By not being vaccinated, or being part of a reasonably sized group of people who are choosing not to get the vaccine, you’re allowing the virus to continue to replicate. When it’s allowed to continue to replicate, it will create mutations, which could then cause variants that are completely resistant to the immunity induced by natural infection or immunization. That consequence will ultimately make the side-effects from the vaccines a non-issue.
BS.
The virus has a vast animal reservoir, much more than the number of humans. In addition, the vaccinated are still carrying heavy viral loads and getting infected, so the virus is replicating in them as well. Moreover, the mutations surviving in the vaccinated are those that involve mutations that modify the key neutralizing anti-body binding sites in the S-protein sub-unit, a.k.a mutations that the vaccinated will be susceptible to. Conferred immunity varies from individual to individual, involves ALL elements of the immune system, and the IgG anti-bodies developed target sites on all sub-units of the virus— this creates a more robust population response among emerging variants. This used to be a basic pillar of medical education, but then again so was the certain knowledge that cloth masks have no effect on the spread of airborne respiratory viruses, which by the way has not been refuted in any controlled study, but has been confirmed and ignored.
“By not being vaccinated... you’re allowing the virus to continue to replicate.”
According to the experts in the various sciences, which you obviously are not, you have it backwards. The vaccines are causing the mutations.
Is that “science!”? Because, rumor has it that the virus replicates and mutates, too, constantly and rapidly … even while your vaxx is happening as directed.
Being vaxxed gives the virus something new to survive, and then new immunity pass along to its children … who then get passed on to the world.
We should have just left it alone and done the same time and flu tested things we’ve always done and taken our chances with it the same as we always have.
If we had done that instead, it probably would be largely over with by now and we, with our busy lives and short attention spans, would have more or less forgotten all about it.
The virus replicates in the vaccinated. So your idea is patently false.