
The Safest Vaccine In The World Is No Vaccine: TLFPGVG
Abstract
This article explores the intersection of Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/American Express Inc. (1989) and Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905), situating them within the broader debate over vaccine mandates, bodily autonomy, and constitutional supremacy. The central claim is that Rodriguez de Quijas applies only to directly controlling Supreme Court precedent — such as Jacobson — but not to per incuriam decisions like Zucht v. King (1922) and its progeny. By clarifying Jacobson’s narrow, emergency‑specific scope and exposing Zucht’s doctrinal misapplication, the article demonstrates that Rodriguez compels courts to follow valid precedent while rejecting per incuriam rulings. Integrating Praveen Dalal’s Per Incuriam Public‑Health Deference (PIPHD) and Unacceptable Human Harm Theory (UHHT), the discussion dismantles herd immunity pseudoscience and critiques judicial deference that entrenches unconstitutional mandates. Through comparative tables and doctrinal analysis, the article argues that fidelity to Rodriguez requires courts to choose contemporary, constitutionally sound decisions over flawed precedents. The conclusion affirms that only by rejecting per incuriam rulings and pseudoscientific doctrines can the judiciary preserve vertical stare decisis, protect bodily autonomy, and restore constitutional coherence.
Introduction
The tension between vertical stare decisis and constitutional supremacy lies at the heart of American judicial practice. Rodriguez de Quijas crystallized the principle that lower courts must follow directly controlling Supreme Court precedent, even if later decisions undermine its reasoning. This doctrine secures hierarchical fidelity and institutional legitimacy. Yet, its application becomes complex when courts confront precedents that are themselves flawed, misapplied, or decided per incuriam.
Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905) is the direct precedent governing vaccine mandates. Properly understood, Jacobson was a narrow, emergency‑specific ruling: it upheld only a modest fine during a smallpox outbreak, with medical exceptions and constitutional guardrails against oppression. By contrast, Zucht v. King (1922) extended Jacobson’s logic to peacetime school exclusions, ignoring proportionality, parental rights, and federal supremacy. Zucht, and subsequent cases relying on it, are per incuriam and therefore not binding under Rodriguez.
This article advances a unified thesis: Rodriguez applies to Jacobson and contemporary valid constitutional decisions, but not to Zucht or its progeny. To apply Rodriguez to per incuriam rulings would perpetuate doctrinal incoherence and undermine constitutional protections. By weaving together doctrinal analysis, Dalal’s PIPHD and UHHT frameworks, and critiques of herd immunity pseudoscience, the article demonstrates that fidelity to Rodriguez requires courts to reject flawed precedents and embrace constitutional coherence.
Restoring Constitutional Coherence Using Per Incuriam Public‑Health Deference (PIPHD) Theory
Rodriguez de Quijas And Vertical Fidelity
Rodriguez is a doctrinal anchor for vertical stare decisis. It insists that lower courts must follow directly controlling Supreme Court precedent, even if subsequent rulings weaken its reasoning. This preserves institutional legitimacy and prevents doctrinal fragmentation across circuits. However, Rodriguez is not a license to perpetuate error. It applies only to valid precedent, not to decisions rendered per incuriam or those violating constitutional supremacy. Thus, while Jacobson remains binding in its narrow scope, Zucht and its progeny fall outside Rodriguez’s command. Courts must recognize this distinction to avoid compounding constitutional error.
The prospective nature of Rodriguez also means it governs contemporary rulings affirming bodily autonomy and the right to refuse medical interventions. When courts face a choice between applying Zucht or modern constitutional protections, Rodriguez compels them to select the latter. Any other interpretation would generate more per incuriam decisions, undermining both stare decisis and constitutional fidelity.
Jacobson Clarified: Emergency‑Specific Limits
Jacobson upheld compulsory vaccination laws only in emergencies, with exceptions and limited penalties. It was not about school mandates or forced vaccination. The Massachusetts statute imposed only a modest fine on adults over 21 without medical exemptions, while children, minors, and those under guardianship faced no penalty. The Court stressed that police power must not be arbitrary or oppressive, embedding constitutional guardrails against abuse. Properly read, Jacobson remains binding but narrow, consistent with constitutional supremacy.
