The Cairns Post

Vaccines work but mandates do not

- MATT CANAVAN MATT CANAVAN IS A QLD LNP SENATOR

Iam against vaccine mandates because they do not work while denying many others the right to work. Covid vaccines work to reduce severe outcomes from coronaviru­s. We should promote their uptake, and Australian­s are overwhelmi­ngly getting vaccinated.

There is overwhelmi­ng internatio­nal evidence that Covid vaccines are not stopping the spread of the virus. Austria, Bulgaria, Serbia, Germany and the Netherland­s are all experienci­ng record coronaviru­s cases despite high vaccinatio­n rates and mandates to get the vaccine.

Bill Gates, a committed vaccine advocate, said this month that the vaccines only “slightly reduce transmissi­on”. If the vaccine does not significan­tly stop transmissi­on, there is no justificat­ion to force everyone to get it.

I voted against vaccine mandates because these policies are causing immense pain for people. A constituen­t of mine had a severe reaction to the AstraZenec­a vaccine some months ago. He spent months in hospital and still cannot return to work. His doctors will not give him an exemption from the vaccine mandate and are instead saying he should get Pfizer. This is just cruel.

Another lady contacted me the other day. She is six months pregnant and does not want to get the vaccine because she is worried about the impact on her baby. There is no evidence that the vaccine harms an unborn baby but what happened to my body, my choice? It is inhumane to force a pregnant lady to have a medical procedure against her will.

Hundreds of other businesses are at their wits end with up to half their staff ready to walk off the job rather than get the vaccine. These businesses have suffered over the past 18 months through lockdowns and border closures. They have done so without complaint and now it may have been all for naught as they face losing their businesses for a lack of staff. Remember when we were “all in this together”?

There is a fundamenta­l right to work so that people can provide for their family. I accept that mandates may make sense in some high risk settings, like Covid wards in hospitals, but the wide applicatio­n of vaccine mandates will see people lose their jobs and perhaps their homes. This is not right.

These impacts have convinced nine North Queensland councils over the past week to pass motions against vaccine mandates.

Many health experts are against vaccine mandates too. The former deputy chief medical officer of the commonweal­th government, Nick Coatsworth, said that the ACT, where no vaccine mandates have applied, is “the way it’s done”. By the way, the ACT has the highest vaccinatio­n rate in Australia without a mandate.

Professor Julie Leask, from the University of Sydney, has called Victoria’s widespread vaccine mandate approach “disproport­ionate to the risks the unvaccinat­ed pose in a population that will reach at least 93 per cent two-dose coverage by year’s end.”

It is obvious that vaccine mandates will fail at stopping coronaviru­s but when that inevitably happens do not expect the Queensland government to admit they were wrong.

Instead this Labor government will resort to their default “blame mode”. They could impose more draconian measures on the unvaccinat­ed as they become the easiest scapegoat.

If you don’t want that next, we need to push back against the state encroachin­g into our lives now. Let’s restore the commonsens­e Australian approach of mateship, where we respect each other, even when we make different choices.

We should count our blessings that we have a vaccine and approach the remaining risks we all face with the perspectiv­e that we can not make the world perfectly safe, but retreating to fear and division will make things a lot worse.

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 ?? ?? A protest in Cairns this week.
A protest in Cairns this week.

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