If only there were some way to know what the Founding Fathers thought of vaccines and vaccine mandates?
Oh, right, they wrote extensively on the subject, and by their actions showed their commitment to public health.
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You may know the history of Washington's variolation of troops at Valley Forge, making them immune to the smallpox scourge that led to tragedy at the Battle of Quebec. The process was not without risk, but according to figures, inoculation lowered case fatality from 45% to 2%.
During the war, he also mandated quarantine for civilians and soldiers under his direction, enforced by troops and general order.
Inoculation in America has African roots: Puritan minister Cotton Mather purchased a slave he named Onesimus, who taught Mather how his tribe rubbed a cut with pus from infected. Other slaves confirmed story & by 1716, Mather spread inoculation throughout New England.
Mather recruited Zabdiel Boylston, a Boston physician & great-uncle to Pres. John Adams, to inoculate 248 people in the midst. 6 died in the process, or 1 in 40. Among uninoculated Bostonians, 1 in 7 died during the same period.
Resistance to his method was violent.
Following the death of his 4 yr old son of smallpox, Ben Franklin established in 1774 "The Society for Inoculating the Poor Gratis" to inoculate the poor of Philadelphia.
When Edward Jenner's much safer vaccine became available, it was first introduced by Boston physician Benjamin Waterhouse in 1800, who sent a sample to President Thomas Jefferson, along with instruction on how it could be distributed, preserved.
Jefferson even ordered explorers Lewis & Clark to carry with them the "kine pox" and to share it with native tribes, although the travel conditions spoiled the serum and it was inert by the time they reached their winter camp.
During his second term, Jefferson wrote to Jenner a sort of fan letter:
"I avail myself of this occasion of rendering you a portion of the tribute of gratitude due to you from the whole human family.Medicine has never before produced any single improvement of such utility."
In 1813, President James Madison signed "An Act to Encourage Vaccination", which created a National Vaccine Agency, also authorizing the US Post Office to carry any package (<0.5 oz) for free if it contained smallpox vaccine material.
We've faced pandemics before in our Republic, & the Founding Fathers were no strangers to conflict between individual rights & public health. They seem, in every case, to have been advocates for a course of action that lessens suffering, increases the strength of our nation.
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Famed population geneticist RA Fisher published this paper in 1936 taking Mendel to task for either concealing, cherry-picking, or omitting parts of his study of pea genetics.
1. The segregation ratios (as in 'Mendelian ratios') are too perfect. Actual observations are modified by noise and distortion, only land on the 3:1, 1:2:1 ratios in extremely large samples sizes of ideal, perfect genetic models.
I want to talk about the Map-Territory Relation in #science & why it matters to many topics in public perception of science.
It's what I think of when people insist that 'science says there are only two genders'.
Maybe you've seen this work by René Magritte, called "The Treachery of Images". The text translates: "this is not a pipe".
It's not. It's an IMAGE of a pipe. It only resembles an actual pipe in one very specific way, from a particular angle, in 2-D.
Like this PICTURE of a pipe, a scientific model or system of classification is by nature a SIMPLIFICATION.
British statistician George Box: "Essentially, all models are wrong, but some are useful. However, the approximate nature of the model must always be borne in mind."
But the most interesting story about Benjamin Franklin I've run across is the giant pit filled with human bones that was recently (1997) found in his basement.
Really.
A giant pit of human bones. The remains of at least 28 bodies. In his basement. Cut up with a saw.
Ben Franklin lived at 36 Craven Street in London (now the 'Benjamin Franklin House & Museum').
Workers doing renovations found the bones in a buried pit in the basement, remains including those of infants.
He had a special arrangement with a friend of a friend, William Hewson, now called the "Father of Hematology" for his discovery of blood composition and fibrin.
Hewson operated an "anatomy school" in Ben Franklin's garden (back yard) where students dissected cadavers.
He had an acknowledged illegitimate son, William, who was the last British governor of New Jersey & chief Loyalist, running pro-British military operations from his base in New York.
He died in exile. But HE had an illegitimate son...
William Temple Franklin was William's illegitimate son, born while William was in law school, London.
"Temple" accompanied his GRANDFATHER Benjamin & acted as his secretary, worked on Treaty of Paris where France recognized USA.
Brief return to US, then rest of life in France.
Temple had an illegitimate son, Théodore, but he died before the age of 5, and an illegitimate daughter, Ellen Franklin Hanbury, who was raised by HER grandfather William.
Ellen married but had no children, so this particular chain of Franklin Bastards reaches its end.
My hypothesis:
Humans invented hats because we were envious of the marvelous headgear in the animal world.
Let's talk about antlers, horns, ossicones & pronghorns.
#Antlers are shed & regrown every year, composed of bone that begins at a pedicle, base structure that remains after shedding. Antlers are extensions of the the skull.
Mechanism of growth similar to bone HEALING: cartilaginous tissue gives rise to bone coated in skin "velvet".
Antlers usually only form on males, with one exception: female reindeer grow shortened antlers, which may be functional for snow clearing, or challenge between females over scarce food resources.