The Real Reason Pediatricians Want You To Vaccinate Your Kids #vaccineswork

Vaccination (and anti-vaxxing) is in the news lately after recent measles outbreaks in Disneyland and across North America.

Here’s a relevant article about how those who are anti-vax ultimately show they don’t trust a doctor’s education, experience and knowledge which is a *much* bigger issue in that relationship than just the question of whether a parent vaccinates a child or not.

I often wonder why a parent who believes vaccines are harmful would want to bring their children to a medical doctor at all. After all, for immunizations to be as malign as their detractors claim, my colleagues and I would have to be staggeringly incompetent, negligent or malicious to keep administering them.

A similar sentiment I saw was posted to Reddit: “Even if parents are anti-vax, they’re literally saying they’d prefer exposing their children to diseases that could kill them or others instead of a chance they might become autistic.”

Death by measles is rare but it does happen.  Author Roald Dahl wrote a poignant open letter to other parents after he lost his seven-year old daughter to the measles.

Scott Adams, of Dilbert fame, posted an article that’s not directly about vaccination but tries to make the point that science is the root of the public’s distrust since it’s often given us contradictory information – “eating fat makes you fat”/”no, eating carbs makes you fat” – and so on.

I’d disagree with his argument though – I think we have to do a better job as a society with science education generally and also with specifics of the scientific method so people understand that everything science says could change tomorrow depending on the latest research as well as the need for a general skepticism in all areas of our lives.

Here’s a good quote from the comments on Adams’ article (in fact, read the comments for a lot better analysis of the issue than the article itself):

The problem with science is the same problem that people have with politics, economics, etc… The general public wants simple answers to complex questions. They want to be told “FOOD X is bad for you” and to know for a fact that no one, ever, should consume FOOD X. They should always consume FOOD Y to be healthy.

Add in the fact that the media often mis-represents or sensationalizes research in a way that’s not realistic (eg. how many “Cancer might be cured?” stories have I heard on the news in my life?) and it’s not science that’s at fault so much as people’s lack of critical thinking, education, gullibility and so on that even allows an anti-vax movement to exist in the first place.

