I read if you avail yourself to get the jab, they'll ask you at least, full name, date of birth, address with ZIP, telephone number, e-mail address. You'll be given a index card size vaccine password but there's also optional digital vaccine passport in to your smartphone if you wish to make easier to enter establishments that require vaccine. Digital vaccine passport, you don't know who'll access, but you just lost your privacy!
"Digital vaccine passport, you don't know who'll access, but you just lost your privacy!"
You also don't know who will access your health care record, with or without any injections. You also don't know who will access your financial information either.
Not everyone who has gotten the injection(s) has been reported to the CDC's IIS.
Think VAERS.
Healthcare providers are required by law to report to VAERS vaccine adverse event(s). Yet, only ~1% are recorded. How can that be, if there is a law that requires reporting? Simple. Humans are involved. There are a myriad of reasons events aren't submitted to the database (ex. laziness, tired and overworked staff, ignorance of the law etc. etc.)
So back to your question in post #11. No, not everyone who has gotten the injection, has been entered into IIS.
Again, any random restaurant out there (aside from NYC) has no way to verify your paper card information or a pic of it on your phone, unless they stop everyone at the door, contact CDC by phone (hope that someone answers) and says....hey...I'm Joe from the Bistro and I'm calling to check on the vaccination status of this person I don't know, who's standing in my restaurant doorway. Can I let them eat in my restaurant or not?
Same goes for large venues, even more so.
It a joke, and a bad one at that.
And FWIW, I haven't gotten the injection either. We've already had covid in our house back in Dec 2020, and only 1 of the 5 of us got it.