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The Inherent Racism of Anti-Vaxx Movements

July 15, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

An illustration from Charles Higgins book ‘Horrors of Vaccination Exposed and Illustrated’ (Internet Archive)
An illustration from Charles Higgins book ‘Horrors of Vaccination Exposed and Illustrated’ (Internet Archive)

By Paula Larson

We are currently experiencing a worldwide vaccination effort that’s being impeded by rising pockets of anti-vaccination sentiment.




There has been a recent increase in anti-vaccination conspiracy theories, misinformation campaigns and protests in various countries.

And while many accuse anti-vaxxers of a selfish disdain for the health and safety of others, there is a underlying aspect of these movements that needs to be more widely recognized.

Vaccine resistance movements have always been led by white, middle-class voices and promoted by structures of racial inequality.

Racist language to discredit vaccination

The intrinsic racism of anti-vaccination movements began with their historical origin in the 19th century.

Inoculation originally referred to the older form of vaccination, where pus was taken from the pustule of someone with a mild form of smallpox and purposely scratched into the arm of a healthy person. This would ideally convey a mild form of the disease and thereby protect the recipient from more deadly forms.

This type of inoculation had its foundation in a number of non-western cultures before it was incorporated into western medical practice. Indeed, inoculation was practised in China for centuries before it made its way to Europe, as well as in the Middle East and North Africa.

Its use in North America was initiated by the knowledge of an enslaved man, Onesimus, who famously taught the procedure to puritan minister Cotton Mather during a smallpox outbreak in the early 18th century.

These non-western origins fuelled some anti-vaccination criticisms during the 19th century. Opponents to the practice declared it a “filthy, useless and dangerous rite” akin to using the “charms and incantations of an African savage.”




By the turn of the 20th century, racialized language began to appear in anti-vaccination dialogues which, on the surface, had little to do with race. These racial slurs served the purposes of anti-vaccinationists who sought to discredit the practice.

One of the most potent examples of this was in 1920, when vocal anti-vaccination writer Charles Higgins published a book against vaccination. Throughout this work he consistently referred to vaccination as a “savage rite” performed by “the Medicine Man” on helpless innocent children.

Medical freedom, white freedom

The racialized language utilized by these early anti-vaxxers was all the more potent when weaponized by white leaders of anti-vaccination leagues (or organizations).

Between 1860 and 1920, numerous anti-vaxx leagues were founded in Britain, the United States and Canada. One of their main arguments was that compulsory enforcement was a “tyrannical interference with the rightful liberties of the people,” an accusation often levelled at health officials attempting to increase vaccine uptake in the general public.

These people used their social standing to loudly condemn perceived limitations of their rights, while blindly ignoring the systemic absence of the same freedoms for racialized and low-income communities.

In North America, the freedom to choose vaccination was already defined by racial identity in many places. Throughout this period, Indigenous children in Canada were forced to attend residential schools, where vaccination was either implemented or ignored at the will of federal or school officials, with little regard for parental or individual choice.

On the West Coast, civic public health officials actively enforced compulsory vaccination on Asian communities based on racial profiling during disease outbreaks. In 1900, city health officials in San Francisco issued mandatory plague vaccination orders for all Chinese individuals after a few cases of plague were found in the city.




American writer Harriet A. Washington has vividly demonstrated how Black communities were frequently enrolled in medical research trials for testing new medical treatments and vaccines, often without their knowledge or consent.

Yet the medical oppression of non-white communities was ignored by anti-vaccination leaders, who instead used their platforms to retain the medical freedoms of dominant white communities.

Today: Anti-vaxx targeting of racialized people

In present times, the leaders of anti-vaccination movements are still predominantly white, with many receiving millions in revenue from their activities.

More concerning is that they have begun to deliberately target racialized communities with anti-vaccine disinformation and propaganda. Recognizing the societal factors that have eroded trust in medical institutions, anti-vaxxers are attempting to direct this distrust to benefit their own cause.

Through their actions, anti-vaxxers deliberately seek to increase the risk of infection in already vulnerable populations. We saw this in 2017 after an outbreak of measles in Minnesota among the Somali-American community in Minneapolis.

Anti-vaxxers staged two public meetings in the community, encouraging parents to avoid vaccination and pushed the false claim that the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine is linked to rising rates of autism. The result was a drastic reduction in MMR vaccination uptake between 2004 and 2014 — dropping from 92 per cent to 42 per cent — and one of the largest measles outbreaks in the state in three decades.

