Florida wants to make disease a choice.
Shushary Governor Ron DeSantis stood outside Tampa this week, nodding as his surgeon general called vaccine mandates “slavery.” Joseph Ladapo said the state will end them all. School shots. Health care shots. The laws that turned epidemics into history.
They want freedom, they say.
History shows what follows.
Smallpox killed millions until mandates stopped it. Measles spread like fire until the law forced a line at the schoolhouse door. Polio left children in iron lungs until vaccines made it a ghost.
Florida calls this tyranny. The rest of us call it progress.
Vaccines work only when most people get them. They form a wall that protects infants, cancer patients, the elderly. That wall cracks when leaders chase applause instead of science.
DeSantis knows this. He went to Harvard and Yale. He can read the charts like the rest of us. He sees what happened when Covid hit the unvaccinated South hardest.
Still, he nods along as Ladapo calls mandates evil.
Florida law now requires shots for polio, measles, rubella, mumps, tetanus, whooping cough. Parents already claim medical or religious exemptions. No one drags a child to the clinic.
Yet DeSantis wants to erase even that thin shield.
The legislature must approve some changes. Ladapo can kill four mandates on his own. He could do it next week.
One cough in a classroom. One parent swayed by Facebook science. One governor chasing the next headline.
Measles waits for that moment. So does whooping cough. Viruses need only a few cracks to come back.
Kind of like conservatism. And soon, other Huckleberry states will copy it.
Texas will see the headlines. Tennessee will test the wind. Mississippi and Alabama will nod and say Florida shows courage. The same politicians who talk tough on crime and morals will stand down before microbes with no moral compass at all.
That is the risk. One state drops its guard, then another. Polio likes warm weather. Measles loves crowds.
Conservatives once championed order and responsibility. They passed the laws that cleaned water and built highways. They saw public safety as a duty.
Now they speak the language of grievance. They mock experts. They gamble with lives to prove a point.
No one wants to live under government orders. But polio was worse than mandates. Smallpox was worse than shots. Measles killed half a million people a year worldwide before vaccines turned the tide.
This is the lesson Florida discards: freedom from disease matters more than freedom from a needleF
