In a 2015 Townhall article, Ben Shapiro criticized “anti-vaccine fanatics” who are opposed to vaccine mandates. Shapiro wrote:
Ben Shapiro once supported vaccine mandates. Now he's opposed.
Ben Shapiro was an enthusiastic supporter of vaccine mandates – before the COVID-19 pandemic
Written by Jason Campbell
Published
The point of mandatory vaccinations is not merely to protect those who are vaccinated. When it comes to measles, mumps and rubella, for example, children cannot be vaccinated until 1 year of age. The only way to prevent them from getting diseases is to ensure that those who surround them do not have those diseases. The same is true for children with diseases like leukemia, as well as pregnant women. Herd immunity is designed to protect third parties.
But Americans have short memories and enormous confidence in junk science. Parents will ignore vaccinations but ensure that their kids are stocked up with the latest homeopathic remedies, Kabbalah bracelets and crystals. St. John's wort, red string and crystals all existed before 1962. They didn't stop the measles. Vaccination did.
Shapiro went on:
When it comes to measles and mumps and rubella and polio, your right to be free of vaccination -- and your right to be a dope with the health of your child because you believe Jenny McCarthy's idiocy -- ends where my child's right to live begins.
With the delta variant scorching through the country and hesitancy to the COVID-19 vaccine dangerously high (especially among right-wing audiences), Shapiro has a different position. Though he deserves credit for encouraging people to take the vaccine (a stark difference between him and his Daily Wire employee Candace Owens), Shapiro has been harshly critical of any mandate for the COVID-19 vaccines, whether they be applied by private businesses or the government.
On August 6, Shapiro argued that “vaccine passports” (a commonly hyped fear in conservative media) would lead to more spread of COVID-19. He went on to say that if private businesses required proof of vaccination, a “social credit system” where businesses would be “carding you for a wide variety of social sins” would follow.
On August 10, Shapiro said that in a “free country,” everyone has the right to make “individual decisions” about receiving a vaccination. And unlike his 2015 commentary, Shapiro now claims that “you would not care as a vaccinated person about the unvaccinated person who lives near you except the public health official is using the unvaccinated person's very presence as a rationale for shutting down your life.”
A clear majority of Americans currently support mandated vaccination against COVID-19.
Now, with over 600,000 Americans dead from COVID-19 and 93 million Americans who are able but refuse to get vaccinated, Shapiro should apply his earlier logic to today’s crisis.