Your definition of 'normal' is incorrect. Hospital ICUs and body storage facilities are funded to handle 'normal'. ICUs that have to ship people to other facilties because they're full are not normal. Hospital morgues that have to rent multiple refrigerated trailers to handle the extra bodies are not normal. People who need cancer surgery/treatment but can't get it because their care facility is full of covid victims are not experiencing normal healthcare.
These conditions have been widely reported and I know it's true not because it's in the press but because people I know and trust who work in healthcare are telling me that it has happened to them at their workplace, and to their colleagues at other facilities.
What are you basing your opinions on? Your common sense, that thing that tells you the sun goes around the earth? The one person in a thousand or ten thousand who has some kind of medical training (invariably unrelated to public health or infectious diseases) who tried to monetize their social media channel? Performers like Alex Jones or Tucker Carlson?
Right. Chuck it. Rely on science. And rely on statistics. Is the vaccine going to save everyone? No.
Is it going to increase your chances of surviving and freeing up healthcare resources for others? Yes.
Are there risks associated with the vaccine? Yes.
Despite that are your chances - and those of the vulnerable around you - better, statistically, if you get vaccinated? Yes.
The sooner we take the plunge and get vaccinated then the sooner we can get people and businesses back to work, paying their rent/mortgages, employing people, and kick-starting our economy.
Look at the stats: it's the unvaccinated that are getting sick and dying. And as crappy as that is there's more: it's the unvaccinated that are providing the fertile ground for new variants to appear. As long as a sizable proportion of the population is breeding new variants, that's how long the chance of the situation getting worse survives.
Your definition of 'normal' is incorrect. Hospital ICUs and body storage facilities are funded to handle 'normal'. ICUs that have to ship people to other facilties because they're full are not normal. Hospital morgues that have to rent multiple refrigerated trailers to handle the extra bodies are not normal. People who need cancer surgery/treatment but can't get it because their care facility is full of covid victims are not experiencing normal healthcare.
These conditions have been widely reported and I know it's true not because it's in the press but because people I know and trust who work in healthcare are telling me that it has happened to them at their workplace, and to their colleagues at other facilities.
What are you basing your opinions on? Your common sense, that thing that tells you the sun goes around the earth? The one person in a thousand or ten thousand who has some kind of medical training (invariably unrelated to public health or infectious diseases) who tried to monetize their social media channel? Performers like Alex Jones or Tucker Carlson?
Right. Chuck it. Rely on science. And rely on statistics. Is the vaccine going to save everyone? No.
Is it going to increase your chances of surviving and freeing up healthcare resources for others? Yes.
Are there risks associated with the vaccine? Yes.
Despite that are your chances - and those of the vulnerable around you - better, statistically, if you get vaccinated? Yes.
The sooner we take the plunge and get vaccinated then the sooner we can get people and businesses back to work, paying their rent/mortgages, employing people, and kick-starting our economy.
Look at the stats: it's the unvaccinated that are getting sick and dying. And as crappy as that is there's more: it's the unvaccinated that are providing the fertile ground for new variants to appear. As long as a sizable proportion of the population is breeding new variants, that's how long the chance of the situation getting worse survives.