Symbolism is
fine, but actual prevention? Not so much.
By
Will Collette
Flip on the right. Only four people were injured as Flip trambled over them when he spotted the camera. For those suffering from humorous Dyscognition, I'm kidding. |
Today, we’ll examine Filippi’s contradictory position
on a subject that, in truth, should unite us all – the struggle to eliminate all
forms of cancer. Filippi made a big show of coming to the Charlestown “Twin Peaks Preservation Stroll,” wearing the de rigueur pink t-shirt to
promote “breast cancer awareness.”
His remarks were lovingly recorded in the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA
Party) blog where he applauded the effort and claimed that “The cure will be found as a result of public awareness.”
With all
due respect to the organizers of these “awareness” events, mere “awareness”
will never cure cancer. I
think there are few people left who remain unaware of breast cancer, or for
that matter, most of the other forms of cancer.
The “awareness” message should
be, but rarely is, a call to arms to demand a massive, extensive amount of
research on causes and cures, affordable treatment for all victims and
prevention.
I
think it’s time to move beyond “awareness” to start demanding the kind of
mobilization of resources and personnel we are capable of, on the scale of the
Manhattan Project, or the Race to the Moon or the Global War on Terrorism.
Now
suppose we do this, and we discover, as is likely, that some forms of cancer,
like cervical cancer, are caused by viruses that can actually be transmitted
from person to person. And we find a vaccine that kills the virus.
Public
health officials consider the best way to stop this form of cancer is to
immunize children because that is the best time to get maximum coverage, kill
the virus and stop it from spreading.
This
is not idle speculation, but the exact scenario we face as we now hold the
means to drastically reduce, if not eradicate, cervical cancer
and other forms of cancer caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV).
The
obvious public health decision is to require all schoolchildren to be
vaccinated against HPV to hopefully eliminate it, just as we wiped out polio
and smallpox.
So
that’s what the Rhode Island Departments of Health and Education decided to do,
with the predictable outcry from hypocritical, if not loony, legislators like
Blake Filippi and fellow
Republican wingnut Rep. Justin (R-Richmond).
They
have become mouthpieces for the anti-vaxxer movement that cloaks their
ignorant, internet-driven views that somehow vaccines are evil under the more
innocuous expression “parental choice.”
Flip
told the Warwick Beacon after a Health
Department informational session in Warwick that the state mandate was an “overstep”
by the Government and that he will work to introduce legislation to get it
repealed.
These
efforts to curb immunization against cervical and related cancers put Rhode Island
right up on the Anti-Vaxxer map, so it’s no longer a West Coast issue where anti-vaxxer parents are letting measles, mumps, whooping cough, chicken pox and other preventable children diseases to make a
come-back. The
outbreaks can be directly tied to how freely states allow people to claim
exemptions from mandatory vaccination.
But the most important reason why the HPV vaccination program makes sense is that it gives us a real chance to wipe out a killer of many women and men. That's worth more than a hundred million pink ribbons.
When
Flip returns to the General Assembly in January, he and his fellow anti-vaxxers
will face some major disappointment as all-powerful Speaker of the
House Nick Mattiello has already made it clear that he believes the decision to
mandate vaccination of students is best made by the Health Department.
There
are many times, places and issues where parental choice can and should be
honored. This isn't one of them and I would think a self-proclaimed Constitutional “expert” like
Flip would know that “parental choice” is not one of those rights specifically
enumerated in the Constitution.
Logically, the framers of the Constitution
realized that not every public decision can be turned into an individual
option.
As
I’ve said before, no self-centered concept of
personal freedom gives a parent the right to conduct germ warfare against the
rest of the people. As Supreme
Court Justice Robert Jackson wrote in 1949, “The Constitution is not a suicide pact.”
So-called “parental rights” do not trump public health. And the high cost of
cancer treatment makes the HPV vaccine an amazing public health bargain.
One has to wonder if the typical Charlestown voter shares
Filippi’s dismissive and short-sighted perspectives on public health issues, or
if they even care. Maybe they don’t even know?
Rep. Blake Filippi seems to be establishing a reputation that is
an embarrassment to the people of our district. Maybe the cure for this sad
state of affairs will also be found as a result of public awareness, brought to
you by Blake’s favorite blog, Progressive Charlestown.