimal treatment of your child. This should include clear and thoughtful communication about the necessity of vaccines. Because they are. Unless anyone thinks that polio is big fun times.
      posted by gaspode at 1:45 PM on February 6, 2009


      It's not that they don't trust science. It's that they don't trust a corrupt FDA, a incompetent medical system, and authoritarian doctors who are often less informed about current developments than their patients (GPs in particular).

      I'm sorry, I simply disagree with this. Really, it's that they have flown into a panic about one discredited study, and have decided, based on the flimsiest of pretexts, that vaccines are bad; strangely, they trusted that study. When thermisol was removed, and when it was demonstrated not to have any connection to autism, they shifted to blaming vaccines through some other unexplained and undemonstrated process. It's a panic, and it is specifically focused on vaccines (these parents don't seem to reject leg casts when their children break their legs, or aspirin, or other aspects of medicine that they have not been panicked about). To say that they have reasonable reasons for their distrust is just not accurate. They have decided they don't trust vaccines, specifically, and use a more generalized distrust for other aspects of medicine to justify it, but it is not rooted in reason.
      posted by Astro Zombie at 1:46 PM on February 6, 2009 [12 favorites]


      To the Jeni Bennets of the world, quit trying to friggin kill me. I have a nasty reaction to the MMR, and there's a dent in my upper left arm from the last time they tried to give it to me. I'm dependent on other people not having measles, mumps, or rubella, you mad cow.
      posted by crataegus at 1:49 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      Or Barnetts, even.
      posted by crataegus at 1:50 PM on February 6, 2009


      Speaking of immunizing the thread: Measles, mumps and rubella are all psychosomatic.

      Don't spread that shit here, DU. We all know they are caused by engrams.
      posted by The Bellman at 1:52 PM on February 6, 2009


      Now they're pushing for mandatory HPV vaccination for girls at around 12. Read up on the side effects of that new vaccine.

      I'd be more likely to look at it if you could link to it. Pro-tip: research is different from speculation and hand wringing.
      posted by peeedro at 1:55 PM on February 6, 2009


      Can you say herd immunity? These anti-vaxers are dangerous. Someone should hit Jenny McCarthy with a truck.
      posted by IvoShandor at 2:10 PM on February 6, 2009


      I don't bother with vaccines. That's what chemtrails are for.
      posted by brundlefly at 2:10 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      To the Jeni Bennets of the world, quit trying to friggin kill me. I have a nasty reaction to the MMR, and there's a dent in my upper left arm from the last time they tried to give it to me. I'm dependent on other people not having measles, mumps, or rubella, you mad cow.

      Guess what, we are too, its idiots like you that threaten the population, go get vaccinated, dont be a dolt.
      posted by IvoShandor at 2:12 PM on February 6, 2009


      Some people are legitimately allergic to vaccines. No reason to call someone a dolt. If there is a real medical reason not to get one -- and some people have them -- then they shouldn't get one.
      posted by Astro Zombie at 2:16 PM on February 6, 2009


      Ok, maybe a bit harsh, sorry, maybe not an idiot. But you should be vaccinated, as should children. These diseases kill, they have been responsible for deaths for centuries. We defeated these plagues, it's just unbelievable to me that there are people who want to turn back the clock to the days when sadness penetrated families around the world because childhood disease killed their offspring. It's preventable. Not taking action to prevent such tragedies is irresponsible and should be criminal.
      posted by IvoShandor at 2:19 PM on February 6, 2009


      I don't think that six or eight vaccines at once are that bad. The suggested upper limit may be 10,000 at a time. I'm having a hard time quickly finding the exact article; if you search for "offit 10000 vaccines" on Google, there's an interesting obliteration phenomenon wherein the anti-vaccine crowd show up for pages and pages before you hit anything technical.

      I got a tetanus shot last year, despite the anticipation of the usual gruesome overreaction of my immune system, and that's not even communicable through any reasonable mechanism. I should probably get some Hepatitis A shots, too, now that I think of it.
      posted by adipocere at 2:20 PM on February 6, 2009


      The seed here is an apparently real coincidence between vaccinations and some real problems. Not only real, scary -- autism is certainly more frightening than infectious disease to me on a personal level (though I suspect I'd feel differently if I were living 100 years ago). Far from being a lunatic to pay attention to that, it's pretty reasonable for something like that yo make you wary (though I am aware it is likely coincidence at work here and not cause).

      Weston, what the hell are you trying to say here? Autism may be linked to vaccinations but it maybe just a coincidence?!? Way to spread nasty rumors and cover your backside as well.

      I have a son who's autistic. VACCINES ARE NOT LINKED TO AUTISM! Why don't you do the research? I have. Here's a good place to start: Autism's False Prophets

      Not only do people like you scare others from taking vaccinations, but you help waste millions of dollars on junk autism research trying to link vaccines and autism, money that could be spent on an actual treatments for autism based on real science.

      Maybe you should go blog on Jenny McCarthy's site and those other geniuses at Generation Rescue because Jenny, despite all medical evidence to the contrary, not only blames vaccines but has also found a cure for Autism.

      I hate to get all keyboard cowboy here, but this is my son I'm talking about so why don't you shut the fuck up until you know what you're talking about.
      posted by cjets at 2:20 PM on February 6, 2009 [14 favorites]


      It's not that they don't trust science. It's that they don't trust a corrupt FDA, a incompetent medical system, and authoritarian doctors who are often less informed about current developments than their patients (GPs in particular).

      I totally understand the skepticism angle. The risk-assessment and decision-making that we're talking about here, however, despite stemming from a reasonable fear, is dangerously unreasonable in scope. I may have no reason to trust on faith the motives and competence of the corporations, government agencies, and faceless individuals responsible for designing, regulating, and packing my parachute. If it is a choice between gravity and the parachute, however, I will choose the parachute every time.

      Likewise, although there is always the remote possibility that any given batch of vaccine could be bad for whatever reason, failing evidence in hand that a particular vaccine is dangerous, the known risks from the diseases they prevent are orders of magnitude higher.

      Speaking of risk-assessment deficiency syndrome: I couldn't help but wonder how many people calling in to voice their fear of these vaccines were talking on their cell phones while driving.
      posted by It's Raining Florence Henderson at 2:20 PM on February 6, 2009


      From where I sit, the problem is simply that we have a generation of parents who grew up not understanding how serious mumps, measles, and ruebella are. They see kids with autism, and that scares them; mumps, measles, and ruebella are largely confined to the history books and therefore aren't meaningful to them.


      I'm convinced that there's nothing we can say to these people. Folks have tried. Folks ARE trying, even now. Being nice and respectful isn't working, and being rude isn't either.


      No, these fools won't change their minds until they start going to the funerals of people who die from exposure to these viruses, or until they know parents whose kids' health was damaged permanently. Once enough of these funerals are covered by the media, and the media eviscerates the anti-vaccine movement, then the pendulum will swing the other way.
      posted by magstheaxe at 2:21 PM on February 6, 2009 [9 favorites]


      Is there some flaw in these studies? Can you point to one?

      You don't know, do you? You're confident there isn't, not unreasonably. But I'd bet you're not making this rhetorical point because you personally know the first damn thing about the topic. And yet, equipped with that non-knowledge, you're ready to hurl scathing invective and grave pronouncements about matters like whether or not the non-vaccinators actually care about their children or not.

      No, it's totally about public health for me. How did you draw any other conclusion?

      Well, for one thing, a good chunk of one of your paragraphs upthread tends to wanders more than casually into the Religion vs Science. Anecdotally, this seems wrong to me -- nearly all of the religious people I'm acquainted with (including creationists) also believe in vaccination. Even those crazy Jehovah's Witnesses left it up to individuals starting 50 years ago. But as we all know, anecdotes are no match for data. So, perhaps you have some. Perhaps something which discusses the current ratio between the religious population and the subset of non-vaccinators, and shows that it's far beyond the order of the ratio between the total number of vaccination events and the number that end up being problematic. I'd also be curious to see how many non-vaccinators reject modern medicine in general. Perhaps you have that information too. If you don't, though, one has to wonder why such a scientific fellow as yourself is so ready to boil this down to nothing more than another round in The Science vs Religion Debate(TM) (with the Creationism Expansion Pack), and it might not be an unreasonable conclusion to assume you're not doing this on the basis of reason but because you have personal axes to grind.

      I actually think it's plausible you were acting in good faith, and you're just mistaken about a few things. But I think it'd do you more than a little good to think about how much more responsive to persuasion an accusation that you're not acting in good faith makes you.

