A mother has told the Family Court that vaccinating kids should be classed as a medical procedure similar to sterilisation and gender reassignment surgery.
Head. Desk.
The woman in question is taking her former husband to court – because she “vehemently opposes” his request to have their two children vaccinated.
Moreover, she is arguing that the court should define immunisation as a “special medical procedure”. This would give it the same legal status as gender reassignment surgery, the sexual sterilisation of intellectually disabled children, and – perhaps the most congruent example – opposing lifesaving medicine and procedures on the basis of religious grounds.
The parents – called only “J” and “P” in court documents – are scheduled to begin fighting in the Family Court on January 29.
The mother will be calling on American doctors to support her case (including a doctor with an appearance fee of $5000), and the court ruled in July that her doctors are allowed to test the children’s urine, faecal matter and blood before the trial. (The reason for that request is unknown). However, the court ruled that doctors could not test food of the children.
After this ruling, the mother lodged an appeal asking that the trial be adjourned, to give her “sufficient time” to “research the relevant law”, as she believed this ruling demonstrated “bias and error”. The appeal was dismissed.
Justice Ann Margaret Ainslie-Wallace published on the court’s website, “Whether or not [it] is found to be a special medical procedure is a matter to be determined and argued before the trial judge.”