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TimorousBestie | 10 days ago
For now. Your state legislature has multiple bills in progress to increase vaccine exemptions and reduce requirements, following the national trend.
> and has a 95.3% vaccination rate
93.8% the year prior, see below. We’ll see if it’s an upward trend or an outlier soon enough.
> But you're making up some stupid bullshit about "ow [sic] childhood vaccine rates".
Here’s a weighting of various vaccination metrics by state: https://www.newsweek.com/states-that-vaccinate-most-map-2127... (2025)
And a local report from a couple months ago: https://alabamareflector.com/2025/12/08/alabama-sees-lower-v...
> The vaccination rate for children aged 13-17 nationwide remained high in 2024, but it drops significantly in Alabama as children age. Where about 70% of 4-10-year-olds are up to date on vaccines statewide, only 25% of children 11-18 years old are up to date.
And as I said to the sibling commenter, I’m not advocating doing nothing about absenteeism. It’s perfectly reasonable to criticize a specific method while endorsing its intended effect.
ch4s3|10 days ago
Honestly you take is disastrously stupid. It's this sort of illness safety maximalism that lead to COVID learning loss to begin with.