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Why vaccination should be like wearing a seat belt – compulsory

Although the first compulsory seat-belt laws met with strong objections when they were introduced 50 years ago, nobody bothers to complain about such a common sense rule anymore. In mandating vaccination against Covid-19, governments today can offer the same basic justification for protecting both individuals and society

People are now making demands for the freedom to be unvaccinated against the virus that causes Covid-19
People are now making demands for the freedom to be unvaccinated against the virus that causes Covid-19 Photo: Getty Images

I’m writing from Victoria, the Australian state that became, in 1970, the first jurisdiction in the world to make it compulsory to wear a seat belt in a car. The legislation was attacked as a violation of individual freedom, but Victorians accepted it because it saved lives. Now most of the world has similar legislation. I can’t recall when I last heard someone demanding the freedom to drive without wearing a seat belt.

Instead, we are now hearing demands for the freedom to be unvaccinated against the virus that causes Covid-19. Brady Ellison, a member of the United States Olympic archery team, says his decision not to get vaccinated was “one hundred percent a personal choice,” insisting that “anyone that says otherwise is taking away people’s freedoms.”

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