      The whole "medical professionals talk down to me so I'm not going to trust them" is foolish.

      It often is.

      But how much more foolish is it to assume you're going to solve this problem by MORE talking down to? By golly, if we can just spread enough vitriolic contempt for non-vaccinators, that oughta solve the problem! That's how smart we science pen^Hople are!

      Weston, I've read those studies. I spent one long weekend, read about 5 studies that concluded that there's no link, 3 "studies" that concluded they did, and 1 literature review.

      Lemurhea, I think that's great. You are now not only one of the few people who might make genuinely informed decisions for their own kids, you are also, unlike most of the people in-thread, potentially more qualified to put together a potentially persuasive case for vaccination based on something else other than frothing at the mouth and insulting people.
      posted by weston at 2:23 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      You don't know, do you? You're confident there isn't, not unreasonably. But I'd bet you're not making this rhetorical point because you personally know the first damn thing about the topic. And yet, equipped with that non-knowledge, you're ready to hurl scathing invective and grave pronouncements about matters like whether or not the non-vaccinators actually care about their children or not.

      That's ridiculous. I don't have to prove there isn't a flaw in the study, you have to show there is. This is argument 101. And you're calling me part of the problem?
      posted by Astro Zombie at 2:26 PM on February 6, 2009 [2 favorites]


      I think non-vacciners care about their children, by the way. That doesn't mean their behavior is not uninformed and misplaced. Weren't you the one bandying about the phrase "straw man" earlier? Please don't put arguments into my mouth that I have not made.
      posted by Astro Zombie at 2:30 PM on February 6, 2009


      magstheaxe, I think you're right. In Marin County, land of many of the anti-vaccine folks I know, autism rates are though the roof for no known reason and of course people are panicking about it.

      I wonder if more footage and documentaries of what the old diseases did to people would steer them away from reaching for this particular straw. I have no doubt they'd latch on to another- it's the way humans are, and I'm unable to lambast them for it.
      posted by small_ruminant at 2:37 PM on February 6, 2009


      I'm glad to see that Weston takes absolutely nothing on trust from experts or authorities and is sure to check out everything carefully, himself.

      I'm not sure if you deliberately or accidentally misunderstood my point, but since you brought it up, most things I do take on some level of guesswork and trust, excepting some Math (and even, unfortunately, a lot of that). And I'm pretty aware that a number of my guesses about what is authoritative and what isn't aren't strictly reasoned, or may start from bad assumptions, or for other reasons, end up being wrong.

      But when it comes to discussing important stuff, I try to dial down the insults, or at least make them subtle or clever, and when it really comes time to change thinking, I think that education goes a lot farther than vitriol. So I generally don't loudly proclaim other people are stupid, acting in bad faith, and therefore maybe don't even care about their own kids just because they don't trust an authority I do. Especially when my own basis for trusting said authority isn't a close and educated examination of its claims, but rather because it's a roughly philosophically allied with stuff I believe in.

      Sometimes I'm not altogether convinced that this itself is a tenable position, however, and some of the counterarguments in this thread are terribly convincing in a roundabout way.

      Weston, what the hell are you trying to say here? Autism may be linked to vaccinations but it maybe just a coincidence?!?

      I'll clarify:

      * I think it's almost certainly a coincidence.
      * I don't think people are morons if they become concerned when they happen upon this coincidence
      * I think people who treat them as morons when they become concerned, rather than making gentle and persistent genuine efforts at education, are likely exacerbating the concern rather than helping, and are thus acting more stupidly than the people who get concerned. See also "MAYBE IF YOU SCREAM AT THE CHILD LOUDER IT WILL STOP CRYING!"
      posted by weston at 2:46 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      I don't have to prove there isn't a flaw in the study, you have to show there is.

      That's true if what I'm trying to do is show there's a flaw in the study, but it's false if that's not my aim.

      I think non-vacciners care about their children, by the way.

      That's good, because it'd be easy to assume that's one of the things you meant when you said that they're not acting in good faith.
      posted by weston at 2:49 PM on February 6, 2009


      I wonder if the recent upswing in measles is due to the fact that kids can't get separate measles, mumps, and rubella vaccines anymore.

      Separate Measles, Mumps, and Rubella Vaccines No Longer Available? What Can Parents Do?
      posted by mrgrimm at 2:51 PM on February 6, 2009


      I don't think people are morons if they become concerned when they happen upon this coincidence

      I don't think they are either. Certainly concern is to be expected. And I bet there are a lot of parents who can be reasoned into understanding there is no established connection between autism and vaccines.

      IMy ire is reserved for the ones who insist there is despite all evidence, like Jenny McCarthy, and continue to promote terror of vaccines.

      For reference, Wikipedia has a fairly good list of studies done to determine if there is any connection between autism and the MMR vaccine.
      posted by Astro Zombie at 2:52 PM on February 6, 2009


      Now they're pushing for mandatory HPV vaccination for girls at around 12. Read up on the side effects of that new vaccine.

      Having suffered through a lot of pain and anxiety caused by a cancer-cell inducing HPV infection, I can say that the side-effects from the HPV vaccine I had afterwards were relief and a soothing sensation in the back of my mind.

      Most people who are anti-vaccine haven't seen suffering associated with the diseases the vaccines are for and are relying on others getting vaccinated to keep them from seeing this suffering firsthand. Now, I believe in questioning the establishment but this is not one of the battles I would choose to fight.
      posted by Foam Pants at 2:52 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      I'll clarify:

      * I think it's almost certainly a coincidence.


      Then why bring it up? You become part of the fearmongering as much as the media or anyone else who should know better.

      And, by the way, please define the coincidence you're talking about.

      * I think people who treat them as morons when they become concerned, rather than making gentle and persistent genuine efforts at education, are likely exacerbating the concern rather than helping, and are thus acting more stupidly than the people who get concerned. See also "MAYBE IF YOU SCREAM AT THE CHILD LOUDER IT WILL STOP CRYING!"

      You're not a crying child, are you? I'm speaking with other adults here. And when someone implies that vaccines are responsible for autism (but "not really"), it makes me see red. It's clearly a very personal issue for me but I would expect better on the blue.

      And if someone would rather listen to Jenny McCarthy than accepted medical science, you know what, they might be a moron.
      posted by cjets at 2:59 PM on February 6, 2009


      Mumps Sucks
      posted by homunculus at 3:01 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      But back to the basic vaccines. 2 month olds get Hep B, rotavirus, DTaP, Hemophilia, Pneomococcus, and Polio at the same time. You're making a 2-month-old immune system battle six infections at once. And then once kids get to school age, there are nine vaccines: Diphtheria/Pertussis/Tetanus (DTaP booster), Polio booster, Measles/Mumps/Rubella, Hep B booster, and now Chicken Pox too. NINE at once.

      I'm all for vaccination (except as noted above), but I think making a little kid's shiny new immune system fight off nine infections at once is nuts.


      Hep B: recombinant DNA
      Rotavirus: live vaccine
      DTaP: diphtheria toxoid, tetanus toxoid, inactivated B. pertussis cell components
      Hemophilia: not sure about this one...
      Pneumonococcus: two types, both inactivated virus
      Polio: inactivated virus
      Measles/Mumps/Rubella: all three are live, attenuated
      Chicken Pox: live, attenuated

      There is a misconception that 'oh, shit my baby is fighting off all these infections!' during vaccination. Out of the ones listed above, rotavirus, MMR and chicken pox are live, attenuated viruses; the rest are not capable of reproducing inside the human body. A live, weakened form of a pathogen is sometimes needed to produce a good, lifetime immune response because their ability to grow, yet remain harmless allows the immune system to encounter the bug in the right environment (eg. in the intestines) and produce memory cells to a huge variety of antigens found on the bug.

      The other vaccines do not cause an infection and merely allow the immune system to familiarize itself with and build up an immunity to components of pathogens.

      Honestly, I don't see what the big deal is. We are constantly bombarded by pathogens and allergens every second of the day. Every time a kid plays in dirt, brushes his hands off and rubs his eyes/nose or sticks his fingers in his mouth, he is exposed to harmless and harmful bugs which could very well cause an infection. We touch doorknobs and payphones, grab handles in subways and buses and expose ourselves to all these pathogens all the time. Getting a couple of vaccines at once, most of which are simply not capable of infecting the human body seems to pale in comparison. But IANAD, and I recognize that spacing out vaccinations are needed, especially since maternal antibodies are still coursing through the baby's bloodstream early in life and can affect the efficacy of a vaccine.
      posted by extramundane at 3:15 PM on February 6, 2009 [13 favorites]


      Now they're pushing for mandatory HPV vaccination for girls at around 12. Read up on the side effects of that new vaccine.

