I refused to take the vaccine due to it being rushed through to market so quickly without being properly tested over a suitably long time-frame that would have been necessary to determine what the long term side-effects are. Especially when you consider it worked using a totally new and previously unused mRNA technology which works in a totally different way to how all previous vaccines did before 2020.I must admit, there is a certain frustration in watching this stuff come out in the media now. For years people were denigrated and treated appallingly for even just asking questions regarding 'vaccine' efficacy, mask mandates, consequences of lockdowns and so on.
I've got a respect for those people who decided against taking the 'vaccine' and stood their ground throughout those years. It showed a strength of character to stick to your guns despite all the threats, manipulation and abuse thrown their way.
No way under any circumstances was I going to put something so experimental and untested as mRNA into my body without there being several years of comprehensive long term side-effect data to back up the safety claims that were being made about it at the time. My resolution was absolutely rock solid and unbreakable regarding this.
This does not mean that I as antisocial in any way though. I was always very respectful of others and was extremely careful to follow social distancing and all of the other rules to the absolute T at all times. More carefully than the majority of vaccinated people did in fact. At least for the first couple of years or more until after the virus mutated several times and naturally became less dangerous. I also had respect for how potentially dangerous it could be too. Particularly the early strains at the beginning.
In late December of 2019 a bad virus was doing the rounds where I work. We will never know for certain but I suspect that this might have actually been an early strain of covid-19 that we had (there is now conclusive proof found using saved blood samples that were taken from the cadavers of people who died in December of 2019 which shows that Covid-19 was already present in parts of the UK shortly before January 2020). Assuming that what we had at work in 2019 was really covid-19 and not something else then I can attest that it was a particularly nasty virus. One of the worst I've ever had in my life in fact and I can see how something as severe as that could easily kill someone who was elderly or weak. Luckily for us we were all reasonably healthy and had good immune systems so we just felt really bad (and I do mean REALLY bad) for a week or two before recovering naturally.