Tuesday, February 3, 2015

VacciNation

Feb. 3, 2015
Measles is spreading across the U.S. while politicians debate the scientific merit of vaccines for some reason
The U.S. is in the midst of a modest measles epidemic. Nationwide, 107 people in eight states have been diagnosed with the disease, all linked to an outbreak at Disneyland in California. Now Arizona health officials say that a family exposed to it on vacation could infect up to 1,000 residents

With the 2016 presidential campaign looming on the horizon like a ravenous vulture waiting to ruin our lives, politicians are jumping on the national debate (a term which deserves scare quotes for its facile treatment of the facts) by the likes of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who declared Monday that "it's more important what you think as a parent than what you think as a public official." 

+ Yeah, that's... not accurate. A significant portion of the anti-vaccination movement bases its fear on the notion that vaccines cause autism — a fraudulent claim made in 1998 and long since debunked.

+ But who cares! Your acceptance of the science of vaccines is closely tied to your political philosophy, according to recent research. And it's stuff like this that leads to Sen. Rand Paul — a licensed doctor — to declare vaccination an issue of "government overreach."

+ That's too bad, because vaccines aren't about your personal beliefs and your freedom — they're about social responsibility. Vaccinated people aren't just individually protected, but act as barriers to outbreaks, since diseases can't pass through them and infect other people

+ Obama gets it! "The science is, you know, pretty indisputable," the president said Monday. "We've looked at this again and again. There is every reason to get vaccinated, but there aren't reasons to not."

+ Wow, this is getting complicated. If you have friends who don't buy the science, just show them this chart:

There are a ton of delicious goodies in President Obama's brand new budget
Promising to help America's middle class, President Barack Obama on Monday sent Congress a record $4 trillion budget that would hammer corporate profits overseas and raise taxes on the wealthy while boosting tax credits for families and the working poor.

+ Obama's budget looks to steer hundreds of billions of dollars to the nation's crumbling infrastructure of roads and bridges, help provide two years of free community college and "reverse the across-the-board, automatic budget cuts that have slammed the Pentagon and nearly every government department," the Associated Press reports.

+ Also in the budget? A massive new tax hike on overseas earnings that U.S. corporations are going to hate.

+ The budget would also help end the ongoing legal battle over ending Washington, D.C.'s marijuana prohibition.

+ The proposal also features a key change that would allow legally married same-sex couples to receive Social Security spousal benefits regardless of where they live — even if it's a state in which same-sex marriage isn't recognized.

Here's what happened to Pornhub traffic during the Super Bowl. Mic

Meet the men making money off the art and personal effects of rapists and serial killers. Vice

What if America had never invaded Afghanistan? The Atlantic

This brave woman is fighting back against revenge porn, one photo at a time. Mic

The definitive oral history of Chipotle. Bloomberg Business

Six weeks ago, Hong Kong's protesters promised they'd be back. They weren't messing around. Mic

The problem with "lumbersexuals." Pacific Standard

Why smoking pot feels so good: New neuroscience explains marijuana and the brain. Salon

Here's what Hollywood keeps getting wrong about the female orgasm. Mic

"Humans are easy to decapitate: Our large heads rest on little necks." Bookforum

Research into psychedelics, shut down for decades, is now yielding exciting results. The New Yorker

There's now a Spotify for people who love live concerts. Mic

Photo of the Day
The Tough Guy Challenge, an annual charity event, took place Sunday in Perton, England. Every year, thousands of men and women tackle the course of 200 obstacles, described on the Tough Guy website as eight country miles filled with freezing mud and "barbed wire, cuts, scrapes, burns, dehydration, hypothermia, acrophobia, claustrophobia, electric shocks, sprains, twists, joint dislocation and broken bones."
We woke up like this. Did we miss something you wanted to read about? Want to see us focus on an under-covered issue? Have a tip for the next edition? Email jared@mic.com.
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