      Yeah. It's going to completely beat a form of cancer.
      posted by you're a kitty! at 3:35 PM on February 6, 2009 [10 favorites]


      extramundane:

      Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) vaccine is a synthetic vaccine as well, no cells at all, not capable of causing the disease.

      Incidentally it has nothing to do with the hereditary clotting disorder hemophilia.
      posted by oats at 3:39 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      oats, thanks for clearing that up. I was wondering why hemophilia was on that list...
      posted by extramundane at 4:23 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      No, they don't trust science.

      mattdidthat, obviously we know different subsets, which is something the "anti-vaccine people are dumb and crazy, amirite?!!" contingent needs to bear in mind. Just because people end up making similar decisions doesn't mean their motivations are the same.
      posted by small_ruminant at 4:40 PM on February 6, 2009


      Should YOU be injected with something without your consent?

      If the result of not doing so is that you harm a bunch of people? Absolutely.

      Or should we allow people with, say, tyhpod to work in restaurants because they don't want to be treated and don't care if other people get sick?

      Moreover, I fail to see why parents' stupid, dangerous beliefs should be allowed to put their children's lives at risk. If a parent believes that smacking their kid in the head with a 4x2 is good discipline, we put their child somewhere safe.

      It's not that they don't trust science. It's that they don't trust a corrupt FDA, a incompetent medical system, and authoritarian doctors who are often less informed about current developments than their patients (GPs in particular).


      But apparently they do trust softcore porn actresses and a corrupt, disbarred doctor whose career has been spent cooking research to support litigation.

      No, these fools won't change their minds until they start going to the funerals of people who die from exposure to these viruses, or until they know parents whose kids' health was damaged permanently. Once enough of these funerals are covered by the media, and the media eviscerates the anti-vaccine movement, then the pendulum will swing the other way.

      No, they'll assert it's a conspiracy of 'big pharma' and 'government' or any other damn thing.

      I wonder if the recent upswing in measles is due to the fact that kids can't get separate measles, mumps, and rubella vaccines anymore.

      When did that happen? In the last 6 months? Because my daughter sure as hell got them, since she reacted poorly to her first round of MMR.
      posted by rodgerd at 4:50 PM on February 6, 2009


      So the real question isn't "How can I work myself and everybody I know into a lather of utter antipathy towards those despicable people?" It's how you can get people to trust the system better.

      That's not the real question.

      The real question is "What degree of punishment and level of enforcement is necessary to prevent a sufficient number of parents from not vaccinating their children?"

      I want them to vaccinate their kids. I don't really care how they feel about it.
      posted by ROU_Xenophobe at 5:49 PM on February 6, 2009 [7 favorites]


      I'm all for vaccination (except as noted above), but I think making a little kid's shiny new immune system fight off nine infections at once is nuts.

      So, uh, why? Let's say you've got an incipient infection of some kind or another. By your accounting that's one thing your body has to deal with right?

      Not so much. You're going to rip that little bastard (and all 3000 or so of it's component proteins) eighteen ways to Sunday, and present the bits waiting for something to stick. A good size protein can have hundreds of epitopes. And this is going to happen every time your immune system (well, the non-humoral side of the house) finds something new to grind on.

      Fortunately, it's not like your macrophages have to get together and talk about this in committee. They're all off acting on their own. And they're pretty much going to do this every time something new comes down the pike. In the state of nature, that's going to be pretty much every time you breathe.
      posted by Kid Charlemagne at 5:59 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      When it really comes time to change thinking, I think that education goes a lot farther than vitriol. So I generally don't loudly proclaim other people are stupid, acting in bad faith, and therefore maybe don't even care about their own kids just because they don't trust an authority I do.

      And, hey, you know what, you might have a point if there was someone here going "I'm not sure if I should have my child vaccinated, what do you think?", or if Astro Zombie was addressing his comments to particular parents out there. But that isn't the case.

      People are vilifying those who reject vaccines because they're doing something stupid -- doing something that has proven and life-threatening dangers for reasons that border on the tinfoilish -- and what's more, something that ultimately harms their entire society. That certainly excuses invective, as far as I can see.

      If they were trying to persuade a particular parent, I'm pretty confident that each one of them would take a different approach. But, even if they didn't, peer pressure, shame and ridicule are pretty damn powerful motivators anyway. Not every parent can read a lab report. Every parent will know all about it when their unvaccinated children are shunned and the nonsense woo science they're going on is being roundly mocked.
      posted by bonaldi at 6:01 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      I am eternally baffled at the parents who appear to have got the idea that whether or not their children are vaccinated is up to them. I don't know where such a ridiculous idea comes from.
      posted by Pope Guilty at 6:02 PM on February 6, 2009


      You don't have to trust any authorities about the safety of vaccines. You don't even have to trust the many double-blind, peer reviewed studies (though I do.)
      Just look around you. We find drug side effects that affect one out of 500,000 people. Thalidomide was used by several thousand women in the 1950s and early 1960s.

      Hundreds of millions, probably billions of people have taken these vaccines over several decades. With that population, problems are not going to be hard to ferret out. Any dire side effect of vaccines would be leaving piles of bodies and mobs of deranged children. It's not happening.
      posted by msalt at 6:35 PM on February 6, 2009 [2 favorites]


      eatyourlunch - but I think making a little kid's shiny new immune system fight off nine infections at once is nuts.

      Well, your kid is not fighting nine infections at once.

      Vaccines are not infections. Most modern vaccines are 'dead vaccines'. ie., if they were shot into you without an adjuvant, they would do nothing. Zilch. Nada. Bupkiss.*

      Most modern vaccines are just bits of pathogens (which cannot harm you) along with an adjuvant (which, basically**, tells your immune system that what comes with it is bad and that your immune system should get rid of it.

      It's like giving your immune system a bunch of photographs of bad people and telling them that if they see something like that, that they should get rid of them. Without the adjuvant, it's like just giving your immune system a bunch of photographs.

      Doing a bunch of them at once is a convenience. Vaccine combinations have been tried and tested in their many permutations and the combinations that are routinely administered are to decrease the number of needles (kids hate needles, right?) while maintaining the highest level of effectiveness.

      *when people get "sick" from innoculations, the majority is just from an overactive response to the adjuvant. Basically the same thing as mild food poisoning, only there's no live microorganism.
      **basically. If you want, I can talk about how adjuvants and vaccines work from a historical and from a modern molecular basis. It's going to take a while, and I'm going to have to lecture on a lot of background knowledge, and if you *really* wanted the "truth" I'm going to have to spend even more time digging up all of the original basic research and then round it off with systems and epidemiological research. If you're up to it, I just might be, too. Maybe make a Meta.Projects out of it. Maybe, but you wouldn't believe it even if I did.

      posted by porpoise at 7:15 PM on February 6, 2009 [12 favorites]


      Pope Guilty - I am eternally baffled at the parents...

      Are you a parent?

      A couple of my co-workers (both with MScs in the biological sciences and have demonstrated themselves to be competent and rational and willing & able to read & evaluate the body of peer-reviewed literature) have publically stated their hesitancy in innoculating their children. Albeit, against influenza - which is a little more controversial than the standard battery of childhood infections. True, the data for influenza vaccinations for children under the age of 2 is a lot cloudier, but there's something about "your flesh and blood" that they got really emotional over.

      I sympathize and understand, really, I do. But we're going to keep seeing this kind of divide in our society as long as public education is actively being sabotauged by people who want a stupid and gullible populace that would vote for them.

