If someone has a good reason other than feelings to not take the Vaccines it's perfectly reasonable to do so...
Humans rights such as personal creed and religion is a perfectly good reason not to take the vaccine.
It's not ok to expect the whole world to bow to your choice. Meaning that you have to accept the concequenses of your actions. Meaning that you should be willing to isolate yourself away from others and be honest about your lack of vaccinations.
Who decides the opinion of the "whole world"? Media Puppeteers?
If the unvaccinated have to self-declare, should they start wearing armbands with a star on them too? Should they put into gulags and eventually rehabilitation camps with the slogan "Vax Will Set You Free"? There is a slippery slope to be observed with the societal behaviour.
That's the breaks... you don't get to go on missions or use public transportation or concerts or movie theatres...it's not the end of the world if you choose that...
It doesn't have to be that way. I have not seen a reasonable argument for why that should be the case.
just don't make everyone else responsible and have to suffer from your choices.
The same could be said about the consequences of choosing to take an emergency shot, or being complicit with an emergency shot being mandated on the entire population. If there are long term effects of the shot, including infertility and sterility (as seen in long term studies of some mRNA-based HPV vaccines from years ago) who suffers from that choice? Not the pharmaceutical companies. Everyone signs a waiver that they won't hold the pharmaceutical companies liable for vaccine injuries. Will the government pay? Enjoy communally paying higher taxes to cover that.
Reason with me for a moment.
1) If the vaccine works, why would everyone need one?
2) If the vaccine works, but not everyone gets one, what % of the population is required in order for herd immunity?
3) If the vaccines only probabilistically work, why wouldn't the restrictions of "theatres, concerts, and public transportation" ALSO apply to the vaccinated?
4) If the unvaccinated infected can be asymptomatic (immune), how can we be sure that asymptomatic vaccinated infected don't also exist? If the vaccines reduce symptoms but do not reduce infectiousness, wouldn't that mean that it is MORE important that the vaccinated isolate as the infection transfers are harder to detect? If vaccination status reduces the effectiveness of being able to detect actual infection status using PCR, would not that justify MORE restrictions for vaccinated individuals?
5) If the goal of the vaccine is only to limit the intensity and duration of infection because it takes up hospital resources, why aren't other mandates put into place for smoking, obesity, etc. which even in the scope of SARS-2 is considered a comorbidity factor?
6) Why are there mRNA vaccines available and non-mRNA vaccines available? What are the differences in % effectiveness?
7) How do I know that the % effectiveness is constant across ethnicities?
8) Why not wait until the "emergency measures" are dropped and the vaccines have been thoroughly tested with long-term study?