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by noduerme
1719 days ago
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If there was a vaccine for cancer, it wouldn't matter to anyone else if you got it. This is a virus. It's a public sacrifice. As brutal as it sounds, you and I and everyone we know had to line up against a wall, and some people were going to take a bullet for the team. I went in prepared to do that, rather than deluding myself that the virus wasn't real or that it was avoidable. When my uncles were in the Navy, they got pumped full of everything at once through an airgun in the bicep. This is jury duty, voting, your DMV test and your military service rolled into one. It's the price of living in an advanced society. I'm sorry for them - and I hope they recover - but they should be considered a hero. This is simply under the circumstances the only right thing to do. |
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If you bring out the usual line that "being vaccinated stops you having such bad symptoms and thus passing it on to others", then surely that means I would have a higher chance of being asymptomatic if I do still catch Covid, and thus not knowing if I am putting others at risk? I suppose you might tell me that's why I need to also regularly test, but then why get vaccinated?
>I'm sorry for them - and I hope they recover - but they should be considered a hero.
I think they would find your gung-ho attitude deeply upsetting, especially when they are of an age where the personal protection offered by the vaccine is significantly more relevant than any supposed benefit to others.