Posted on Jan 14, 2021
Why are so many service members refusing to receive the COVID vaccine?
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So I did my research and decided to volunteer to receive the COVID vaccine. I received my first series yesterday and get my second series around 10 Feb. What are your thoughts?
Posted 4 y ago
Responses: 19
My Soldier stated that as long as it's voluntary, he doesn't want the shot. He is going to wait until it's mandatory. He did state that he will not refuse once it becomes mandatory. Meh. It is what it is. The problem is that way too many folks are buying into the mass hysteria hype and paranoia that is the media. My Commander asked me if I would volunteer for it. Figuring that it's just one more vaccination, meh....why not. After Anthrax, Typhoid, Yellow Fever, Smallpox...what is the Covid vaccination gonna do to me?
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SSG (Join to see)
Same can be said about the mass historian covering how deadly Covid is. It's not very deadly for the SM age groups , and fitness levels.
I believe this as with many things should remain a personal choice. It neither stops the spread or prevents one from getting Covid, it merely manages symptoms. (So, it's like the motrin of covid)
I believe this as with many things should remain a personal choice. It neither stops the spread or prevents one from getting Covid, it merely manages symptoms. (So, it's like the motrin of covid)
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I haven't seen any service members refuse the vaccine. Most service members aren't even authorized to receive it yet because they're too low on the priority. My wife is a high priority person in base and received hers last week and she said they were turning people away all day.
I remember the same thing happened during H1N1. People freaked out because the vaccine was fast tracked. There's a misconception that it takes almost a year to develop a vaccine. Nothing is further from the truth. The first COVID vaccine was developed even before the first person in the US died. Vaccines are so easy to develop now that biohackers can make them in their garage. What takes a long time is the safety testing that goes into proving that it's safe in the long term. The new vaccines are still experimental and I think that scares a lot of people
I remember the same thing happened during H1N1. People freaked out because the vaccine was fast tracked. There's a misconception that it takes almost a year to develop a vaccine. Nothing is further from the truth. The first COVID vaccine was developed even before the first person in the US died. Vaccines are so easy to develop now that biohackers can make them in their garage. What takes a long time is the safety testing that goes into proving that it's safe in the long term. The new vaccines are still experimental and I think that scares a lot of people
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SFC (Join to see)
Exactly. And that is what I read up on and decided to receive the vaccine. Technology is so advanced now that vaccines are very easy to make and safe to distribute. I'm at TRADOC, so the entire Brigade asked for volunteers to take the vaccine. We had more who wanted it than refused, but many who refused. Numbers were close.
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SFC (Join to see)
Here in TRADOC we are authorized to get it. A little lower than half are refusing. Most of us are getting it, though.
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I'm just waiting until someone tells me I have to get it or my MEDPROS will be red. *Shrug*
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