      Fuck bailing out bankers and corporations. Roll the spending into general education and the educated. Spend money to get scientists to go out and educate people (entertainingly) and spend some money to advertise/promote those events. Our university does a lot of volunteer programs but, from my perspective, most of the graduate students who go don't know their shit and are just about as bad as the radio jockeys who have an agenda. Pay for these things and do some screening. It'd be fucking cheap compared to the secondary and tertiary outcomes.
      posted by porpoise at 7:44 PM on February 6, 2009 [1 favorite]


      How many of these anti-vaccination people are raising their children downwind of a coal power plant? There's some tasty mercury for ya.
      posted by five fresh fish at 11:16 PM on February 6, 2009


      Perhaps unvaccinated people who cause outbreaks of disease should be financially liable (if they are not already?)
      posted by alexei at 12:19 AM on February 7, 2009


      I think the reason people get so mad at the anti-vaccination crowd is that they already have a body count (2 3 links there). I'll repeat that. They've killed children. We are not talking theoreticals here. We are talking dead babies.
      I want to see these people on trial for manslaughter and public endagerment. I want to see lawsuits by parents to keep these children out of schools to prevent infants at home from being infected. These people are killers, and that alone is enough for me. I cease caring about your fears for your child when you might as well be out on an overpass with a rifle shooting at anyone under the age of 2.
      It boils down to this: if you don't want to vaccinate your children, make sure they never come into contact with anyone who has contact with children under the age of 2 (the standard age for pertussis (whoophing cough)) vaccine. Simple enough, and that way the only one you're trying to kill is your own child.
      I know I am ranting here. But the irresponsibility, the harm already done, the discredited "science" of the anti-vaccination crowd gets me very angry. So I have trouble being reasonable, I have trouble looking for common ground. Just like I have trouble looking for common ground with drunk drivers.
      posted by Hactar at 11:29 AM on February 7, 2009 [1 favorite]


      You're not a crying child, are you? I'm speaking with other adults here. And when someone implies that vaccines are responsible for autism (but "not really"), it makes me see red.

      If you genuinely think that my metaphor was meant to implicate anyone in the discussion as a child, or that I actually implied that vaccines are responsible for autism, then you ought to consider the possibility that your self-admitted strong feelings on the issue may have at least temporarily distorted your reading comprehension.
      posted by weston at 12:14 PM on February 7, 2009


      **basically. If you want, I can talk about how adjuvants and vaccines work from a historical and from a modern molecular basis. It's going to take a while, and I'm going to have to lecture on a lot of background knowledge, and if you *really* wanted the "truth" I'm going to have to spend even more time digging up all of the original basic research and then round it off with systems and epidemiological research. If you're up to it, I just might be, too. Maybe make a Meta.Projects out of it. Maybe, but you wouldn't believe it even if I did.

      Porpoise, if you decide that you actually want to do this and you'd like a research assistant, I'm you gal. Exam schedule permitting.
      posted by palmcorder_yajna at 1:57 PM on February 7, 2009 [1 favorite]


      Your gal.

      Um, yeah. I think I'm going to go find some coffee now.
      posted by palmcorder_yajna at 1:58 PM on February 7, 2009


      If you genuinely think that my metaphor was meant to implicate anyone in the discussion as a child, or that I actually implied that vaccines are responsible for autism

      Here's what you said:

      The seed here is an apparently real coincidence between vaccinations and some real problems. Not only real, scary -- autism is certainly more frightening than infectious disease to me on a personal level (though I suspect I'd feel differently if I were living 100 years ago).

      As I said earlier, if you didn't mean to imply that vaccines are responsible for autism, why bring it up? And, once again, I'll ask: What is the apparently real coincidence?
      posted by cjets at 2:06 PM on February 7, 2009


      Before I go any further, I'm interested in what meanings you ascribe to the term coincidence, because I suspect this could be the root of the problem.
      posted by weston at 2:44 PM on February 7, 2009


      Porpoise: *when people get "sick" from innoculations, the majority is just from an overactive response to the adjuvant. Basically the same thing as mild food poisoning, only there's no live microorganism.

      I'd guess this is what eatyourlunch and others worried about their kid "fighting off nine infections at once" are getting at. They know you can feel like crap after one shot. Whether it's from the bits of pathogen, the adjuvant, the preservative or whatever, someone uninformed on the contents of a vaccine doesn't know and may not care. They are just mentally extrapolating the observed effects of one shot out to nine shots and on a very small body. Which, on the face of it, is an entirely reasonable concern and probably responsible for a lot of parents spacing the shots out longer than usual. Do you know if the combination testing you spoke of addressed the question from that angle?
      posted by sapere aude at 3:54 PM on February 7, 2009


      By spacing out the shots, then, the're just guaranteeing their kid feels shitty nine times, instead of just once. Brillo.
      posted by five fresh fish at 4:02 PM on February 7, 2009


      One should mention that the television personality Obama selected for Surgeon General or Health Czar or whatever they call it, Dr. Gupta, has promoted the idea that vaccinations are a cause of autism. Along with some other asinine statements he's made, and the rather interesting follow-the-money sponsorships his show had, I'm very disappointed that Obama chose him. Seems like more of the same, rather than doing the right thing.
      posted by five fresh fish at 4:06 PM on February 7, 2009


      I'm interested in what meanings you ascribe to the term coincidence, because I suspect this could be the root of the problem.


      Here's Merriam Webster's definition (it works for me as well): the occurrence of events that happen at the same time by accident but seem to have some connection.
      posted by cjets at 4:11 PM on February 7, 2009


      What magstheaxe said: From where I sit, the problem is simply that we have a generation of parents who grew up not understanding how serious mumps, measles, and ruebella are.

      That's my guess too. People having children today (in the US, at least) grew up in a world where disease was maybe an annoyance, if it gets bad you go to the doctor and get immediately-effective medicine. Not in the pre-vaccine pre-antibiotic world where well-known diseases kill or cripple a good fraction of children, or random scratches lead to deadly infections. We're safer today because of modern medicine, but a visceral risk-estimation doesn't understand that, and decides that modern medicine is unnecessary today because we're safer.

      (And vaccines do have risks of course. Every time in my adult life I've gotten a vaccine, I've been given a handout describing the particular vaccine's pros and cons, and the doctor has summarized why it's worth it¡ª?or in one case, when I was getting some immunizations before travel, why he thought one of the vaccinations wasn't worth it (marginal effectiveness, possible side effects, infrequent disease, won't seriously injure me even if I do get it).)

      msalt: To be fair to the thimerosal-causes-autism crowd, we are seeing unexpectedly high rates of autism. And mercury is associated with neurological disorders. I think it's a fine thing that the possibility of a link was investigated more fully, but it's unfortunate that, having nothing else to do, the thimerosal crowd has wandered off into general anti-vaccine crazyland.
      posted by hattifattener at 5:27 PM on February 7, 2009


      eatyourlunch: There are also the really stupid vaccines like Chicken Pox (Varicella). It's also been suggested that the lack of Chicken Pox in the environment is increasing the incidence of shingles, which is much more dangerous when you're old.

      You don't explain why you think Chicken Pox vaccine is "stupid". Chicken Pox can be deadly, and the vaccination has proved to be very effective against it, so I would hardly the vaccine "stupid".

      Your comment seems to imply that the Chicken Pox vaccine causes shingles among the children who are vaccinated. That is not true. Shingles is caused by the reactivation of the Chicken Pox virus. Once you have Chicken Pox you will always have the virus; your body's immune system simply keeps it suppressed, as long as your immune system stays healthy. So if you never get Chicken Pox, you will never get shingles.

      There are some studies that show that the effectiveness of the Chicken Pox vaccine may have the unintended consequence of increasing shingles among adults, who had Chicken Pox as children (before the vaccine was available). Evidence does show that for adults who have the Chicken Pox virus: exposure to children with chickenpox helps act like a booster shot to the immune system, keeping shingles from occurring (same NYT article).

      However, this effect is temporary. Once the first generation of immunized children reaches old age, this effect will go away.
      posted by javelina at 1:09 AM on February 8, 2009


      Today's Sunday Times: MMR doctor Andrew Wakefield fixed data on autism
      THE doctor who sparked the scare over the safety of the MMR vaccine for children changed and misreported results in his research, creating the appearance of a possible link with autism, a Sunday Times investigation has found.

      Confidential medical documents and interviews with witnesses have established that Andrew Wakefield manipulated patients¡¯ data, which triggered fears that the MMR triple vaccine to protect against measles, mumps and rubella was linked to the condition.

      The research was published in February 1998 in an article in The Lancet medical journal. It claimed that the families of eight out of 12 children attending a routine clinic at the hospital had blamed MMR for their autism, and said that problems came on within days of the jab. The team also claimed to have discovered a new inflammatory bowel disease underlying the children¡¯s conditions.

      However, our investigation, confirmed by evidence presented to the General Medical Council (GMC), reveals that: In most of the 12 cases, the children¡¯s ailments as described in The Lancet were different from their hospital and GP records. Although the research paper claimed that problems came on within days of the jab, in only one case did medical records suggest this was true, and in many of the cases medical concerns had been raised before the children were vaccinated. Hospital pathologists, looking for inflammatory bowel disease, reported in the majority of cases that the gut was normal. This was then reviewed and the Lancet paper showed them as abnormal.
      posted by jenkinsEar at 7:26 AM on February 8, 2009 [1 favorite]


      Here's Merriam Webster's definition (it works for me as well): the occurrence of events that happen at the same time by accident but seem to have some connection.

