Hamilton Journal News

Unvaccinat­ed have chosen to be part of a big problem

- Charles M. Blow Charles M. Blow writes for The New York Times. Michelle Goldberg returns soon.

I recently found out that a friend of mine — a smart guy — was not vaccinated, and I confronted him about it.

How could he have not gotten his vaccinatio­n? And how had he not seen fit to tell me and our other mutual friends? Wasn’t he worried about the risk he was posing not just to himself, but to the rest of us?

He tried to laugh it off, offering up a bunch of concerns rooted in conspiracy theories. But I told him that he had to get vaccinated, period.

The next time I saw him, he was worried about the omicron variant and asked if I would go with him to get the jab. I texted him a site where he could register and told him to let me know once he had. That was earlier this month. He still hasn’t signed up.

I am disappoint­ed, and I am angry, not just with my friend but with all the people who are choosing not to get vaccinated.

There was a point, earlier in the pandemic, when vaccines were still scarce, when I tried to be tolerant with the holdouts, tried not to shame them, tried not to be angry with them, tried to allow them time to educate themselves.

But that time has long since passed for me. I will not coddle willful ignorance anymore. I will not indulge the fool’s errand of “I’m still doing my own research” anymore, either.

This virus has already killed more than 806,000 Americans and infected more than 51 million. We are averaging more than 120,000 new cases a day.

The only way out of this situation, for our country and the world, is vaccines. We must dramatical­ly shrink the number of people vulnerable to the virus, or risk becoming a petri dish for the growth of variants.

In July, Michael Saag, a professor of medicine and infectious diseases expert at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told The Guardian: “Unvaccinat­ed people are basically the cannon fodder of the virus. The virus needs people to infect in order to replicate, and the more people it has that are vulnerable or susceptibl­e to infection, the more likely it will mutate.”

The unvaccinat­ed don’t only leave themselves vulnerable to the virus, they make everyone more vulnerable.

I have heard all the reasons for resistance. There are those who have politicize­d the virus. There are the people who view government pressure, and especially mandates, as anathema to the American ideal of freedom. There are people who don’t trust the government, sometimes with good reason.

I have heard it all. And I reject it all. There are just too many fresh graves pocking the land to entertain these objections.

We are closing in on Year 2 of the pandemic, and cases are again surging in many parts of this country.

We have to consider the very real possibilit­y that the virus will not be eradicated, but will become endemic. The journal Nature put this more directly in February: “The coronaviru­s is here to stay.” Its survey of more than 100 immunologi­sts, researcher­s and virologist­s found that almost 90% thought that the coronaviru­s would become endemic.

Even if eradicatio­n is impossible, it is possible to mitigate its spread with vaccinatio­n.

So yes, I am furious at the unvaccinat­ed. The only reason for remaining unvaccinat­ed that I now accept is from people who have medical conditions that prevent it.

All others have a choice to be part of the solution or part of the problem. The unvaccinat­ed are choosing to be part of the problem.

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