The Columbus Dispatch

Just be honest about not wanting vaccine

- Your Turn Ray Marcano Guest columnist

When it comes to the COVID-19 vaccine, I wish people would say “I don’t want it” and leave it at that.

The two reasons anti-vaxxers give most often for not taking the vaccines are nonsense.

The vaccines, they say, are too new and they don’t know what they’re putting in their body; and they don’t want their employers telling them they have to get a vaccine because it violates their personal freedom. There’s a problem with both of those arguments. Not knowing what you’re putting into your body is an everyday occurrence.

More than 35 million Americans, for example, take statins, the drug that helps decrease bad cholestero­l. But none of those people have any idea what’s in the statin drugs that include Lipitor. I had no idea either, until I looked on the FDA website:

Statins contain “10, 20, 40 or 80 mg atorvastat­in and the following inactive ingredient­s: calcium carbonate, USP; candelilla wax, FCC; croscarmel­lose sodium, NF; hydroxypro­pyl cellulose, NF; lactose monohydrat­e, NF; magnesium stearate, NF; microcryst­alline cellulose, NF; Opadry White YS-1-7040 (hypromello­se, polyethyle­ne glycol, talc, titanium dioxide); polysorbat­e 80, NF; simethicon­e emulsion.”

I can’t pronounce most of that stuff.

The same thing goes for heart, diabetes or anxiety medication­s.

You take them because your doctor says so and you don’t protest that you’re putting something in your body and you don’t know what’s in it. You take the pills because the medical profession­al says so.

What makes taking a COVID vaccine different? Let’s take this one step further. Americans eat frozen and canned foods and have no idea what’s in them. I won’t list all of the ingredient­s in this one popular frozen pizza, but here’s just a taste of what’s in it: cooked seasoned pizza topping made with pork and chicken, BHA, BHT and citric acid added to help protect flavor (pork, mechanical­ly separated chicken).

Mechanical­ly separated chicken? Yuck.

So next time, when claiming that you don’t want to put something in your body you’re unsure about, consult your grocery list.

The employment thing is even more puzzling. Let’s forget about the Supreme Court’s 1905 ruling that gave businesses the right to mandate flu shots for employees. Employers have been telling employees what to do for millennia.

Employers tell you when you must come to work and when you can leave.

Violate those rules and you could be suspended, lose pay or get fired. Your boss tells you how long you can take for lunch and how much vacation you can take. Companies have rules about social media, including your private page, and govern how you can interact with coworkers and community members. That’s in addition to mandating vaccines.

That’s why I think the most honest statement for anyone still resisting a vaccine is, “I don’t want to” and that’s it.

People will say they don’t want a cup of coffee or don’t want to work overtime or don’t want to go to a movie they have no interest in. They don’t qualify why they “don’t want to.” They just don’t.

That’s more honest – if a still puzzling reaction – from those who resist vaccines, even as the delta variant rears its ugly head and the new mu variant has health officials starting to worry.

In a world in which honesty is at a premium, just say, “I don’t want it.” I won’t understand it, but I can at least respect that you’re being honest.

Ray Marcano is the former national president of the Society of Profession­al Journalist­s, a two-time Pulitzer juror and a Fulbright Scholar.

 ??  ??
 ?? CLAY BENNETT ??
CLAY BENNETT

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States