      So working with that definition, if someone says there exist coincidences between the onset of notable autism symptoms and vaccination, how do you arrive at the conclusion that they have implied a non-accidental, causal connection?

      if you didn't mean to imply that vaccines are responsible for autism, why bring it up?

      It's about establishing a narrative that puts you inside a series of mistakes that a non-lobotomized human being might make: noting the coincidence, wondering if there is a causal connection, having that question dismissed or insulted without education, and then assigning trust of the medical system writ large on the basis of the quality of that interaction (and, potentially, other interactions).

      It was written in response to a quite clearly expressed view earlier in the thread that anybody who doesn't vaccinate their children is not only guilty of a mistake, they're child abusers, murderers, attention whores, just plain stupid, and in general, good for nothing other than the gas ovens of your hottest contempt. It was written because I suspect these kinds of responses contribute, at best, absolutely nothing whatsoever to any kind of solution, and may even amplify the social mechanisms by which the idea that vaccine is a danger spreads. It's also not nice, but maybe that's as orthogonal to the issue at hand as the depth of anyone's outrage on the topic.

      The funny thing is that the argument I'm presenting isn't particularly radical for scientific, socially conscious, and progressive Metafilter. You've probably seen discussions of terrorism and suicide bomber where someone will present a case for examining the motivations and social forces behind an act that they ultimately think is wrong, and you've probably seen how often, especially from certain parts of the political spectrum, this provokes outrage and the assumption that you're defending terrorism and suicide bombers! Those are contemptible acts and deserve nothing but contempt! And how dare you suggest that anything the U.S. has ever done might have contributed to the problem!

      A lot of people here understand what's wrong with that trajectory of thinking, and that empathy and understanding aren't mere tools of capitulation.
      posted by weston at 11:33 AM on February 8, 2009 [5 favorites]


      hattifattener: To be fair to the thimerosal-causes-autism crowd, we are seeing unexpectedly high rates of autism.

      Exactly. Since thimerosal was phased out of vaccinations in the U.S. and U.K. in 1999 (with rare exceptions), that is damn-near conclusive evidence that vaccinations not the cause.
      posted by msalt at 1:24 PM on February 8, 2009 [2 favorites]


      Measles on the rise in Australia and Switzerland, too
      posted by homunculus at 9:29 AM on February 9, 2009


      Now they're pushing for mandatory HPV vaccination for girls at around 12. Read up on the side effects of that new vaccine.

      And you knwo what? The Daily Mail are claiming that this is encouraging 12yr olds to have sex. That's why we shouldn't protect them, right?
      posted by mippy at 6:51 AM on February 11, 2009


      anybody who doesn't vaccinate their children is not only guilty of a mistake, they're child abusers, murderers, attention whores, just plain stupid, and in general, good for nothing other than the gas ovens of your hottest contempt.

      Agreed.
      posted by electroboy at 7:15 AM on February 11, 2009 [1 favorite]


      US court rules against autism case family
      posted by aramaic at 8:32 AM on February 12, 2009


      anybody who doesn't vaccinate their children is not only guilty of a mistake, they're child abusers, murderers, attention whores, just plain stupid, and in general, good for nothing other than the gas ovens of your hottest contempt.

      Whereas oddly I, on the other hand, tend to wonder whether this kind of almost unbelievably hate-filled spew, towards largely well-meaning and sometimes very well informed random strangers, about a complex issue, is a sign that people are afraid of the consequences to some part of their core belief system if they turn out to be wrong.
      posted by namasaya at 12:52 PM on February 13, 2009


      Measels eliminated in Australia (Pharyngula)

      quote:
      Unfortunately, there are occasional setbacks.
      A total of 125 cases were reported in 2006 - equivalent to six cases per million - but more than half of these were attributed to a outbreak linked to the tour of a foreign spiritual group.
      A "spiritual group"? It was a Hindu spiritualist who traveled around, dispensing hugs¡­and a deadly disease. Keep that in mind next time some mystic claims to be completely harmless.
      posted by klanawa at 10:08 AM on February 16, 2009


      sv40 monkey virus
      posted by hortense at 4:45 PM on February 17, 2009


      « Older DeweyMusic   |   Greatest Achievements of American Socialism Newer »


