texagbeliever said:
I think it is always best to look at your own biases and see if that influences your answer.
You likely recommended the vaccine earlier on. You want to have given good medical advice. Therefore you are biased to believe the vaccine was effective at least early on. I'm not saying that proves you wrong; I am just pointing out a sunk cost logic fallacy you will have to overcome. Infectionag is in the same boat that he was certainly more adamant and vocal at least in his stance on texags. That's okay there are many mistakes I allow myself to be blinded to because of a bias.
At the beginning of the vaccine people wanted it to work. They had hope that it would work. It became more of a religion then a science. When that happens, normally less than ideal results follow.
But again, you continue to ignore the fact that it has been clearly demonstrated beyond any reasonable doubt that the covid vaccines DO reduce the chances of severe disease and death dramatically, especially with respect to the earlier variants and higher risk groups. Very few things in the history of medicine have been as extensively studied in such a short period of time and the data from around the world is OVERWHELMING.
Again, I'm sorry those in power lied (or simply through their own ignorance genuinely believed) and said you wouldn't get covid if you got the vaccine. That was never going to be true. It's never been true for any vaccine and particularly one for a novel, rapidly mutating RNA virus. And it's also not true that boosters are going to do much anymore, given the prevalence of natural infection/vaccination already. But they absolutely, beyond all statistical doubt at this point, saved lives.
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