101 Things That Make Me Happy

In completely random order…

  1. Sasha
  2. Pace
  3. Shea
  4. The Flames Kicking Ass This Year
  5. Tropical Holidays
  6. Helping People With Technology Problems at the Library
  7. Our Dozen or So Young Regulars Who Hang At the Library
  8. Craft Beer
  9. iPhones and Knowing That I Have A Device in My Pocket More Powerful Than The Computers That Sent A Man To The Moon
  10. Reddit
  11. Staples Office Supply Stores
  12. Not Being Able To Name The Favourite Thing Shea Cooks (Tonight’s Tikka Masala Stir Fry was Amazing!)
  13. Days When I Don’t Have To Scrape The Car Windows In The Morning
  14. Days When I Do (As Long as It’s Not *Too* Cold) As It Makes Me Feel Very Canadian
  15. Reading Through Chapter Books With Pace
  16. When Sasha Demands To Be Read Her Board Books at Bed Time
  17. Anytime I Walk In The House After Work and See Sasha, Pace and Shea at the Dinner Table Waiting For Me
  18. Memories of Our Kauai Trip – One of the Best Trips of My Life
  19. Staying Up Until The Wee Hours of the Morning Reading a Book I Can’t Put Down
  20. Staying Up Until The Wee Hours of the Morning in General
  21. Pace Making the Next Leap in His Technological Progress Connecting with a Friend on XBox Live Today So They Can Play Minecraft Remotely
  22. How Much The Oilers Suck This Year
  23. Pizza
  24. Living in the Centre of the Continent
  25. That I Still Get the Occasional Freelance Writing Gig
  26. Being On the Board of a Local Literary Press
  27. Hawksley Workman
  28. Fred Eaglesmith
  29. Corb Lund
  30. The Beatles
  31. Books about the Beatles
  32. The Movie *Boyhood*
  33. My New HaflingerAS Slippers (shout-out to ShoeMe.ca for the wicked deal)
  34. Realising that part of the reason I wear through slippers so much is that I wear one pair pretty much 24/7 while at home and that I could have two pairs – one good lounging pair and a cheaper one for when I’m working/sweating/going outside to save the good pair.
  35. Old Dutch Cheese Nacho Chips
  36. Bushwakkers Brew Pub
  37. That Shea’s parents and my parents get along so well, go on trips together, have holidays together
  38. Pace not playing hockey makes me sad in some ways but makes my pocket book *very* happy! 😉
  39. Looking through old photos
  40. Playing guitar
  41. Memories of my exchange to England which was probably the single best four-month stretch of my life – not just a holiday but a whole different way of life for a semester
  42. Johnny Gaudreau
  43. When Sasha says “Allll done!”
  44. The sense of calm that pulling back from pretty much all volunteer/political activities I’ve had since Sasha was born
  45. Our new Google Chomecast dongle
  46. Bacon
  47. Bacon and tomatoes
  48. Bacon and tomatoes and cheese
  49. Rdio.com
  50. The smell of a new book
  51. NetFlix
  52. When Sasha’s sleeping with us and you open your eyes to see her gazing at you
  53. Freedom of Expression issues
  54. Being an atheist
  55. Those rare times when Pace has a clean room
  56. Those even more rare times when our entire house feels clean
  57. Wednesdays mornings at work – that’s our closed morning and it’s the best time to be in the library when, other than a couple other staff, it’s pretty much empty and quiet (kinda like an old fashioned library!)
  58. YouTube
  59. The recent Supreme Court ruling against Saskatchewan’s Essential Services legislation and how the current government’s overreach may have helped the labour movement across Canada in a way that no left wing government has been able to do
  60. The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
  61. Daniel Bryan, Seth Rollins and Damien Mizdow
  62. Barack Obama basically seeming to have no fucks to give now that he’s a lame duck President – snarking back at the State of the Union to drinking a beer during a Super Bowl interview to using Presidential power to unilaterally move forward issues he knows Congress won’t support
  63. Science and anything cool that happens in science
  64. The Qu’Appelle Valley
  65. This video
  66. Weddings
  67. Dancing at Weddings
  68. Our rPod182G Camper
  69. Starting To Think About Summer Camping Options
  70. Low Carb Beer (I am officially an old man)
  71. Reading in the Bath Tub
  72. Crossing Things Off My To Do List
  73. Waking Up On A Day Off and Realising I Don’t Have To Go to Work
  74. Facebook
  75. Caesar Salad
  76. Steak
  77. Caesar salad and steak
  78. Caesars
  79. Frame TV (saw this channel of rotating HD wallpapers in our hotel room this weekend and couldn’t turn it off)
  80. Blogs/Blogging
  81. Kurt Vonnegut
  82. That Final Catch in the Super Bowl (even if I hated the interception that followed on the next play)
  83. That my library has an XBox and Kinect available for programs and patrons to use
  84. Following politics
  85. Doug Stanhope
  86. Louis CK
  87. CalgaryPuck Fan Forum
  88. Visiting libraries in other communities
  89. Calgary (one of my favourite cities I’ve ever visited)
  90. That Shea Lost 40+ pounds after Sasha was born
  91. Joining a road hockey game on Christmas Day
  92. ThisLife.com (if they’d only improve their pricing structure)
  93. Pretty much anything written by Marcello di Cintio or Chris Turner
  94. Whenever I get my e-mail in-box under control at home or at work
  95. External hard drives
  96. Sasha dancing
  97. Sasha laughing
  98. Pace laughing
  99. Pace dancing
  100. Writing – anything from stories to poems to journals to reports at work
  101. Lists!

Music Monday – “Kiss me under the light of a thousand stars/Place your head on my beating heart/I’m thinking out loud/That maybe we found love right where we are”

Didn’t post this weekend as I was away at my brother-in-law’s wedding…

Thinking Out Loud” – Ed Sheeran

Throwback Thursday – #tbt – A Life In Books

Feeling nostalgic today…

Myself with the board of the Saskatchewan Publishers Group in 1999…

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Me with the board of the Saskatchewan Book Awards circa 1999-2000

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Various co-workers from the offices shared by the Sask Writers Guild, Sask Publishers Group and Sask Library Association…

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Me with the board of the Writers Guild of Alberta…(null)

My office with the Sask Publishers Group (as well as some serious rockin’ hair!) (null)

In One Month, I Hope To Have A Similar Clip of Pace and/or Sasha…

I keep watching this clip with them over and over to make sure their moves are ready! 😉

Regina’s Status As Fly-Over Country Confirmed #yqrcc #yqr

When I was in England on exchange in 1995, I would sometimes go to the college library and read the UK’s national papers.

I still remember looking at the Travel section of The Weekend Times and seeing an ad for a “Cross-Canada Adventure”.  After landing in the maritimes, you would take a coach through Quebec and Ontario, carry on through the majestic Canadian Shield to Winnipeg then catch a flight to Calgary, gateway to the Rockies.

At the time, I remember being *highly* offended – they advertise a cross-Canada tour, don’t skip the Canadian shield but still avoid Saskatchewan???

It took me nearly twenty years but I think I figured out why they’d skip Saskatchewan. As much as we want to believe we’re a world-class centre, as much as we long to join Calgary and Winnipeg as true mid-sized Canadian cities rather than engorged small towns, when it comes right down to it, we’re basically the Kansas or Nebraska of Canada – fly-over country.

