Thanks to Tuchodi for pointing out how many people the covid vaccine saved:
I compared this to Canada's vaccine injury stats: 10,168 serious adverse events in 87,040,246 doses. That's an incidence rate of 11.68 serious vaccine injuries per 100,000.
Here's another way to compare these stats: For every 4.57 people that the vaccine saves, it kills or ruins the quality of life of 11.68 people, and that doesn't include the milder injuries which are multiple times more.
Were the vaccines worth it?
"Trust the science" is akin to "have faith" in religions.
The way I presented the risk is how it should be presented to any intelligent person. If you don't understand this, that's your problem.
I did my best, considering that governments don't give us full vaccine injury breakdowns.
This is how you present the risk, though:
This also IS NOT comparing apples-to-apples. It's half the risk assessment and completely ignoring the other half with a dumb statement. This is have faith in the Pfizer religion because I say so. I understand, though - This is how CTV news presents it to you and you can't think for yourself.
Over 12 billion doses of the vaccine have been delivered. It's not surprising that some people have a reaction to it. While over six million people have died from the virus https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/ you struggle to come up with numbers from anywhere in the world that more than a few people might have died from the vaccine.
So you compare deaths from covid to a whole range of reactions to the vaccine, not just deaths, and pretend that it's a fair comparison.
This statement is essentially saying "safe and effective." This isn't comparing apples-to-apples.
Don't change the subject. You compared deaths from covid to a whole range of reactions to the vaccine, not just deaths, and pretended that it's a fair comparison.