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What country are you from, guys, and did you get your COVID-19 vaccine shot already?
As of this writing, half of the adults in the U.S. will be administered with at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine by next week, CNN reports. Further, the data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) showed that a total of 192 million vaccines have been administered in the U.S. so far.
But why should we get vaccinated against COVID-19? Take a look at some of the reasons below and please feel free to tell us in the comments section the benefits of getting a COVID-19 vaccine that we might have failed to mention:
- Travel – granted it may take a while before we can travel outside of our respective countries, we can at least, start traveling within our own state again. Or, forget traveling long distance; we can, at least, go on a trip to our local supermarket without the fear of contracting COVID-19. Read the guidelines for domestic travel here.
- We can go see our family and friends again. We can have a night out or attend a small, indoor gathering mask free, provided the others you are going with are also fully vaccinated people.
- Yes, vaccinated people can go hug each other now.
- We can even go on dates. People who have been vaccinated have been editing their online dating profiles to say that yes, they got vaccinated already. You can go ahead and edit your own dating profile here.
- For financial reasons. We can’t afford to get sick, and it’s cheaper to get the vaccine as compared to paying for hospital fees.
- Getting a COVID-19 vaccine means protecting ourselves, our friends, loved ones, partners, boyfriends, colleagues etc. from the disease.
CDC has listed a number of reasons as well as to why we should get vaccinated, read their list here. If you wish to track the COVID-19 vaccinations in the U.S., click here, or here for the data around the world.
For more information as to who should and should not get the COVID-19 vaccine, click here. Lastly, if you wish to learn the differences among the authorized and recommended vaccines as of the moment, click here, here, and here.
Because without getting vaccinated, you risk becoming a walking, talking “Petri-Dish” – spreading & developing new variants/mutations!
Perhaps you can give us your qualifications for this statement?
Stop telling people how to think. The people can think for themselves. Let them do that.
The vaccines (Pfizer and Moderna particularly) are and continue to prove to be both very safe and exceptionally effective against the older strains of COVID-19 as well as the 3 variant strains, UK, Brazilian, and South African. Young men think, if they had it already, they are protected but the variants are different enough that acquired immunity is not holding and reinfection is occurring at a more and more rapid pace. If for nothing else than to prevent a second round with the variant strains, the vaccine should be taken. It also provides a different type immunity to the disease,… Read more »
Wow. This comment didn’t age well, especially since all of the data has come out about how at-risk men between the ages of 16-45 for myocarditis and pericarditis and how Pfizer and Moderna cooked their studies
Approach me with a needle, and I’ll turn on you. Consider that the warning.
I have no interest in being Big Pharma and the federal government’s guinea pig. When they rescind the liability waiver for the vaccines and require military personnel to get it, then and only then will I consider taking this experimental vaccine
Tony:
You brought up the duplicities of getting the Covid-19 Vaccine.
The Liability waiver speaks for itself. The possibilities for lawsuits are as many as those yet to be vaccinated.
The Military will do its own if and when the vaccines are fully tested and bulliet-proof. For the average-day person, the vaccines work reasonably well although some have reported blood clots.
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