Later courts misapplied Jacobson by extending it beyond its emergency context. They ignored its proportionality calculus, medical exceptions, and limited enforcement. This misapplication created doctrinal confusion and enabled oppressive mandates. Recognizing Jacobson’s limits is essential to restoring constitutional coherence and preventing further per incuriam rulings.
Zucht v. King As Per Incuriam
Zucht abandoned Jacobson’s anchors, extending emergency‑specific deference into peacetime exclusions of children from education. This doctrinal leap ignored proportionality, parental rights, bodily autonomy, and federal supremacy. By treating Jacobson as a blanket precedent, Zucht distorted constitutional doctrine and entrenched oppressive mandates. As a per incuriam decision, Zucht cannot bind lower courts under Rodriguez. To continue relying on Zucht perpetuates constitutional error and undermines judicial legitimacy.
The persistence of Zucht illustrates the dangers of misapplied precedent. It transformed a temporary emergency measure into a permanent deprivation of a core public good. Courts must recognize Zucht’s flaws and reject its authority. Fidelity to Rodriguez requires adherence to valid precedent, not per incuriam rulings.
Dalal’s PIPHD And UHHT Frameworks
Praveen Dalal’s PIPHD Theory insists that public‑health mandates must face strict scrutiny, not rational basis review. It exposes how courts misapplied Jacobson and relied on Zucht, creating a jurisprudential framework that eroded constitutional protections. PIPHD demands doctrinal coherence and restores sovereignty by rejecting per incuriam precedent. Dalal’s companion UHHT Theory complements this framework by imposing absolute liability on states and pharmaceutical actors for harms from coerced interventions. Together, PIPHD and UHHT dismantle medical exceptionalism and restore individual rights.
These frameworks align with broader jurisprudential shifts. Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo (2024) rejected Chevron deference, reasserting judicial independence. Rodriguez reinforced vertical fidelity. Together, they underscore the need for courts to avoid blind deference and doctrinal drift. Dalal’s theories provide a roadmap for reform, ensuring that public‑health measures serve safety without sacrificing liberty.
The Collapse Of Herd Immunity Pseudoscience
Herd immunity has been invoked as the scientific justification for mandates, yet closer examination reveals it as pseudoscience. Vaccines generate antibodies that “dangerously point” towards pathogens without eliminating them; true elimination requires immune effector cells. Thus, herd immunity is biologically impossible. Courts entrenched this pseudoscience by deferring to per incuriam precedents, enabling oppressive mandates. PIPHD exposes this collusion, demanding strict scrutiny and constitutional protection.
The collapse of herd immunity doctrine converges with the exposure of judicial reliance on per incuriam precedent. Together, they dismantle the legitimacy of vaccine mandates. Scientifically, herd immunity is a myth. Legally, mandates rest on misapplied precedent. Ethically, oppressive laws must be resisted. The judiciary must reject pseudoscience and restore constitutional coherence.
Doctrinal Fidelity, Per Incuriam Collapse, And Constitutional Renewal
Before presenting the table, it is important to situate it within the broader argument. This comprehensive table illustrates how Rodriguez enforces fidelity to valid precedent, how Jacobson was narrowly framed, how Zucht misapplied it, how Dalal’s theories provide corrective frameworks, how herd immunity collapses as pseudoscience, and how contemporary rulings affirm bodily autonomy. The table provides a holistic view of the doctrinal landscape, showing the choices courts face and the consequences of those choices.
