You do realize if a person has had side effects then it is simply anecdotal.
True. But anecdotal from a person who has actually experienced something would be better than "my sister's friend's boyfriend knows someone who said that her cousin...." Which is what most of these stories -- including yours -- amount to.
But to answer your question -- I heard today that a sister at our church who felt compelled to get the vaccine because she wanted to be a teacher died, she was on a ventilator.
Ummm ... first, that is the definition of anecdotal. You heard? From whom? From the sister? From someone who knows the sister? From the doctor or nurse who was helping the sister? How reliable is this source? You can't even say who it is who you heard from, so how reliable can an un-named source be?
Second, died from what?
Yesterday, after praying, I got a splitting headache. Therefore prayer causes headaches.
That's ridiculous, isn't it?
It's significantly LESS ridiculous than you saying "someone said that someone else died after getting a vaccine. Therefore the vaccine is bad."
How many people have died from NOT getting the vaccine? MILLIONS!!!! How many have died after getting the vaccine? Well, certainly many. People die every day. They die from all sorts of things -- heart disease, cancer, accidents, murder, etc. Some of them died after getting the vaccine. Some of them died from a complication arising from the vaccine. Like, 3 or 4 out of the billion of vaccines that have been given out.
In other words, your chances of dying from a complication from the vaccine is several THOUSANDS of times smaller than your chance of getting a serious case of COVID, dying from it, giving it to other people, and killing all of them from it as well.
So if you're okay with murdering other people, then don't get the vaccine.
I'm not really okay with hurting other people, so I got vaccinated.