That’s not just the flatness of our landscape or the agricultural base of our industry, it summarizes the backwards, morally conservative bent of our politics and rustic approach to life.

That was brought home in the worst fashion last night when, after recent changes to provincial legislation (themselves, long overdue), the Regina City Council still deemed it necessary to turn down an application for a <gasp> strip club by a vote of 9-1.

I don’t have much of a dog in this fight as my strip club days are long behind me (for the most part!) 😉

But I can’t help but laugh at the hypocrisy of the whole thing – our current Mayor and many councillors promoted our new stadium as a great way to put Regina on the map as a destination for big name concerts to an attraction for potential new residents.  Yet they line up, all in a row, and after a huge outcry by the moral minority, to turn down a strip club which, as has been pointed out numerous times through the debate, a pretty common feature in any major city – including other prairie cities like Winnipeg and Calgary.

It was also pointed out that Regina is home to massage parlours, sex toy shops, adult video stores and all kinds of other sex-related industries and activities.  The only councilor to vote in favour of the application, Shawn Fraser, apparently opened the yellow pages to demonstrate just how easy it was to find strippers in Regina already.

It was also interesting to see that this topic didn’t split perfectly along ideological lines – one leftie posted how, if city council truly cared about the harm being done to marginalized citizens, they do more about homelessness.  But another leftie I know was voicing her opposition on Twitter because of the harm that strip clubs can cause for women in terms of increased domestic violence, prostitution and other issues.  On the right, the biggest opposition seemed to come from religious people opposing the strip club on “Woe, think of the children!” and/or “Boobies are scary!” moral grounds.  But there were also righties who thought this was a legitimate business, meeting all regulations so there shouldn’t be a question as to whether it should pass or not.

(Side note:  Can we please start taxing churches that engage in political advocacy of this type?)

Anyhow, I can see the potential negatives but overall, I think having a strip club isn’t that big of a deal (and really, shows you’re more metropolitan than a shiny stadium in many ways!) and I am pretty disappointed that the Council was so opposed.  (As someone on Twitter observed: “Regina City Council turns in a 1950’s decision about a 1980’s issue”, just one sample of the online reaction.)

I didn’t contribute on Twitter myself, even though I thought it would be funny to point out what a hypocritical joke this whole thing is considering the bar that used to be in the same proposed location as the strip club was called JDs (aka “Just Dirties” to its regulars), regularly had drunken patrons quasi-copulating on the dance floor and in the booths, and was infamous for such classy moves as having “dildo races” on Ladies Night.

(Uhm, in case you’re not familiar, this particular activity involved putting sex toys on the floor, turning them on, then seeing which would “win” by inching its way outside of a circle on the floor…at least that’s what I heard!) 😉

In the end, Regina can trumpet its metropolitan ambitions all it wants.  But until the city actually starts acting like a 21st Century city, that’s nothing but talk.

How Secular Parenting Stacks Up

Pretty well actually

I could basically cut & paste the whole article as it’s all relevant but here are a few of my favourite sections…

The results of such secular child-rearing are encouraging. Studies have found that secular teenagers are far less likely to care what the “cool kids” think, or express a need to fit in with them, than their religious peers. When these teens mature into “godless” adults, they exhibit less racism than their religious counterparts, according to a 2010 Duke University study. Many psychological studies show that secular grownups tend to be less vengeful, less nationalistic, less militaristic, less authoritarian and more tolerant, on average, than religious adults.

Recent research also has shown that children raised without religion tend to remain irreligious as they grow older — and are perhaps more accepting. Secular adults are more likely to understand and accept the science concerning global warming, and to support women’s equality and gay rights. One telling fact from the criminology field: Atheists were almost absent from our prison population as of the late 1990s, comprising less than half of 1% of those behind bars, according to Federal Bureau of Prisons statistics. This echoes what the criminology field has documented for more than a century — the unaffiliated and the nonreligious engage in far fewer crimes.

Another meaningful related fact: Democratic countries with the lowest levels of religious faith and participation today — such as Sweden, Denmark, Japan, Belgium and New Zealand — have among the lowest violent crime rates in the world and enjoy remarkably high levels of societal well-being. If secular people couldn’t raise well-functioning, moral children, then a preponderance of them in a given society would spell societal disaster. Yet quite the opposite is the case.

Saturday Snap – A Couple of Pinheads

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Friday Fun Link – AllTheMinutes (Twitter Clock)

You may want to turn your Mute button but otherwise, the site AllTheMinutes.com is pretty cool.

It shows a clock comprised of live tweets (one per second) from people around the world who have mentioned the current time.

Great insight into the boring everyday lives of humanity (at least those who use Twitter!)

Throwback Thursday – #tbt – 1987 RPL Newsletter

A co-worker retired this week and brought a copy of the internal staff newsletter that featured her on its cover back in 1987!

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