Deliberate targeting has been amplified even further this year in the attempt to discredit COVID-19 vaccines. The prominent anti-vaccine organization Children’s Health Defense recently released a film aimed at fuelling distrust in vaccination among Black Americans.

Anti-vaccination leaders have also begun to co-opt narratives of persecution and suffering for their own purposes. Last month, a Washington state official wore a yellow Star of David to protest vaccine mandates, while prominent anti-vaccine voice, Naomi Wolf, was scheduled to headline a fundraiser for “liberation” from vaccine mandates on Juneteenth.

It’s not the white, middle- and upper-class anti-vaccination leaders who suffer most from a diminished herd immunity and increased prevalence of vaccine-preventable illnesses. Such individuals are generally protected by the same social and racial privileges that have historically enabled them to continuously gain a large following.

In the end, the individuals who bear the brunt of an increased burden of disease are those from historically vulnerable communities whose concerns continue to be co-opted and overshadowed by anti-vaccination activists.

Paula Larsson is a doctoral student at the Centre for the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology, University of Oxford.

The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation U.S. seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. TC says

    July 15, 2021 at 9:26 pm

    No one is being denied the vaccine everyone that wants it can get it stop trying to make everything racial it’s getting stupid

  2. Dennis says

    July 16, 2021 at 5:55 am

    Ever, ever trust the United States government.

  3. Jimbo99 says

    July 16, 2021 at 11:03 am

    Uggghhhh, throughout 2021 the vaccine has been pretty much free for anyone of whatever race or gender they identify as or may be to freely choose even which vaccine they get. If you haven’t received at least a single dose of any of the vaccines available, race shaming isn’t going to get that done. Getting the vaccine requires that you go to a location, provide identification and wait your turn. They’ll want you to stick around for 15 minutes in the event there is something that goes horribly wrong. That applies to every race & gender, even age so there really is no discrimination. As far as I know, if you want a booster or the other vaccine that requires 1 or 2 shots, you’re free to show up and get that too ? Empowering racism as a reason for anything related to his vaccine is an over reach. My CDC card doesn’t indicate what race I am, nobody asked that question at the Publix pharmacy. I don’t think they ever will. Getting vaccinated is an individual accountability & responsibility thing. If you lack what it takes to commit 30-45 minutes of a single or couple of days to get a vaccine done, that’s because you are a slacker and didn’t get a simple task done. The J&J vaccine is a one & done injection vaccine. You know, if you grocery shop once a week, take your family down to Publix or Wal-Mart, get your shot(s) and then grocery shop. Boom, you’re vaccinated and have your groceries. Now then, was that so difficult ? If you can get the kids to go to the splash pad after the vaccine, there you have it, a non-racist vaccine rewarded with a non-racist park attraction.

  4. Trailer Bob says

    July 16, 2021 at 4:35 pm

    Thank you for your comment Jimbo99. And you are absolutely correct, as I have experienced the same reality at the pharmacy I went to for my shot. If there is anyone that is not vaccinated by now, it is by their own will not to do so.
    My wife and I only recently got our first shots because of the newer strain that appears significantly more viral. We didn’t do it earlier because a) we are health and the last time I was sick was when I was 14 years old and I am now 66. It wasn’t because we are white ignorants or thought the virus was a conspiracy by the government, etc.. We got the vaccine because our intelligence allowed us to see the new strain as more deadly and more transmittable. And I am glad that we faced the COVID virus the way we did, while allowing time for us to see what happened to others who had already taken the vaccine. Seems there is a conspiracy theory for everything nowadays. So glad I am old, and got to see better times when people were kinder and more reasonable….lol.

  5. Greg says

    July 16, 2021 at 6:19 pm

    Race baiting is all part of the World Economic Forum agenda headed by Klause Schwab. They are pushing “ build back better” and the great reset. It is an objective of theirs to eventually have a one world government through a “new world order”.
    Anyone that does a little bit of research can find out more about their main objectives and end game. Part of the WEF is to divide us and create racial division. Ever hear the term “divide and conquer”? Yes it all clear as day as to what is going on worldwide and unfortunately Donald Trump was in the way of the great reset.
    Just today Janet Yellen is pushing for a global corporate tax. This is just the beginning.
    Ladies and Gentlemen buckle your seatbelts!

  6. Richard says

    July 18, 2021 at 11:04 am

    It appears that EVERYTHING is categorized as being racial or have some sort of racism attached to it. That term has been used so widely now that I am now so over it and immune to its use that I could care less about how it is now used. I personally think that racism is all a bunch of BS and anyone that uses it should take a good look into a mirror to see what’s looking back.

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