From the (boneheaded) editor: My apologies. I pooched this one in a way that is exceptional, even for me. I humbly beg your forgiveness. The line for torches is on the left, and pitchforks is on the right. Please, move on to the next story and don't waste any further time on this one.
Regards,
cmn32480
(Score: 2) by HiThere on Tuesday March 15 2016, @07:28PM
Sorry, but many vaccines DO cause one to be slightly infectious. It's generally an extremely mild form of the disease, and unlikely to spread, but contagion is possible.
If you get some vaccines you are cautioned to stay away from young children and pregnant women for a week or so. (I think how long depends on the vaccine.) This is *probably* unnecessary, as the disease is so mild that it's probably difficult to catch it from you, but it is possible, so they warn you.
I can envision that someone who was vaccinated ignored the warnings and passed the disease onto someone else who hadn't been vaccinated BEFORE the visit to Disneyland, and then that someone visited Disneyland while fully contagious. That could happen, and some people do ignore warnings.
It would still be the disease being spread by and among those who were unvaccinated, of course.
Javascript is what you use to allow unknown third parties to run software you have no idea about on your computer.