Opinion I’m Furious at the Unvaccinated

(archive)
I recently found out that a friend of mine — a smart guy — was not vaccinated, and I confronted him about it.

How could he have not gotten his vaccination? And how had he not seen fit to tell me and our other mutual friends? Wasn’t he worried about the risk he was posing not just to himself, but to the rest of us?

He tried to laugh it off, offering up a bunch of concerns rooted in conspiracy theories. But I told him that he had to get vaccinated, period.

The next time I saw him, he was worried about the Omicron variant and asked if I would go with him to get the jab. I texted him a site where he could register and told him to let me know once he had. That was Saturday. He still hasn’t signed up.

I am disappointed, and I am angry, not just with my friend but with all the people who are choosing not to get vaccinated.

There was a point, earlier on in the pandemic, when vaccines were still scarce, when I tried to be tolerant with the holdouts, tried not to shame them, tried not to be angry with them, tried to allow them time to educate themselves about the benefits of getting vaccinated.

But that time has long since passed for me. Call me one of the intolerant. That’s what I am. I will not coddle willful ignorance anymore. I will not indulge the fool’s errand of “I’m still doing my own research” anymore, either.

This virus has already killed nearly 800,000 Americans and infected nearly 50 million. We are now averaging about 120,000 new cases a day.

This virus is deadly and unrelenting. The only way out of this situation, for our country and the world, is through the vaccines. We must dramatically shrink the number of people vulnerable to the virus — or else we risk allowing our population to act as a petri dish for the growth of variants.

In July, Michael Saag, a professor of medicine and infectious diseases expert at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told The Guardian: “Unvaccinated people are basically the cannon fodder of the virus. The virus needs people to infect in order to replicate and the more people it has that are vulnerable or susceptible to infection, the more likely it will mutate.”

The unvaccinated don’t only leave themselves vulnerable to the virus, they make everyone more vulnerable.

I have heard all the reasons for resistance. There are the people who have politicized the virus and see getting vaccinated through a partisan lens. There are the people who view government pressure, and especially mandates, to put something in your body as overreach and anathema to the American ideal of independence and freedom. There are people who don’t trust the government, sometimes with good reason.

I have heard it all. And I reject it all.

There are just too many fresh graves pocking the land to entertain these objections. And too many lives disrupted, as people grieve lost loved ones, alter their employment, and keep their children home from school.

When this pandemic first exploded, I thought that it would be a disruption of a few months. We are now closing in on year two, and while some offices and schools have reopened, cases are again surging in many parts of this country, and the Omicron variant has spooked markets around the world.

We now have to consider the very real possibility that the virus will not be eradicated, but will become endemic. The journal Nature put this more directly in February: “The coronavirus is here to stay.” In a survey of more than 100 immunologists, researchers and virologists, the journal found that almost 90 percent thought that the coronavirus would become endemic. As Nature put it at the time, “it will continue to circulate in pockets of the global population for years to come.”

Even if eradication is all but impossible, it is possible to control the virus and mitigate its spread, if more people are vaccinated.

So yes, I am furious at the unvaccinated, and I am not ashamed of disclosing that. I am no longer trying to understand them or educate them. Barriers to access have fallen. The only reason for remaining unvaccinated that I now accept is from people who have medical conditions that prevent it.

All others have a choice to either be part of the solution or part of the problem. The unvaccinated are choosing to be part of the problem.
 
The group with the (by far) lowest vaccination rate, the blacks, are the least vaccinated. Maybe black writers, such as the author, should be calling them out specifically?
You can't do that. That's racism!

Besides Pfizer and Moderna are already raking in the dough, no need to endanger that by criticizing the people we're supposed to be sucking the cocks of.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Elim Garak
Today I read an article about a group of Canadian sportsmen who just suffered an outbreak linked to their most recent game.

Every single player and fan were vaccinated-- many of them triple-dosed. Every distancing precaution was followed at the game.

Sort of like what still keeps happening at concerts full of vaccinated musicians and fans, with everybody following full precautions throughout the show.

The vaccine is a great thing that saves life and limb at the individual level-- but at this point, I'm pressing X to doubt that it prevents either public outbreaks or new strains all that effectively. Nothing seems to be stopping that, and there is simply no scapegoat readily available for blame.

People like this author need help. OCD mixed with BPD is a nasty combo.
 
It's articles like this that harden the resistance of the unvaccinated.

Using some fucking common sense, when you demonize someone or some group you become a demon yourself. It would be more logical to show the unvaccinated why getting the shot is good for themselves, their families, and the community, and encourage they get vaccinated instead of demonizing the unvaccinated.

We've been dealing with the Chinese flu for two years now, pretty much. Over 700,000 dead. But many of the dead had comorbidities. And during these two years a good 2,400,000 Americans have died of heart disease and cancer. The number of those dying from heart disease goes up every year. Yet we haven't badly damaged our society and damaged our economy in trying to stop the spread of these diseases. Apples and oranges, you say? I don't think so.

Which has killed more people? Pretty fucking obvious to me.

In the end, there will be a yearly Chinese Flu vaccination available, just like for the "regular" flu.

And the next time a national calamity happens, and there shall be a next time, "they" are likely to find FAR less overall support than they got for the Chinese flu. "Their" fucking around, taking the adversarial approach, pissing people off for no good reason, has resulted in a large and growing loss of trust and confidence in government, law enforcement, the judiciary, the media, and science at ANY level.

"They" may laugh now, but ya know, ya never get fucked as thoroughly or as hard as when ya fuck yourself. And "they" have done just that, in my opinion. 🖕 🖕 🖕 🖕 🖕
 
I've had covid and shrugged it off in ten days, I may get it again and I'm confident of surviving. I was tested and found worthy of being alive

Why should I take orders from you who hasn't walked that crucible, who wants me vaccinated because you're scared of being found wanting?

I hope it kills billions, more resources for us worthy survivors
 
What is funny is looking at that map of case rates for my own state is that it is basically an inverse population heat map. What is the old saying? There are lies, damn lies and statistics.
 
If you change a few words in the article but keep the "holier than thou" attitude - this dude could be in the Spanish Inquisition trying to forcefully convert the filthy natives into seeing the light.
 
  • Like
Reactions: JosephStalin
SOME GUY: "Hey, will you go with me to get vaxxed? I'm kinda worried about Omicron."
HIS INSUFFERABLE FRIEND: "No. Do it yourself."
SOME GUY: "Ok." *doesn't get vaxxed*

Am I the only one that sees this part of it?
 
Go cope and seethe while in line to get your 15th booster, and then redeem your punch card for a free bug sandwich wrap, courtesy of Pfizer Inc, you good little obedient citizen you.
 
Back