Children in Florida do not have to preserve vaccines against avoidable diseases such as measles, mumps, chickenpox, polio and hepatitis, said Joseph Ladapo, the general surgeon of the state, on Wednesday in a speech in which he compared vaccination mandate with “slavery”.
Ladapo, by Ron Desantis, Florida’s Republican governor, was selected for the role of Ron Desantis, a long -time skeptic of the advantage of vaccines and was previously accused of entering “scientific nonsense” by supporters of public health.
In his announcement on Wednesday, at a press conference in Tampa, which was held by Desantis, he said that every state vaccine requirement would be lifted and that he expected the move to be given the blessing “God”.
“Every last of them is wrong and drips with contempt and slavery,” said Ladapo, who changed the data in a 2022 study via Covid 19 vaccines to overdo the risk of young men who revenue.
“People have the right to make their own decisions. Who am I as a government or someone else to tell them what they should put in their bodies? Our body is a gift from God. What they put in their body is due to their relationship with their body and God.”
Ladapo condemned the requirements for the lockdowns and vaccination requirements during the Coronavirus pandemic as time when crazy things passed “and said that the growing skepticism of the vaccines” reflections of the view of God were against the darkness of the tyranny and oppression “.
The Florida Ministry of Health currently has strict requirements for vaccinations that have to be given in childhood, which are published on its website. No child can be inscribed at a public school in Florida, unless it has received a number of shots against a number of diseases.
Routine vaccinations in childhood are prevented by around 508 million illnesses, 32 million hospital stays and 1.13 million deaths in children born in the United States between 1994 and 2023.
It was estimated that the vaccination program nationally led to a direct saving of $ 540 billion and social savings of 2.7 tons of US dollars.
Ladapo did not indicate any details or timeline for the proposed cancellation, but said that his department would work with the legislator and the Desantis government to achieve this.
“I love our legislators. You have to make decisions … People have to make a decision,” he said. “People have to choose a page. And I’m telling them that the moral side is so simple.”
Ladapo also said that “it will be wonderful for Florida to be the first state”. However, a new law in Idaho, which came into force last month, has entered into force that children were vaccinated for schools in the state.