> "It used to be, when I were a kid, that everybody got measles. And the measles gave you lifetime protection against measles infection"<p>I suppose the kids who were hospitalized and <i>died</i> did, technically, gain "lifetime protection from measles"!<p>If "natural" inoculation was <i>that</i> effective and <i>that</i> safe, you know hwat? <i>The disease would already be extinct generations ago</i>, and we wouldn't be having these discussions. If anything, crazy folks like this are <i>helping</i> a disease we almost had practically eradicated.<p>___<p>Additionally:<p>This is even <i>worse</i> from a personal-liberty perspective, because even if it were as safe as vaccines (it <i>isn't</i>) to be effective you would need to force/compel/entice <i>even more people</i> into partiicpating, since it's actually increasing the number of infectious sources and routes in the short-term.<p>Even for kids not hospitalized/dead, measles damages and kinda-resets the immune system, meaning they become vulnerable to injury/death from <i>other</i> diseases even after you thought they were safe.
To make sure that everybody gets measles, they could bottle it in vials and give children a carefully dosed injection. Maybe an attenuated measles strain instead of the most dangerous form.<p>Surely the natural immunization acquired in this way cannot be worse than unnatural vaccines!
From author Roald Dahl:<p>> Olivia, my eldest daughter, caught measles when she was seven years old. As the illness took its usual course I can remember reading to her often in bed and not feeling particularly alarmed about it. Then one morning, when she was well on the road to recovery, I was sitting on her bed showing her how to fashion little animals out of coloured pipe-cleaners, and when it came to her turn to make one herself, I noticed that her fingers and her mind were not working together and she couldn’t do anything.<p>> “Are you feeling all right?” I asked her.<p>> “I feel all sleepy,” she said.<p>> In an hour, she was unconscious. In twelve hours she was dead.<p>> [...]<p>> I dedicated two of my books to Olivia, the first was ‘James and the Giant Peach‘. That was when she was still alive. The second was ‘The BFG‘, dedicated to her memory after she had died from measles. You will see her name at the beginning of each of these books. And I know how happy she would be if only she could know that her death had helped to save a good deal of illness and death among other children.<p><a href="https://fs.blog/roald-dahl-letter-daughter/" rel="nofollow">https://fs.blog/roald-dahl-letter-daughter/</a>
<a href="https://www.cdc.gov/measles/data-research/index.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.cdc.gov/measles/data-research/index.html</a><p>We'll get new numbers on that page this Friday, but the number of cases in Texas alone (per other reporting) now exceeds the national total from last week. Spring break is coming up which means a lot more travel for families so we're probably going to see it spread even wider.