Thomas Veil
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- Aug 13, 2020
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Finally we’re seeing the light bulb going on over some of these people’s heads.
The vaccine-hesitant (as opposed to the dedicated anti-vaxxers) are starting—starting, mind you—to get immunized.
It’s still dumbfounding that these people literally waited until they saw people dying all around them to get the shot.
This person, on the other hand, has a better excuse: she’s twelve.
The story has a whole host of vignettes about young people who are finally scared enough to put down their phones and hold out their arms.
It’s sad, though, because it’s a story of people who don’t read real news, and either didn’t realize the danger they were in or feared ridiculous bogus side effects like magnetism.
I hope this trend keeps up, however belated.
The vaccine-hesitant (as opposed to the dedicated anti-vaxxers) are starting—starting, mind you—to get immunized.
They were unmoved by the urgings of President Joe Biden to get vaccinated. They've spurned calls from the nation's leading doctors, as well as from sports heroes and movie stars. But one thing is finally grabbing the attention of millions of unvaccinated Americans - the invasion of the hyper-contagious delta variant of the coronavirus.
"My friend works at the hospital, and she told me there's 18-year-olds on ventilators. That scared me," said Tyler Sprenkle, a recent high school graduate in Goodman, Mo., who got a shot this month.
In nearby Bella Vista, Ark., 25-year-old Chelsah Skaggs said she had been avoiding the shots, citing false reports that they might cause infertility.
But as delta hit her area, she did her own research and became convinced she should get vaccinated. "Skepticism is a good thing," she said. "But to be ignorant is a different issue. My only regret is not doing it sooner."
Half a million shots were given just on Friday, the highest daily tally since July 1, deputy White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said at a briefing Friday. This was also the third week that states with the highest numbers of coronavirus cases also had the highest vaccination numbers, she said.
It’s still dumbfounding that these people literally waited until they saw people dying all around them to get the shot.
This person, on the other hand, has a better excuse: she’s twelve.
Twelve-year-old Shanuan Alcantar also was unsure she wanted to get the vaccine, largely because of the baseless reports she saw online that it would make her arm magnetic.
"I was really scared seeing all of those TikToks of the metal spoons and the magnets" hanging from people's arms, she said as she visited a clinic in East Los Angeles with her mother, Bellanira Reyes. "I was pretty scared of it, but I decided whatever happens, happens."
The story has a whole host of vignettes about young people who are finally scared enough to put down their phones and hold out their arms.
It’s sad, though, because it’s a story of people who don’t read real news, and either didn’t realize the danger they were in or feared ridiculous bogus side effects like magnetism.
I hope this trend keeps up, however belated.
'A rush to get shots'
They were unmoved by the urgings of President Joe Biden to get vaccinated. They've spurned calls from the nation's leading doctors, as well as from sports heroes and movie stars. But one thing is finally grabbing the attention of millions of unvaccinated Americans - the invasion of the...
news.yahoo.com