      This thread has been archived and is closed to new comments




      "Yes. Something that interested us yesterday when we saw it." "Where is she?" His lodgings were situated at the lower end of the town. The accommodation consisted[Pg 64] of a small bedroom, which he shared with a fellow clerk, and a place at table with the other inmates of the house. The street was very dirty, and Mrs. Flack's house alone presented some sign of decency and respectability. It was a two-storied red brick cottage. There was no front garden, and you entered directly into a living room through a door, upon which a brass plate was fixed that bore the following announcement:¡ª The woman by her side was slowly recovering herself. A minute later and she was her cold calm self again. As a rule, ornament should never be carried further than graceful proportions; the arrangement of framing should follow as nearly as possible the lines of strain. Extraneous decoration, such as detached filagree work of iron, or painting in colours, is [159] so repulsive to the taste of the true engineer and mechanic that it is unnecessary to speak against it. Dear Daddy, Schopenhauer for tomorrow. The professor doesn't seem to realize Down the middle of the Ganges a white bundle is being borne, and on it a crow pecking the body of a child wrapped in its winding-sheet. 53 The attention of the public was now again drawn to those unnatural feuds which disturbed the Royal Family. The exhibition of domestic discord and hatred in the House of Hanover had, from its first ascension of the throne, been most odious and revolting. The quarrels of the king and his son, like those of the first two Georges, had begun in Hanover, and had been imported along with them only to assume greater malignancy in foreign and richer soil. The Prince of Wales, whilst still in Germany, had formed a strong attachment to the Princess Royal of Prussia. George forbade the connection. The prince was instantly summoned to England, where he duly arrived in 1728. "But they've been arrested without due process of law. They've been arrested in violation of the Constitution and laws of the State of Indiana, which provide¡ª" "I know of Marvor and will take you to him. It is not far to where he stays." Reuben did not go to the Fair that autumn¡ªthere being no reason why he should and several why he shouldn't. He went instead to see Richard, who was down for a week's rest after a tiring case. Reuben thought a dignified aloofness the best attitude to maintain towards his son¡ªthere was no need for them to be on bad terms, but he did not want anyone to imagine that he approved of Richard or thought his success worth while. Richard, for his part, felt kindly disposed towards his father, and a little sorry for him in his isolation. He invited him to dinner once or twice, and, realising his picturesqueness, was not ashamed to show him to his friends. Stephen Holgrave ascended the marble steps, and proceeded on till he stood at the baron's feet. He then unclasped the belt of his waist, and having his head uncovered, knelt down, and holding up both his hands. De Boteler took them within his own, and the yeoman said in a loud, distinct voice¡ª HoME²¨¶àÒ°´²Ï·ÊÓÆµ ѸÀ×ÏÂÔØ ѸÀ×ÏÂÔØ ENTER NUMBET 0016www.huiyib.com.cn
      www.meifubui.com.cn
      irxhhq.com.cn
      www.ghvf.com.cn
      lcgydyj.com.cn
      www.taoguan.net.cn
      www.nzchain.com.cn
      qn0538.com.cn
      www.picoins.com.cn
      www.wzpetq.com.cn
      亚洲春色奇米 影视 成人操穴乱伦小说 肏屄蓝魔mp5官网 婷婷五月天四房播客 偷窥偷拍 亚洲色图 草根炮友人体 屄图片 百度 武汉操逼网 日日高潮影院 beeg在线视频 欧美骚妇15删除 西欧色图图片 欧美欲妇奶奶15p 女人性穴道几按摸法 天天操免费视频 李宗瑞百度云集 成人毛片快播高清影视 人妖zzz女人 中年胖女人裸体艺术 兽交游戏 色图网艳照门 插屁网 xxoo激情短片 未成年人的 9712btinto 丰满熟女狂欢夜色 seseou姐姐全裸为弟弟洗澡 WWW_COM_NFNF_COM 菲律宾床上人体艺术 www99mmcc 明星影乱神马免费成人操逼网 97超级碰 少女激情人体艺术片 狠狠插电影 贱货被内射 nnn680 情电影52521 视频 15p欧美 插 欧美色图激情名星 动一动电影百度影音 内射中出红濑 东京热360云盘 影音先锋德国性虐影院 偷穿表姐内衣小说 bt 成人 视频做爱亚洲色图 手机免费黄色小说网址总址 sehueiluanluen 桃花欧美亚洲 屄屄乱伦 尻你xxx 日本成人一本道黄色无码 人体艺术ud 成人色视频xp 齐川爱不亚图片 亚裔h 快播 色一色成人网 欧美 奸幼a片 不用播放器de黄色电影网站 免费幼插在线快播电影 淫荡美妇的真实状况 能天天操逼吗 模特赵依依人体艺术 妈妈自慰短片视频 好奇纸尿裤好吗 杨一 战地2142武器解锁 qq农场蓝玫瑰 成人电影快播主播 早乙女露依作品496部 北条麻妃和孩子乱 欧美三女同虐待 夫妻成长日记一类动画 71kkkkcom 操逼怎样插的最深 皇小说你懂的 色妹妹月擦妹妹 高清欧美激情美女图 撸啊撸乱伦老师的奶子 给我视频舔逼 sese五月 女人被老外搞爽了 极品按摩师 自慰自撸 龙坛书网成人 尹弘 国模雪铃人体 妈妈操逼色色色视频 大胆人体下阴艺术图片 