At least 5 maybe 6.
2. A subjective point.
5. You give credit solely to the vaccine when stuff like cleanliness and better health need be included. If you are vaccinated for polio but I give you a large enough dose of inoculum you can get polio.
6. Define common.
9. 10. 11. mRNA has no track record of being safe because no product using the tech has ever been delivered before. The mRNA induces the body to create a single epitope response to the S protein spike and not multiple epitopes to create a stronger immune response. A pure inoculum of S protein spike injected into lab animals created horrific vascular disease. The S protein is the infection. People being injected and having the worse adverse effects to the vaccine probably have asymptomatic Covid or the vaccination did not apply aspiration correctly to make sure the vaccine was being administered in an intramuscular fashion. The encapsulating lipids of the vaccine are being found in tissues all over the body to include higher presence in the ovaries. Lipids are not mRNA but... The efficacy of the mRNA vax is going down rapidly with time. Either the bug is evolving away or the immune response isn't as persistent as could be hoped for. Natural immunity to Coronavirus from the early 2000's is still found in those sickened at the time. Meaning...? I could go on with it takes 7-12 years to approve a vaccine in which time the long term effects as seen over years can be discovered. EUA to approved in under a year is a regulatory capture joke.
18. 36,000 people die on the road. The hypochondriacs say 45,000 have died from the shot. If true its getting closer to even chances.
20. The vaccinated are getting sick. Means they can harbor the disease and here is when it can mutate to become deadlier.
That'll do I guess.
2. That danger was typically significantly lower than the danger they were averting.
A subjective point? No. An objective one. Studies showed it decreased mortality.
5. Statistically people were far better off with the polio vaccine than without it
Do I give credit solely to the vaccine when stuff like cleanliness and better health need be included? No. As you can see, I never said a word about it being solely responsible. That's a straw man.
6. The polio virus used to be a common childhood ailment.
How do I define common? It was hitting thousands of people per year. In fact, in 1952, it hit 57,879 people in the US alone, 3,145 of whom died. But, within a few years of polio vaccination starting, deaths from polio in the US were down to the double digits and never returned to their former high levels. These days we go many years at a time without a polio death in the US, and it's not because we're that much cleanlier or healthier overall than in the mid-20th century. It's because a campaign of vaccination created herd immunity, making it impossible for the virus to circulate in the US the way it used to.
9The mRNA vaccines don't have any virus in them,
10The mRNA vaccines can't infect anyone with COVID.
11The mRNA vaccines effectively give your body a recipe for manufacturing some proteins
The mRNA vaccines now have a strong track record of being safe, since there has been a massive roll-out of billions of vaccines, with almost no serious adverse effects.
" it takes 7-12 years to approve a vaccine"
Incorrect. Most leading nations have approved multiple COVID vaccines, all in much less time than that. If what you mean to say is "in my personal, unprofessional opinion, it SHOULD take longer to approve a vaccine than it did," that's a different point.
18. You're more likely to die driving to get vaccinated than die of the vaccine.
Yes, 36,000 people die on the road each year, in the US alone. The hypochondriacs essentially assume all deaths that occur after someone gets the vaccine were caused by the vaccine, in order to claim that the shot kills lots of people. Most of them rely on a hilariously false understanding of how the vaccine database works, where they imagine every health issue that's reported there is caused by the vaccine, which is of course silly.
In reality, as of July 19, with 339 million doses administered, three deaths had been linked to vaccination. Let's say the average person drives 10 miles to get to the vaccine. That would be 3.39 billion miles driven. In the US, we get about 13.7 fatalities per billion vehicle miles traveled. So, we'd expect around 46 people to have died driving to get their vaccination, versus 3 dying from the vaccination itself. Even if the vaccine fatality figure were off by an order of magnitude, my statement would still be factual: you're more likely to die driving to get vaccinated than to die of the vaccine.
20. The vaccines also lower your risk of transmitting the virus to others
Yes, some vaccinated still get sick. However, they get sick less frequently than the unvaccinated and get better faster on average, which suggests less transmission. And population evidence supports that, with highly vaccinated areas having lower rates of new cases than low-vaccination areas, generally.