finley:
How would you even know that? Vaccination statistics are so horribly mutilated it’s impossible to be sure one way or the other - for example most countries count a death within two weeks of the first shot as “unvaccinated”.
You also don’t know how many years a bout of vaccine-induced myocarditis (or any of the other myriad adverse effects) will shave off the lifespan of a 15-year-old … because, of course, the vaccines haven’t been around long enough for us to find out. If, on average, we find that they end up dying in their 60s instead of a more normal lifespan, then a rate of 200 per million might (crudely speaking) be equivalent to 20 deaths per million.
There are a large number of post-vax deaths recorded worldwide. Whether they are dying specifically of myocarditis is probably not that important if you’re the person who’s dead. In comparison, look at those COVID death numbers for young people. These are vanishingly rare events - as I’ve pointed out many times before, they’re comparable to (actually lower than) extreme outlier tragedies like murder, suicide, and drug overdoses, and those are things which are to a certain extent preventable.
Your choice is not “vaccination or infection”. There is more to life than that.
We’ve been over this many times.
Again I would ask you why you assume infection is preferable? Every question you’ve posed you could say the same thing for infection. We haven’t known long enough what are the long term effects of infection.
Current evidence shows that myocarditis from vaccination is much less severe, resolves on its own and does not result in death likes it does with infection.
To our knowledge, this is the first analysis comparing findings in patients with classic myocarditis, MIS-C myocarditis, and COVID-19 vaccine-related myocarditis. Compared to classic myocarditis, patients with MIS-C had a greater likelihood of full recovery of cardiac function with a faster time to recovery, even when they presented with fulminant myocarditis. Those with COVID-19 vaccine-related myocarditis generally had a milder clinical course, with lower likelihood of cardiac dysfunction at …