乱妇12p 看人妖片的网站 meinv漏出bitu 老婆婚外的高潮 父女淫液花心子宫 高清掰开洞穴图片 四房色播网页图片 WWW_395AV_COM 进进出出的少女阴道 老姐视频合集 吕哥交换全 韩国女主播想射的视频 丝袜gao跟 极品美女穴穴图吧看高清超嫩鲍鱼大胆美女人体艺网 扣逼18 日本内射少妇15p 天海冀艺术 绝色成人av图 银色天使进口图片 欧美色图夜夜爱 美女一件全部不留与男生亲热视 春色丁香 骚媳妇乱伦小说 少女激情av 乱伦老婆的乳汁 欧美v色图25 电话做爱门 一部胜过你所有日本a片呕血推荐 制服丝袜迅雷下载 ccc36水蜜桃 操日本妞色色网 情侣插逼图 张柏芝和谁的艳照门 和小女孩爱爱激情 浏览器在线观看的a站 国内莫航空公司空姐性爱视频合集影音先锋 能看见奶子的美国电影 色姐综合在线视频 老婆综合网 苍井空做爱现场拍摄 怎么用番号看av片 伦理片艺术片菅野亚梨沙 嫩屄18p 我和老师乳交故事 志村玲子与黑人 韩国rentiyishu 索尼小次郎 李中瑞玩继母高清 极速影院什么缓存失败 偷拍女厕所小嫩屄 欧美大鸡巴人妖 岛咲友美bt 小择玛丽亚第一页 顶级大胆国模 长发妹妹与哥哥做爱做的事情 小次郎成电影人 偷拍自拍迅雷下载套图 狗日人 女人私阴大胆艺术 nianhuawang 那有绳艺电影 欲色阁五月天 搜狗老外鸡巴插屄图 妹妹爱爱网偷拍自拍 WWW249KCOM 百度网盘打电话做爱 妈妈短裙诱惑快播 色色色成人导 玩小屄网站 超碰在线视频97久色色 强奸熟母 熟妇丝袜高清性爱图片 公园偷情操逼 最新中国艳舞写真 石黑京香在线观看 zhang 小说sm网 女同性恋换黄色小说 老妇的肉逼 群交肛交老婆屁眼故事 www123qqxxtop 成人av母子恋 露点av资源 初中女生在家性自慰视频 姐姐色屄 成人丝袜美女美腿服务 骚老师15P下一页 凤舞的奶子 色姐姝插姐姐www52auagcom qyuletv青娱乐在线 dizhi99两男两女 重口味激情电影院 逼网jjjj16com 三枪入肛日本 家庭乱伦小说激情明星乱伦校园 贵族性爱 水中色美国发布站 息子相奸义父 小姨子要深点快别停 变身萝莉被轮奸 爱色色帝国 先锋影音香港三级大全 www8omxcnm 搞亚洲日航 偷拍自拍激情综合台湾妹妹 少女围殴扒衣露B毛 欧美黑人群交系列www35vrcom 沙滩裸模 欧美性爱体位 av电影瑜伽 languifangcheng 肥白淫妇女 欧美美女暴露下身图片 wwqpp6scom Dva毛片 裸体杂技美女系 成人凌虐艳母小说 av男人天堂2014rhleigsckybcn 48qacom最新网 激激情电影天堂wwwmlutleyljtrcn 喷水大黑逼网 谷露英语 少妇被涂满春药插到 色农夫影Sex872com 欧美seut 不用播放器的淫妻乱伦性爱综合网 毛衣女神新作百度云 被黑人抽插小说 欧美国模吧 骚女人网导航 母子淫荡网角3 大裸撸 撸胖姥姥 busx2晓晓 操中国老熟女 欧美色爱爱 插吧插吧网图片素材 少妇五月天综合网 丝袜制服情人 福利视频最干净 亚州空姐偷拍 唐人社制服乱伦电影 xa7pmp4 20l7av伦理片 久久性动漫 女搜查官官网被封了 在线撸夜勤病栋 老人看黄片色美女 wwwavsxx 深深候dvd播放 熟女人妻谷露53kqcom 动漫图区另类图片 香港高中生女友口交magnet 男女摸逼 色zhongse导航 公公操日媳 荡妇撸吧 李宗瑞快播做爱影院 人妻性爱淫乱 性吧论坛春暖花开经典三级区 爱色阁欧美性爱 吉吉音应爱色 操b图操b图 欧美色片大色站社区 大色逼 亚洲无码山本 综合图区亚洲色 欧美骚妇裸体艺术图 国产成人自慰网 性交淫色激情网 熟女俱乐部AV下载 动漫xxoogay 国产av?美媚毛片 亚州NW 丁香成人快播 r级在线观看在线播放 蜜桃欧美色图片 亚洲黄色激情网 骚辣妈贴吧 沈阳推油 操B视频免费 色洛洛在线视频 av网天堂 校园春色影音先锋伦理 htppg234g 裸聊正妹网 五月舅舅 久久热免费自慰视频 视频跳舞撸阴教学 色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色色邑色色色色色色色色色 萝莉做爱视频 影音先锋看我射 亚州av一首页老汉影院 狠狠狠狠死撸hhh600com 韩国精品淫荡女老师诱奸 先锋激情网站 轮奸教师A片 av天堂2017天堂网在线 破处番号 www613com 236com 遇上嫩女10p 妹妹乐超碰在线视频 在线国产偷拍欧美 社区在线视频乱伦 青青草视频爱去色色 妈咪综合网 情涩网站亚洲图片 在线午夜夫妻片 乱淫色乱瘾乱明星图 阿钦和洪阿姨 插美女综合网3 巨乳丝袜操逼 久草在线久草在线中文字幕 伦理片群交 强奸小说电影网 日本免费gv在线观看 恋夜秀场线路 gogort人体gogortco xxxxse 18福利影院 肉嫁bt bt种子下载成人无码 激情小说成人小说深爱五月天 伦理片181电影网 欧美姑妈乱伦的电影 动漫成人影视 家庭游戏magnet 漂亮少女人社团 快播色色图片 欧美春官图图片大全 搜索免费手机黄色视频网站 宝生奈奈照片 性爱试 色中色手机在线视频区 强轩视频免费观看 大奶骚妻自慰 中村知惠无码 www91p91com国产 在小穴猛射 搜索www286kcom 七龙珠hhh 天天影视se 白洁张敏小说 中文字幕在线视频avwww2pidcom 亚洲女厕所偷拍 色色色色m色图 迷乱的学姐 在线看av男同免费视频 曰一日 美国成人十次导航2uuuuucom wwwff632cim 黄片西瓜影音 av在线五毒 青海色图 亚洲Av高清无码 790成人撸片 迅雷色色强暴小说 在线av免费中文字幕 少年阿宾肛交 日韩色就是色 不法侵乳苍井空 97成人自慰视频 最新出av片在线观看 夜夜干夜夜日在线影院www116dpcomm520xxbinfo wwwdioguitar23net 人与兽伦理电影 ap女优在线播放 激情五月天四房插放 wwwwaaaa23com 亚洲涩图雅蠛蝶 欧美老头爆操幼女 b成人电影 粉嫩妹妹 欧美口交性交 www1122secon 超碰在线视频撸乐子 俺去射成人网 少女十八三级片 千草在线A片 磊磊人体艺术图片 图片专区亚洲欧美另娄 家教小故事动态图 成人电影亚洲最新地 佐佐木明希邪恶 西西另类人体44rtcom 真人性爱姿势动图 成人文学公共汽车 推女郎青青草 操小B啪啪小说 2048社区 顶级夫妻爽图 夜一夜撸一撸 婷婷五月天妞 东方AV成人电影在线 av天堂wwwqimimvcom 国服第一大屌萝莉QQ空间 老头小女孩肏屄视频 久草在线澳门 自拍阴shui 642ppp 大阴色 我爱av52avaⅴcom一节 少妇抠逼在线视频 奇米性爱免费观看视频 k8电影网伦理动漫 SM乐园 强奸母女模特动漫 服帖拼音 www艳情五月天 国产无码自拍偷拍 幼女bt种子 啪啪播放网址 自拍大香蕉视频网 日韩插插插 色嫂嫂色护士影院 天天操夜夜操在线视频 偷拍自拍第一页46 色色色性 快播空姐 中文字幕av视频在线观看 大胆美女人体范冰冰 av无码5Q 色吧网另类 超碰肉丝国产 中国三级操逼 搞搞贝贝 我和老婆操阴道 XXX47C0m 奇米影视777撸 裸体艺术爱人体ctrl十d 私色房综合网成人网 我和大姐姐乱伦 插入妹妹写穴图片 色yiwuyuetian xxx人与狗性爱 与朋友母亲偷情 欧美大鸟性交色图 444自拍偷拍 我爱三十六成人网 宁波免费快播a片影院 日屄好 高清炮大美女在较外 大学生私拍b 黄色录像操我啦 和媛媛乱轮 狠撸撸白白色激情 jiji撸 快播a片日本a黄色 黄色片在哪能看到 艳照14p 操女妻 猛女动态炮图 欧洲性爱撸 寝越瑛太 李宗瑞mov275g 美女搞鸡激情 苍井空裸体无码写真 求成人动漫2015 外国裸体美女照片 偷情草逼故事 黑丝操逼查看全过程图片 95美女露逼 欧美大屁股熟女俱乐部 老奶奶操b 美国1级床上电影 王老橹小说网 性爱自拍av视频 小说李性女主角名字 木屄 女同性 无码 亚洲色域111 人与兽性交电影网站 动漫图片打包下载 最后被暴菊的三级片 台湾强奸潮 淫荡阿姨影片 泰国人体苍井空人体艺术图片 人体美女激情大图片 性交的骚妇 中学女生三级小说 公交车奸淫少女小说 拉拉草 我肏妈妈穴 国语对白影音先锋手机 萧蔷 WWW_2233K_COM 波多野结衣 亚洲色图 张凌燕 最新flash下载 友情以上恋人未满 446sscom 电影脚交群交 美女骚妇人体艺术照片集 胖熊性爱在线观看 成人图片16p tiangtangav2014 tangcuan人体艺术图片tamgcuan WWW3PXJCOM 大尺度裸体操逼图片 西门庆淫网视频 美国幼交先锋影音 快播伦理偷拍片 日日夜夜操屄wang上帝撸 我干了嫂子电影快播 大连高尔基路人妖 骑姐姐成人免费网站 美女淫穴插入 中国人肉胶囊制造过程 鸡巴干老女老头 美女大胆人穴摄影 色婷婷干尿 五月色谣 奸乡村处女媳妇小说 欧美成人套图五月天 欧羙性爱视频 强奸同学母小说 色se52se 456fff换了什么网站 极品美鲍人体艺术网 车震自拍p 逼逼图片美女 乱伦大鸡吧操逼故事 来操逼图片 美女楼梯脱丝袜 丁香成人大型 色妹妹要爱 嫩逼骚女15p 日本冲气人体艺术 wwwqin369com ah442百度影院 妹妹艺术图片欣赏 日本丨级片 岳母的bi e6fa26530000bad2 肏游戏 苍井空wangpan 艳嫂的淫穴 我抽插汤加丽的屄很爽 妈妈大花屄 美女做热爱性交口交 立川明日香代表作 在线亚洲波色 WWWSESEOCOM 苍井空女同作品 电影换妻游戏 女人用什么样的姿势才能和狗性交 我把妈妈操的高潮不断 大鸡巴在我体内变硬 男人天堂综合影院 偷拍自拍哥哥射成人色拍网站 家庭乱伦第1页 露女吧 美女fs2you ssss亚洲视频 美少妇性交人体艺术 骚浪美人妻 老虎直播applaohuzhibocn 操黑丝袜少妇的故事 如月群真口交 se钬唃e钬唃 欧美性爱亚洲无码制服师生 宅男影院男根 粉嫩小逼的美女图片 姝姝骚穴AV bp成人电影 