do we have any data or number of people that have died or been hospitalized caused by the vaccine?
or are we discussing side affects such as a sore arm, headache, feeling lethargic?
There are a couple of cases of people who have died after the vaccine with strange circumstances. The most well known that I'm aware of is a doctor in Florida who suddenly had his platelet count drop to zero about 4 days after getting the vaccine and died not long thereafter. That's one of those freak reactions that nobody quite has a clue what caused it.
They also monitor you for a minimum of 15 minutes after the vaccine for anaphylaxis. That is a rare but non-zero reaction.
But... We've given 50M doses in this country and we're not hearing horror stories about deaths/hospitalizations. So as far as the short-term side effects, they don't seem to exist.
Long term effects- which are unknown obviously. Sterility, long term efficacy ( previous strains of Corona virus vaccine had some real issues- that’s why it never came to market).
call it what it is at this early juncture- experimental.
Really? Sterility?
I mean, I've heard this crap before. Nobody has actually shown it happens. But very few things scare a childless woman of childbearing age more than the idea that she'll never have the ability to have children, so it's a remarkably phenomenal fear tactic.
Apparently it has to do with the idea that there is some very tiny similarity between a protein in the placenta and the spike protein of COVID...
https://www.webmd.com/vaccines/covid-19-vaccine/news/20210112/why-covid-vaccines-are-falsely-linked-to-infertilityBut as this article points out, if the vaccine could cause sterility (by virtue of encoding the body to reject the spike protein of COVID and therefore reject a placenta),
then actually being infected with COVID would do the exact same thing.
That said, multiple people in the COVID vaccine trial have become pregnant, so it doesn't appear that it has any effect.
But go on spreading conspiracy theories. At least this one is more coherent than the idea that it's Bill Gates injecting microchips.