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the title is clickbait. yes, there are side effects but there are a few orders of magnitude greater chances of the combo getting covid + dying than being affected by the vaccine and dying.

i am not saying we should not talk about them, but should we exercise caution with the way we formulate it. there are a lot of antivaxers out there and they don’t read beyond the title. if their number increases it will be bad for the entire society.



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Every time an antivaxxer can point at science or a scientist and say “Look! They’re lying to you!” that’s a real loss of credibility it will take years to win back.

There might be problems with this one particular COVID-19 vaccine. Let’s not play that straight into the antivaxxers hands by being obviously dishonest about it.

If there’s causes for concern, we obviously need to investigate those concerns and be open about it.


I don't think being apprehensive about these particular vaccines makes one an "anti-vaxxer". I know a few people who don't want them right now who are otherwise fully vaccinated.

Is that because they're well-informed on the topic and have reason to believe that these vaccines are especially dangerous, or is it that they usually don't know (and think) a lot about rare side-effects?

I wonder what the threshold is. You want people to make informed decisions, but you don't want them to panic about tiny risks, because otherwise you'll get a lot less vaccinations.

Anti-vaccination is reasonable if one says "any potential side effect means I won't take it". But that seems neither individually wise nor collectively desired, though we don't really talk about the individual's responsibility as a carrier/spreader of something like influenza. Maybe we will in the future, now that it has been on everyone's mind with Covid.


I can't speak for them but for me it boils down to my perception that I am not at significant risk of complications from having covid. The age-stratified data seemingly supports this view.

On the other hand, it's hard for me to quantify the risks of the vaccines. AFAIK the only trials were performed by the companies themselves who have less than stellar track records and have no liability exposure. And while mRNA technology has been around for some time, AIUI, it's never been used en masse for vaccination purposes and we aren't really sure what to expect on longer timescales. While I suspect it's probably fine, I don't currently assign a lot of trust to public health officials due to their behavior over the past year. They've reversed their opinions/prescriptions multiple times and have proven themselves to not be above mixing politics with their health advice. It's an unfortunate reality.

My plan is to wait and see how things progress and if we get more data about both the efficacy of the vaccines and possible side-effects from more objective channels.


> there are a lot of antivaxers out there and they don’t read beyond the title.

Is that what you meant to write?


My odds of getting Covid-19 when I'm working from home and only "going out" to buy things by having them placed in my trunk is awfully low. Think it's still higher than my risks from this vaccine? I am not convinced.

I actually belive that, yes, because you and your entire family will not stay isolated for 24 hours per day.

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