The vaccines are safe and effective. There's really no denying that. Well, I guess you could make arguments re long-term which are impossible to disprove at the moment, but otherwise -- safe and effective. Getting jabbed is a mild time inconvenience (two doses) and potentially a mild physical inconvenience (I felt mostly fine the day after my 2nd, so, meh). So, there's not a great deal of cost associated with getting it.
Covid, as we have learned, affects different ages groups differently. If you're young, then you're extremely unlikely to suffer significant adverse effects. Again, of course, there's the impossible to disprove long-term bullshit, but whatever.
So, you have a safe and effective vaccine that is of little cost to get and will protect you from a virus that...in a lot of people poses almost no serious risk. From a pure decision-making standpoint, I think each route is defensible. My family and I opted for vaccinations and I don't have a Covid care in the world. But, again, I'm not going to hop all over a 25-yr old for not getting vaccinated.
That said, criticizing the vaccines as not safe or not effective is nonsense contravened by a mountain of evidence.
Covid, as we have learned, affects different ages groups differently. If you're young, then you're extremely unlikely to suffer significant adverse effects. Again, of course, there's the impossible to disprove long-term bullshit, but whatever.
So, you have a safe and effective vaccine that is of little cost to get and will protect you from a virus that...in a lot of people poses almost no serious risk. From a pure decision-making standpoint, I think each route is defensible. My family and I opted for vaccinations and I don't have a Covid care in the world. But, again, I'm not going to hop all over a 25-yr old for not getting vaccinated.
That said, criticizing the vaccines as not safe or not effective is nonsense contravened by a mountain of evidence.
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