Category: Religious Fear
- The Smallpox Vaccine "Mark of the Beast"
This theory claimed that compulsory smallpox vaccination was not a humanitarian measure but a corrupt state intervention that would animalize, contaminate, or morally degrade the population. In its earlier form, critics warned that material taken from cows would introduce “beastly” disease into human bodies. In the compulsory-vaccination politics of the 1870s, these fears merged with anxieties about government intrusion, class purity, bodily corruption, and the idea that vaccination marked the body with an unnatural badge of obedience. The historical record clearly shows that anti-vaccination literature in Britain flourished in the 1870s and 1880s and that critics genuinely described vaccination as introducing bovine corruption into the human bloodstream. What remains theory rather than fact is the belief that vaccination was designed to cattleize or spiritually mark the population.