Los Angeles Times

A new cause for anti-vaxxers

- Rotesters plan to gather

Pin Sacramento on Thursday for a second time in less than a week to demand that Gov. Gavin Newsom lift pandemic-related restrictio­ns so that people can exercise their God-given right to spread the coronaviru­s.

If that sounds familiar, that because it’s essentiall­y the same message pushed by protesters last year during the legislativ­e battle over SB 276, a bill to make it harder to exempt students from mandatory vaccinatio­ns. Protesters framed their position as a defense of personal choice, even though the bill didn’t deny parents the choice to leave their children uninoculat­ed against measles and other easily preventabl­e diseases. It prevented them only from enrolling their uninoculat­ed children in schools, where they might risk the health of other people’s kids.

Vaccinatio­n opponents lost that fight, then failed to persuade enough California­ns to sign on to their fringey, anti-science crusade to repeal the law through a ballot initiative. Polls show that most people understand that vaccinatio­ns are overwhelmi­ngly safe and effective, which has been affirmed in study after study.

Many of the faces at the coronaviru­s protests are familiar as well. That’s because the three protests at the state Capitol in Sacramento were organized by the Freedom Angels Foundation, which was formed by a trio of women who met during the SB 276 debates. Now, it seems, they have channeled their frustratio­n into a new cause: fomenting dissent about the measures meant to stop the spread of COVID-19.

Anti-vaxxers, as they are known, have become important players in protests around the country against social distancing orders, joining other anti-government types at events in Texas, Michigan, Maryland and other states. They have attacked not just pandemic policies but also health experts, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, the well-respected head of the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases. Along the way they are pushing their signature combinatio­n of junk science, misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 is a hoax by the government to subdue Americans for reasons never made exactly clear.

They say they want “medical freedom,” but to us it sounds more like they want the freedom to do whatever they want, pandemic be damned, even if it means other people might get sick or die because of their actions. People have a right to endanger their own lives, but not those of others.

The pandemic restrictio­n protesters are loud and persistent, but a core group of them are merely rebels in search of a cause, any cause, to push their nutty theories. And they found one with COVID-19.

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