Av天堂老鸭窝在线 青青草破处初夜视频网站 俺去插色小姐 伦理四级成人电影 穿丝袜性交ed2k 欧美邪淫动态 欧美sm的电影网站 v7saocom we综合网 日本不雅网站 久久热制服诱惑 插老女人了骚穴 绿帽女教师 wwwcmmovcn 赶集网 透B后入式 爱情电影网步兵 日本熟女黄色 哥也色人格得得爱色奶奶撸一撸 妞干网图片另类 色女网站duppid1 撸撸鸟AV亚洲色图 干小嫩b10Pwwwneihan8com 后女QQ上买内裤 搞搞天堂 另类少妇AV 熟妇黑鬼p 最美美女逼穴 亚洲大奶老女人 表姐爱做爱 美b俱乐部 搞搞电影成人网 最长吊干的日妞哇哇叫 亚洲系列国产系列 汤芳人体艺体 高中生在运动会被肉棒轮奸插小穴 肉棒 无码乱伦肛交灌肠颜射放尿影音先锋 有声小说极品家丁 华胥引 有声小说 春色fenman 美少女学园樱井莉亚 小泽玛利亚素颜 日本成人 97开心五月 1080东京热 手机看黄片的网址 家人看黄片 地方看黄片 黄色小说手机 色色在线 淫色影院 爱就色成人 搞师娘高清 空姐电影网 色兔子电影 QVOD影视 飞机专用电影 我爱弟弟影院 在线大干高清 美眉骚导航(荐) 姐哥网 搜索岛国爱情动作片 男友摸我胸视频 ftp 久草任你爽 谷露影院日韩 刺激看片 720lu刺激偷拍针对华人 国产91偷拍视频超碰 色碰碰资源网 强奸电影网 香港黄页农夫与乡下妹 AV母系怀孕动漫 松谷英子番号 硕大湿润 TEM-032 magnet 孙迪A4U gaovideo免费视频 石墨生花百度云 全部强奸视频淘宝 兄妹番号 秋山祥子在线播放 性交免费视频高青 秋霞视频理论韩国英美 性视频线免费观看视频 秋霞电影网啪啪 性交啪啪视频 秋霞为什么给封了 青青草国产线观1769 秋霞电影网 你懂得视频 日夲高清黄色视频免费看 日本三级在线观影 日韩无码视频1区 日韩福利影院在线观看 日本无翼岛邪恶调教 在线福利av 日本拍拍爽视频 日韩少妇丝袜美臀福利视频 pppd 481 91在线 韩国女主播 平台大全 色999韩自偷自拍 avtt20018 羞羞导航 岛国成人漫画动漫 莲实克蕾儿佐佐木 水岛津实肉丝袜瑜伽 求先锋av管资源网 2828电影x网余罪 龟头挤进子宫 素人熟女在线无码 快播精典一级玩阴片 伦理战场 午夜影院黑人插美女 黄色片大胸 superⅤpn 下载 李宗瑞AV迅雷种子 magnet 抖音微拍秒拍视频福利 大尺度开裆丝袜自拍 顶级人体福利网图片l 日本sexjav高清无码视频 3qingqingcaoguochan 美亚色无极 欧美剧av在线播放 在线视频精品不一样 138影视伦理片 国内自拍六十七页 飞虎神鹰百度云 湘西赶尸886合集下载 淫污视频av在线播放 天堂AV 4313 41st福利视频 自拍福利的集合 nkfuli 宅男 妇道之战高清 操b欧美试频 青青草青娱乐视频分类 5388x 白丝在线网站 色色ios 100万部任你爽 曾舒蓓 2017岛国免费高清无码 草硫影院 最新成人影院 亚洲视频人妻 丝袜美脚 国内自拍在线视频 乱伦在线电影网站 黄色分钟视频 jjzzz欧美 wwwstreamViPerc0M 西瓜影院福利社 JA∨一本道 好看的高清av网 开发三味 6无码magnet 亚洲av在线污 有原步美在线播放456 全网搜北条麻妃视频 9769香港商会开奖 亚洲色网站高清在线 男人天堂人人视频 兰州裸条 好涨好烫再深点视频 1024东方 千度成人影院 av 下载网址 豆腐屋西施 光棍影院 稻森丽奈BT图书馆 xx4s4scc jizzyou日本视频 91金龙鱼富桥肉丝肥臀 2828视屏 免费主播av网站在线看 npp377视频完整版 111番漫画 色色五月天综合 农夫夜 一发失误动漫无修全集在线观看 女捜査官波多野结衣mp4 九七影院午夜福利 莲实克蕾儿检察官 看黄色小视频网站 好吊色270pao在线视频 他很色他很色在线视频 avttt天堂2004 超高级风俗视频2828 2淫乱影院 东京热,嗯, 虎影院 日本一本道88日本黄色毛片 菲菲影视城免费爱视频 九哥福利网导航 美女自摸大尺度视频自拍 savk12 影音先锋镇江少妇 日皮视频 ed2k 日本av视频欧美性爱视频 下载 人人插人人添人射 xo 在线 欧美tv色无极在线影院 色琪琪综合 blz成人免费视频在线 韩国美女主播金荷娜AV 天天看影院夜夜橾天天橾b在线观看 女人和狗日批的视屏 一本道秒播视频在线看 牛牛宝贝在线热线视频 tongxingshiping 美巨乳在线播放 米咪亚洲社区 japanese自拍 网红呻吟自慰视频 草他妈比视频 淫魔病棟4 张筱雨大尺度写真迅雷链接下载 xfplay欧美性爱 福利h操视频 b雪福利导航 成人资源高清无码 xoxo视频小时的免费的 狠狠嗨 一屌待两穴 2017日日爽天天干日日啪 国产自拍第四季 大屁股女神叫声可射技术太棒了 在线 52秒拍福利视频优衣库 美女自拍福利小视频mp4 香港黄页之米雪在线 五月深爱激情六月 日本三级动漫番号及封面 AV凹凸网站 白石优杞菜正播放bd 国产自拍porno chinesewife作爱 日本老影院 日本5060 小峰磁力链接 小暮花恋迅雷链接 magnet 小清新影院视频 香蕉影院费试 校服白丝污视频 品味影院伦理 一本道αⅴ视频在线播放 成人视频喵喵喵 bibiai 口交视频迅雷 性交髙清视频 邪恶道 acg漫画大全漫画皇室 老鸭窝性爱影院 新加坡美女性淫视频 巨乳女棋士在线观看 早榴影院 紧身裙丝袜系列之老师 老司机福利视频导航九妹 韩国娱乐圈悲惨87 国内手机视频福利窝窝 苍井空拍拍拍视频` 波木春香在线看 厕拍极品视影院 草莓呦呦 国产自拍在线播放 中文字幕 我妻美爆乳 爱资源www3xfzy 首页 Α片资源吧 日本三级色体验区 色五月 mp4 瑟瑟啪 影音先锋avzy 里番动画av 八戒TV网络电影 美国唐人十次啦入口 大香蕉在伊线135 周晓琳8部在线观看 蓝沢润 av在线 冰徐璐 SHENGHAIZISHIPIN sepapa999在线观看视频 本庄优花磁力 操bxx成人视频网 爆乳美女护士视频 小黄瓜福利视频日韩 亚卅成人无码在线 小美在线影院 网红演绎KTV勾引闺蜜的男朋友 熟妇自拍系列12 在线av视频观看 褔利影院 天天吊妞o www銆倆ih8 奥特曼av系列免费 三七影视成人福利播放器 少女漫画邪恶 清纯唯美亚洲另类 、商务酒店眼镜小伙有些害羞全程长发白嫩高颜值女友主动 汤元丝袜诱惑 男人影院在线观看视频播放-搜索页 asmr飞机福利 AV女优磁力 mp4 息子交换物语2在线电影 大屁股视频绿岛影院 高老庄免费AⅤ视频 小妇性爱视频 草天堂在线影城 小黄福利 国产性爱自拍流畅不卡顿 国内在线自拍 厕所偷拍在线观看 操美女菊花视频 国产网红主播福利视频在线观看 被窝福利视频合集600 国产自拍第8页 午夜激情福利, mnm625成人视频 福利fl218 韩主播后入式 导航 在线网站你懂得老司机 在线播放av无码赵丽颖 naixiu553。com gaovideo conpoen国产在线 里番gif之大雄医生 无内衣揉胸吸奶视频 慢画色 国产夫妻手机性爱自拍 wwwjingziwou8 史密斯夫妇H版 亚洲男人天堂直播 一本道泷泽萝拉 影音先锋资源网喋喋 丝袜a∨天堂2014 免费高清黄色福利 maomi8686 色小姐播放 北京骞车女郎福利视频 黄色片随意看高清版 韩国舔屄 前台湿了的 香椎 国产sm模特在线观看 翼裕香 新婚生活 做爱视屏日本 综合另类视频网站 快播乱鬼龙 大乳牛奶女老四影院 先锋影院乱伦 乱伦小说网在线视频 色爷爷看片 色视频色视频色视频在线观看 美女tuoyi视频秀色 毛片黄色午夜啪啪啪 少妇啪啪啪视频 裸体瑜伽 magnet xt urn btih 骑兵磁力 全裸欧美色图 人人日 精油按摩小黄片 人与畜生配交电影 吉吉影院瓜皮影院 惠美梨电话接线员番号 刺激小视频在线播放 日韩女优无码性交视频 国产3p视频ftp 偷偷撸电影院 老头强奸处女 茜公主殿下福利视频 国产ts系列合集在线 东京热在线无码高清视频 导航H在线视频 欧美多毛胖老太性交视频 黑兽在线3232 黄色久视频 好了avahaoleav 和体育老师做爱视频 啪啪啪红番阁 欧美熟妇vdeos免费视频 喝水影院 日欧啪啪啪影院 老司机福利凹凸影院 _欧美日一本道高清无码在线,大香蕉无码av久久,国产DVD在线播放】h ujczz成人播放器 97色伦在线综合视频 虐玩大jb 自拍偷拍论理视频播放 广东揭阳短屌肥男和极品黑丝女友啪啪小龟头被粉穴搞得红红的女女的呻吟非常给 强奸女主播ed2k 黄色色播站 在线电影中文字幕无码中文字幕有码国产自拍 在线电影一本道HEYZO加勒比 在线电影 www人人插 手机在线av之家播放 萝莉小电影种子 ftp 偷拍自拍系列-性感Riku 免费日本成人在线网视频 啪啪自拍国产 日妹妹视频 自拍偷拍 老师 3d口球视频 裸体视频 mp4 美邪恶BBB 萝莉被在线免费观看 好屌看色色视频 免賛a片直播绪 国内自拍美腿丝袜第十页 国模SM在线播放 牛牛在线偷拍视频 乱伦电影合集 正在播放_我们不需要男人也一样快乐520-骚碰人人草在线视频,人人看人人摸人人 在线无码优月真里奈 LAF41迅雷磁力 熟女自拍在线看 伦理片87e 香港a级 色午夜福利在线视频 偷窥自拍亚洲快播 古装三级伦理在线电影 XXOO@69 亚洲老B骚AV视频在线 快牙水世界玩走光视频 阴阳人无码磁力 下载 在线大尺度 8o的性生活图片 黄色小漫 JavBiBiUS snis-573 在线观看 蝌蚪寓网 91轻轻草国产自拍 操逼动漫版视频 亚洲女人与非洲黑人群交视频下载 聊城女人吃男人阴茎视频 成人露露小说 美女大肥阴户露阴图 eoumeiseqingzaixian 无毛美女插逼图片 少女在线伦理电影 哥迅雷 欧美男男性快播 韩国147人体艺术 迅雷快播bt下载成人黄色a片h动漫 台湾xxoo鸡 亚洲人体西西人体艺术百度 亚州最美阴唇 九妹网女性网 韩国嫩胸 看周涛好逼在线 先锋影音母子相奸 校园春色的网站是 草逼集 曰本女人裸体照 白人被黑人插入阴道