When “freedom” becomes the license to endanger
The darkest of days of infamy have descended on Florida as lawmakers dismantled school vaccine mandates.
They call it freedom. But this idea of liberty isn’t liberty at all. It’s the license to endanger your neighbor’s child, dressed up in patriotic bunting. Real freedom has always been tied to civic duty — the duty to protect one another from preventable harm.
We are victims of success. Vaccines worked so well that the diseases they conquered faded from memory. Because we no longer see children suffocating from diphtheria, paralyzed by polio, or blinded by measles, people have convinced themselves those nightmares never existed. But they did. And the only reason they’re gone is because of vaccines — and mandates.
Florida has chosen to forget.
The Warning We Ignore: Measles Is Back
We don’t have to rely on history books to understand what happens when vaccination rates fall. We have a real-time reminder: measles.
This year, the United States saw outbreaks of measles — a disease we once eliminated. Where vaccination rates were strong, measles fizzled. Where they faltered, it spread like wildfire.
That isn’t theory. That is proof. Vaccines work. And the absence of vaccines works in the virus’s favor.
Florida has chosen the virus.
Victims of Vaccine Success
The paradox is simple: because vaccines worked, we forgot the terror of what came before.
Polio filled wards with children in iron lungs, many never breathing on their own again.
Diphtheria closed airways until children suffocated in their parents’ arms.
Measles blinded, deafened, or killed countless children before the age of ten.
If you doubt this, walk through the older sections of any cemetery. Count the rows of small headstones. These were not random tragedies. They were the result of microbes medicine had not yet defeated.
Vaccines were our answer — and mandates were how we ensured they worked.
Herd Immunity: The Duty to Protect
Vaccines don’t just protect the child who gets the shot. They protect the baby too young for a full vaccine series. They protect the child on chemotherapy. They protect the immunocompromised kid who depends on the rest of us.
That’s herd immunity. A shield built from civic duty. And Florida has chosen to break that shield.
This isn’t freedom. It’s surrender.
Florida’s Deadly Exceptionalism
Let’s not forget: Florida already had one of the worst COVID death records in the nation. That wasn’t an accident. That was policy — leadership choosing ideology over evidence, politics over public health.
Now, instead of learning from catastrophe, Florida is doubling down. Once again, children will bear the consequences.
The Ethics of Medicine
A foundation of medical ethics is public health. Physicians are not only responsible for the patient in front of them, but for protecting the community.
Standing for public health is not optional. It is what every doctor is bound to do — not by convenience, not by politics, but by moral clarity.
And I am bound to speak out. Trained in virology, I cannot stand silent while public health is dismantled. I do this because of you, my readers and supporters. You allow me to speak plainly, with science and history as my only sponsors. For that, I thank you.
A Personal Memory: Alaska Remembers

The Iditarod sled dog race wasn’t invented as sport. It commemorates a desperate mission. In 1925, a doctor in Nome recognized diphtheria spreading toward epidemic levels. He knew hundreds of children would die — not a peaceful death, but suffocation as their airways closed.
Can you imagine watching your child struggle for breath and fail? That was diphtheria before vaccines.
The serum run began in Seward, Alaska — where my father was raised in the Jesse Lee Home, an orphanage filled with children whose parents had already been lost to infectious disease. My father buried too many of his classmates.
Alaska Native children suffered the most. Families shattered, generations scarred. But Alaska remembered. And because we remembered, Native children were among the first to be vaccinated against every infectious disease.
Unlike Florida, we did not pretend history hadn’t happened. Our gravestones are not so many generations away. We still carry family stories of loss. We know that civic duty is not a synonym for personal freedom. Civic duty is the obligation to protect your neighbor.
Florida has forgotten. Alaska has not.
Conclusion: The Price of Forgetting
Florida hasn’t struck a blow for liberty. It has struck a match in a dry room, pretending the fire won’t spread. But walls of immunity collapse when you stop maintaining them. And microbes wait patiently.
The price of forgetting is paid in children’s graves. Florida has chosen amnesia. The rest of us must choose memory — and duty.
Thank you Doctor.