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Blue State Nazi Democrats: MD Judge Tells Parents to Vaccinate Kids or Go to Jail


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http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,312066,00.html

 

Md. Judge to Parents: Vaccinate Kids or Go to Jail

Saturday, November 17, 2007

 

UPPER MARLBORO, Md. - Hundreds of grumbling parents facing a threat of jail

lined up at a courthouse Saturday to either prove that their school-age kids

already had their required vaccinations or see that the youngsters submitted

to the needle.

 

The get-tough policy in the Washington suburbs of Prince George's County was

one of the strongest efforts made by any U.S. school system to ensure its

youngsters receive their required immunizations.

 

Two months into the school year, school officials realized that more than

2,000 students in the county still didn't have the vaccinations they were

supposed to have before attending class.

 

So Circuit Court Judge C. Philip Nichols ordered parents in a letter to

appear at the courthouse Saturday and either get their children vaccinated

on the spot or risk up to 10 days in jail. They could also provide proof of

vaccination or an explanation why their kids didn't have them.

 

By about 8:30 a.m., the line of parents stretched outside the courthouse in

the county on the east side of Washington.

 

Many of them complained that their children already were properly immunized

but the school system had misplaced the records. They said efforts to get

the paperwork straightened out had been futile.

 

"It was very intimidating," Territa Wooden of Largo said of the letter. She

said she presented the paperwork at the courthouse Saturday and resolved the

matter.

 

"I could be home asleep. My son had his shots," said Veinell Dickens of

Upper Marlboro, who also blamed errant paperwork.

 

Aloma Martin of Fort Washington brought her children, Delontay and Taron, in

10th and 6th grade, for their hepatitis shots. She said she had been trying

to get the vaccinations for more than a month, since the school system sent

a warning letter. She had an appointment for Monday, but came to the

courthouse to be safe.

 

"It was very heavy handed," she said of the county's action. "From that

letter, it sounded like they were going to start putting us in jail."

 

School officials deemed the court action a success. School system spokesman

John White said the number of children lacking vaccinations dropped from

2,300 at the time the judge sent the letter to about 1,100 Friday. Hundreds

more were expected to be in compliance after Saturday's session.

 

Officials said they did not know how many students got shots Saturday and

how many merely had paperwork problems. It was also unclear how many claimed

medical or religious exemptions to the requirement.

 

White said the school system, with about 132,000 students, has been trying

for two years to get parents to comply with state law. That law allows

children to skip vaccines if they have a medical or religious exemption.

 

Maryland, like all states, requires children to be immunized against several

childhood illnesses including polio, mumps and measles. In recent years, it

also has required that students up to high school age be vaccinated against

hepatitis B and chicken pox.

 

Nichols said nobody actually came before him Saturday, but he was there if

any parent asked to see him.

 

The judge noted the unhappy looks of some of the kids in line waiting for

vaccinations.

 

"It's cute. It looks like their parents are dragging them to church,"

Nichols said.

 

Any children who still lack immunizations could be expelled. Their parents

could then be brought up on truancy charges, which can result in a 10-day

jail sentence for a first offense and 30 days for a second.

 

Prince George's State's Attorney Glenn Ivey couldn't say Saturday whether he

would prosecute parents who fail to comply.

 

"We have to sit down with school and health services," he said. "We haven't

ruled anything out. We need to figure out where we stand."

 

Several organizations opposed to mass vaccinations demonstrated outside the

courthouse. While the medical consensus is that vaccines are safe and

effective, some people blame immunizations for a rise in autism and other

medical problems.

 

"People should have a choice" in getting their children immunized, said

Charles Frohman, representing a physicians' group opposed to vaccines.

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Popular Days

The National Socialists were not convinced that vaccinations are a

good thing. You can look it up on the internet and see the opposing

views. The National Socialists would therefore not have forced

vaccinations, they probably didn't even promote them.

 

http://www.ihr.org/ http://www.natvan.com

 

http://www.thebirdman.org http://www.nsm88.com/

 

http://wsi.matriots.com/jews.html

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