i don't think there's anything wrong with skepticism or anything irrational about it. the issue i have is people conflating the politics as reason to not take vaccines.
a challenge here is your reasons to be skeptical are subject to selection bias. there are also reasons for confidence that you did not list. there's nothing wrong with presenting the questions. what's irrational is stopping there. there are answers to each, which you may accept or not.
a vaccine that is released in about a tenth of the time normally required to release a new vaccine.this is partially true. but most vaccines only get 6 months of safety follow-up. the rest of the time is spent in FDA paperwork. in the case of these vaccines they did the same safety follow-up (6 months) but used a ~10x larger test group, and then fast-tracked the paperwork.
reason for confidence: there was a much larger than normal clinical trial done and the safety was much more closely monitored by the FDA during the EUA period than for any other vaccine
the technology of this vaccine is new.kinda. it's 25+ years old. here's
an article that shows why it was able to be done quickly. it's a good read on background research.
reason for confidence: there were decades of research and ongoing clinical trials. the only thing that was significantly new was the actual encoding of the spike protein; previous spike protein work was done for other outbreaks already.
this new vaccine technology had horrible results in animal testing and had to be ended prematurely.this is kind of true.
ten years ago a trial with mice had a problem, but it isn't the same technology as these vaccines. animal trials were conduced for these vaccines. the difference was in the interest of time they did the initial animal trials in parallel with human trials. for example,
here's the study from pfizer on primates.
reason for confidence. there was a ton of dosing and distribution studies done in animals for other diseases using the same technology and delivery platform but different mrna sequence, so scientists had a huge head start and a lot of confidence in dosing, delivery, and safety
a much higher quantity of "breakthrough" cases than you typically hear of for vaccines.this is kind of hard to answer because i don't know what you typically hear about for vaccines. the covid shots are better than flu shots - those vary between
60% and 10% effective year to year.
reason for confidence: covid vaccines work better than flu vaccines (pretty dang low bar, to be honest - ha!)
will grow as we hear and read of various studies and anecdotes about possible side effects of the vaccine, coupled with changing reports of vaccine efficacy continuing to drop.this is where you have to be skeptical both ways. you should be just as skeptical about the negative and positive.
reason for confidence: there have been a metric crap ton of studies out there that have been made free to the public to read, and the studies showing that the vaccines are safe provide an overwhelming backdrop of evidence against the studies and anecdotes that don't.
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If these vaccines really did what they were originally intended to do; and if Covid infections were as deadly as initially advertised, there would be no need to try to "convince" people to be vaccinated. There would be no need to issue "mandates".
are you kidding? most people don't get flu shots. 10% of people dont give their kids the MMR vaccine. 20% don't get pertussis for their kids. 80% of adults aren't current on pertussis vaccines. that being said - the mandates were wrong, and the method they attempted to use to mandate them through the OSHA general duty clause was particularly egregious. i completely i agree with you there.
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Frankly, I don't understand why you seem to be so passionately opposed to people thinking and making decisions for themselves regarding this vaccine. Is there a profit motive in it for you?
if you can find a single place where i've expressed any opposition to people thinking for themselves or making decisions please quote it.
sharing information is the exact opposite of what you're describing. i'm encouraging you to read studies. it is 100% the same as the people who post tweets about vaccine danger. open discourse must include dissenting opinions. otherwise you're not looking for thought or decision making but a groupthink echo chamber.
the behavior that is passionately opposed to people thinking and making decisions for themselves is the constant insults and accusations. why are y'all so afraid of an open discussion about vaccine safety where research is shared?