I think all statistics when it comes to this need to be taken with a grain of salt. When you see the covid death count, are all these people dying because of covid or are people dying with covid? Is the VAERS count a bunch of malarkey or is there some truth to it and it's being suppressed by those who have a vested interest in the vaccine? Almost every time we're told something "factual" about this whole ordeal, it turns out to be wrong within a few months.
It's not fair to only question things you don't believe in and blindly follow the things you do. I say question the validity of everything. Stats aren't stats if they are manipulated into making you believe something that isn't true. Science isn't science if it's funded by a company that has an interest in the science looking a certain way once the tests have been done. What we think are the best minds in the world don't always have our best interests at heart.
The push to get us all vaccinated started with "c'mon man", then morphed into "Everyone in the state of Alabama gets a sixer of Natty Light" to now them pushing to make people's lives incredibly difficult if they don't just go get the shot. I'd like them to prove that we won't be a part of a class action lawsuit in 10 years over the long term side effects of this thing. But the coercion going on around it makes people trust it even less.
The statistics regarding COVID-19-related deaths do need to be taken with a grain of salt, but not at all in the way you're describing. You're not wrong to assume that looking exclusively at the raw mortality data for a disease like COVID-19 might not tell the whole story, but it is far more likely that the death toll of COVID-19 has been
majorly underreported rather than even minorly overreported. This is primarily due to the differences in reporting methodologies from country to country, particularly in those with a shortage of COVID-19 testing supplies.
So instead of looking at the raw numbers as they've been reported, it's more useful to look at
"excess mortality". It's kinda like analytics for epidemiology that accounts for the deaths a country would expect to experience under "normal" conditions; it helps to discard some of the noisy data and creates a better understanding of the actual mortality impacts of COVID-19, given the incredible multitude of factors that shape the difficulty of ascribing responsibility for death to a disease like COVID. Almost all studies of "excess mortality" during the pandemic have arrived at the conclusion that many,
many more have died as a result of this disease than is being currently reported.
It's good to be inherently skeptical. I consider myself a skeptic. But to "question the validity of everything" is an undergraduate's excuse for not critically engaging with the substance of a particular issue. The skeptic's eye must
always be informed by the best data available. Otherwise the skeptic is forever paralyzed against making rational, reasonable decisions within the context of the reality in front of them. That paralysis defeats the practical purpose of skepticism, which is to aid an individual in making rational, reasonable decisions that emanate from consideration of data and reliance on the expertise of those who are most qualified, rather than making irrational, unreasonable decisions that emanate from the way we may
feel about a subject.
As far as I can tell from the post I've quoted, you don't seem personally hesitant about the vaccines as a result of the best available data; the skepticism you're expressing here seems rooted instead in annoyance over being told what you "should" do by various authorities after feeling jerked around by those same authorities. But spite is not the haven for a skeptic; it's the haven for a partisan. Yes, the data has moved constantly throughout the pandemic, and strategies have been adjusted accordingly by the relevant authorities. The messaging has often been... well, a mess. Mistakes were made along the way. This can be frustrating, but it doesn't change the fact that we should be making decisions based on the best available data, because that protects the greatest number of people and saves the greatest number of lives.
When expert opinion is offered on the subject of who should take shelter from a tornado, advising changes by the minute because tornadoes often shift course quickly and dramatically. When expert opinion is offered on the subject of taking shelter from an incoming hurricane, advising changes on a daily basis as models and predictions about the hurricane's path are adjusted to reflect new data. A global pandemic is an even more
enormously complicated and dangerous event than your garden variety natural disaster, and responses to it must be flexible and adaptable as more is learned about the virus. And then there is the further complication of the virus itself changing dramatically as it mutates within the bevy of available hosts it can seek out. Hence the push for mass vaccination in an attempt to achieve something close to herd immunity before further mutations in the virus occur, which could potentially render the current vaccinations moot.
This is especially relevant now that the Delta variant of COVID-19 is the most dominant strain in the United States. We should
not be responding to a pandemic with an r0 somewhere between 5 and 8 (Delta) as we do to a pandemic with an r0 around 2 or 3 (Alpha). The Delta variant has represented an extraordinary rise in the transmissibility and infectivity of the disease. It spreads much more easily, clusters much more easily, and presents in the human body with a greater "viral load" than the earliest variants of COVID-19. In other words, the Delta variant is not necessarily more "deadly" than earlier variants of COVID-19, but it can result in deadlier
outcomes because of how much more efficiently it moves and presents in the body.
If you're looking for proof that you "won't be a part of a class action lawsuit in 10 years over the long term side effects of this thing", you're not going to find it. Under no circumstances could that
ever be proven for
any preventative measure. It's not magic. It's not a suit of armor. There are
always edge cases in matters of medicine. There are
always very rare side effects, even amongst the most heavily-tested and vetted of vaccinations. And for a disease with a considerably lower r0, we might have the luxury of waiting to determine if we as individuals might end up one among the 0.000x% who experience any long-term side effects of note. But when it comes to public health with respect to developing herd immunity to COVID-19, the risks of waiting
far outweigh the risks of getting the vaccine. Hell, catching even a mild case of COVID-19 can have long-term ramifications on an individual's health, no matter their age. Even young athletes in the best shape of their lives have experienced lingering side-effects from these kinds of mild cases. 23-year-old Jayson Tatum, who had no prior respiratory conditions, was relying on an inhaler long after recovering from his experience with COVID.
Given the extraordinary transmissibility of the Delta variant, there is simply a
much greater risk of experiencing long-term effects from the disease (again,
no matter your age) than experiencing any comparably severe side effect to the COVID-19 vaccine. Skeptics of these vaccines behave as if there wasn't a clear and transparent process that
any individual can learn about with a simple glance at the FDA's or CDC's or WHO's respective websites, or any of a dozen other reputable sources with readily available information about the development of the COVID-19 vaccines, from research to trial to implementation to mass distribution. These vaccines weren't created by some whacky uncle in his hobby shop. They were a
global cooperation between some of the most respected medical institutions on the entire planet and have since been approved by scores of governmental agencies seeking to protect their populations. In the US,
"emergency approval" does not mean that the vaccines weren't vetted properly. It simply means that they were vetted according to a different set of guidelines in order to accommodate the, ya know,
emergency that the pandemic represented upon its arrival.