Millions of social media users are no strangers to posting their private lives online which makes it an advantage to share relevant and important life changing events with friends and family. It also makes it a disadvantage when you get tons of backlash, especially when Facebook mogul Mark Zuckerberg shares a photo with his baby getting vaccinated.
Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan gave birth to their first child on December 1, 2015 and ever since, Mark has not been shy on posting all Max-related events online.
The Facebook founder, Mark Zuckerberg, shared a picture online. He probably thought the post of his daughter, Max, would be an adorable and innocent photo. Max and her father was at the doctor's on Friday, ready to get her first vaccination shots. Within seconds, the uploaded photo received both positive and negative comments from followers online.
The photo of the two Zuckerbergs showed the 31 year old dad wearing a grey shirt and jeans sitting down while holding his one month old daughter on his lap wearing an adorable colored onesie. The picture was captioned:
Time for vaccines!
The photo which hadn't even timestamped to the minute received multiple debates from Facebook followers.
One follower commented, "Thank you for being resonsible!", while some did not receive the uploaded picture quite well, saying...
Do you honestly think that a beautiful healthy newborn baby needs injections of neurological-toxins to become safe for the public?
And there are some who just shook their heads in disappointment. Rolling their eyes that people would even consider that the picture posted by the Facebook CEO was even worthy of all the attention it is getting.
It's kinda sad that we now live in a world in which we congratulate people for vaccinating their kids. Look at how far we have regressed due to science illiteracy.
Anti-vaccination movements have been a long-time debate for several years and users online have been very forward about expressing their opinions that vaccination is not ideal for human health. Pro-vaccination consumers have said otherwise. Amidst this online back and forth discussion, millions of Americans are still opting to vaccinate their children against diseases that usually affects children such as measles and chicken pox.
© 2017 Jobs & Hire All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.