No, it’s common sense. rationally thinking people that are aware of a known serious disease don’t fear it, they take the known proper preventative measures, then move on without that issue in their lives.
I want to agree with you, and that might be true for some. I doubt that is genuinely the case with most people that get the vaccine. I believe most people get it because they fear what might happen if they don't, either due to pre-established health conditions (and rightfully so if that is the case) and some perhaps like you because it is the ethical thing to do which I respect. The third group are people that did not agree to it but had to because of their line of work something I also respect. From what I can recall this whole pandemic was centered on how much it was spreading and its fatality rate, which we all know now as even stated by the CDC to be of 1%. But in the beginning, it was a scandal from what I remember. But perhaps I had the wrong impression as advertised by the media and others?
The only part I have to disagree with is "then move on without that issue in their lives". From what I understand people that have gotten it did so with that very same hope. Then it went from so we don't spread it to now so that the symptoms are lesser so we don't overcrowd the hospitals for people that are actually at high risk (which is a sound reason I have to admit).
I just believe as we find out more about the effectiveness and side effects of the vaccine are simply labeled as common sense when anyone with a capacity to think critically would question how this was handled and is still being handled.
Even after actual documents and testimonies from Pfizer and Federal employees it still beats me to label it as a conspiracy theory.
So let's put it this way, if you can still contract the virus and spread it with the vaccine, why would someone with a perfect natural immunity that cares for what goes in their bodies not allowed to question or have sovereignty over a health choice that can very likely and heavily impact them?
If the reason is still going back to a matter of infrastructure, then I would agree that those that are not vaccinated are
denied medical care if it's related to covid-19. That is the only thing I would change and agree as reasonable. But I still believe it is a personal choice. And an important one.
Modern Man Advice