Table Integrating The Core Theme
| Material | Core Insight | Constitutional Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Rodriguez de Quijas (1989) | Vertical stare decisis; fidelity to controlling precedent | Applies only to valid precedent; compels rejection of per incuriam rulings |
| Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905) | Narrow emergency ruling; modest fine; medical exceptions | Binding but limited; consistent with constitutional supremacy |
| Zucht v. King (1922) | Per incuriam expansion to school exclusions | Not binding under Rodriguez; perpetuates constitutional error |
| PIPHD + UHHT Theories | Strict scrutiny; absolute liability; dismantling exceptionalism | Restores sovereignty; demands doctrinal coherence |
| Herd Immunity Critique | Pseudoscience; biological impossibility; judicial collusion | Mandates built on pseudoscience unconstitutional; courts must reject |
| Contemporary Rulings | Affirm bodily autonomy, privacy, right to refuse vaccines | Governed by Rodriguez; compel courts to choose valid precedent |
Analysis:
This table synthesizes the doctrinal landscape by weaving together the central theme of this article. At its foundation, Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/American Express Inc. (1989) enforces fidelity to valid precedent, compelling courts to follow Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905) while rejecting Zucht v. King (1922) and subsequent cases as per incuriam. Jacobson remains binding but narrow, consistent with constitutional supremacy: it was an emergency‑specific ruling, limited to a modest fine, and tempered by medical exceptions and constitutional guardrails against oppression. Zucht, however, represents a doctrinal misapplication, extending Jacobson into peacetime exclusions of children from education without reapplying the controlling principles of proportionality, bodily autonomy, and parental rights. Dalal’s PIPHD and UHHT frameworks provide corrective tools, demanding strict scrutiny of public‑health mandates and imposing liability for coerced harms. These theories dismantle medical exceptionalism and restore sovereignty, ensuring that constitutional protections are not eroded under the guise of public health. The collapse of herd immunity pseudoscience further undermines mandates, exposing them as scientifically untenable and constitutionally oppressive. Contemporary rulings affirming bodily autonomy and the right to refuse vaccines even in emergencies are governed by Rodriguez, which compels courts to prioritize these valid decisions over flawed precedents.
The integrated doctrinal framework reveals a judiciary at a crossroads. Fidelity to Rodriguez is not blind obedience but principled adherence to constitutional supremacy. Courts must distinguish between valid precedent and per incuriam rulings, recognizing Jacobson’s narrow binding force while discarding Zucht and its progeny as doctrinally unsound. This distinction prevents doctrinal incoherence and safeguards fundamental rights. The broader implication is that the judiciary must recalibrate its approach to public‑health law. Herd immunity, once treated as scientific orthodoxy, has collapsed under scrutiny, revealing itself as pseudoscience. Mandates built upon it lack both scientific and constitutional legitimacy. Dalal’s PIPHD and UHHT frameworks provide the tools to dismantle medical exceptionalism, demand doctrinal coherence, and restore sovereignty. Contemporary rulings affirming bodily autonomy must be recognized as valid precedent under Rodriguez. This doctrinal realignment ensures that vertical stare decisis coexists with constitutional supremacy, preventing further per incuriam rulings and reaffirming the judiciary’s role as guardian of both institutional legitimacy and individual liberty. In this way, the courts can fulfill their dual role: preserving hierarchical fidelity while protecting the constitutional rights of individuals against oppressive and pseudoscientific mandates.
Conclusion
The comprehensive analysis establishes a clear doctrinal pathway. Rodriguez de Quijas applies to Jacobson v. Massachusetts as the direct precedent, but it does not extend to Zucht v. King or subsequent cases decided per incuriam. Jacobson remains binding in its narrow, emergency‑specific scope, while Zucht must be discarded as doctrinally unsound. Dalal’s PIPHD and UHHT theories reinforce this conclusion, demanding strict scrutiny of public‑health mandates and imposing liability for coerced harms. The collapse of herd immunity pseudoscience further undermines the legitimacy of vaccine mandates, exposing them as scientifically untenable and constitutionally oppressive. Contemporary rulings affirming bodily autonomy and the right to refuse medical interventions are governed by Rodriguez and must be prioritized over flawed precedents.
Ultimately, fidelity to Rodriguez requires courts to choose valid precedent over per incuriam rulings. Any other interpretation would perpetuate doctrinal incoherence and generate more constitutional error. By rejecting Zucht, dismantling herd immunity pseudoscience, and embracing contemporary constitutional protections, the judiciary can restore coherence, safeguard liberty, and reaffirm its role as guardian of both institutional legitimacy and individual rights. This is not merely a doctrinal adjustment; it is a constitutional imperative.


















