rockm
Spuds Moyogi
You must not have been around when the polio vaccine was new. It had a one-year trial, tracked by pen and paper by thousands of volunteers before roll out. It's been almost 70 years since the first polio vaccine was administered. Hysterical fears then too, proven false by time. You probably have had a polio vaccines, right?Your post was pretty polite, so I'll respond.
Personally, I choose not to sneeze on people, keep the maximum social distance available to me whenever possible, and to compulsively disinfect my hands/ not touch my face at work. This serves not only to prevent the transmission of COVID, but other illnesses as well.
Fortunately, this plan does seem to be working for me so far. I've managed not to get COVID, or any kind of illness at all, despite regularly interfacing with the public per my line of work.
I don't disagree with your choice to get the vaccine. In fact, I think you did it for the right reasons. I simply don't believe that the MRNA vaccine is effective at stopping the spread of COVID, and that the risks likely outweigh the benefits, but that's also my opinion.
No, that's incorrect. COVID19 has been enormously politicized.
I do agree with you that whatever the politicians are shouting doesn't matter-- Most of them are shouting about what a big deal this is, and how we all need to give up our rights to protect against it.
I'm going to disregard all of that fearmongering, continue to take proper precautions, not get sick, not take an experimental vaccine that could leave me infertile, maimed or dead, and go back to bonsai.
"Scientific" argument: "Vaccines work. Therefore, you need to get vaccinated so that our vaccines will work! Look bro, just get injected. Trust the experts who were paid by Pfizer, a company which has never before successfully launched a vaccine, or by J&J-- a company that has had multiple billions of dollars in lawsuits."
How about no? I'm never going to take an unsafe vaccine. Maybe in 25 years when they're safe. 'Til then, no.
The Covid vaccine has had more testing and proven results, with exponentially larger sample groups and vanishingly small reactions. The polio vaccine uses actual inactivated virus to prevent disease. mRNA vaccines don't use virus. The technology have been honed for decades. They've been developed since the 1970's. One of the reasons the Covid vaccines were so quickly developed was because of that earlier development period. Covid's RNA was inserted into the mRNA process.
Fears are inevitable with any new health technology. Allowing it to run rampant is silly. Reading anti-vaccine propaganda (and all your arguments against it--from the doubts about successful launches and lawsuits--are just that--amplified BS from anti-vaccine groups with agendas of their own).
At least be informed by credible sources:

The Long History of mRNA Vaccines | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
A look at how this vaccine technology has been in the works for decades.