At the place you read it, did they provide actual statistics ?
Without accurate data, any journalist can say the risk is less. But is it 0.1% vs 0.01% or 0.1% vs 0.099% ? And since vaccinated are still 100% likely to get Covid, does it actually reduce the risk if you get vaccinated + covid ?
There are no hard answers, just weasel words like "no scientific evidence to support claim" aka they know jack shit or "rare", which is a meaningless word - rare as in lightning strike level rare or rare like natural redheads ?
And then, when people do post really bad numbers from public reporting like VAERS, they say its not reliable because its self reported, completely ignoring that 50% of reporting is by medical professionals, and that CDC requires side effect reporting to VAERS
sj_zero@lotide.fbxl.net 2 years ago
I took the vaccine for work, but asked my pregnant wife not to. It's psychotic to test a vaccine like this on pregnant women. There's no ethical way to do that.