Oh cmon UA. You know that's bull****. Do you have social media?
Haha. I only have Facebook. My pages are running and cooking. They have a COVID information and update page now created by FB, so I "watch" that too. I honestly don't know how people can get upset over Facebook to tell you honestly unless they are choosing to watch pages and talk with people they know they will get angry at. RF is the only social media I go to on a routine basis but even then it's hard to weed out facts versus opinion. Even on Youtube (I don't read/comment just watch videos) I haven't seen or at least search videos that antivaxxers are encouraging people not to vaccinate. They're just complaining that they don't want to be pushed to do so.
It's not that they can't. It's that they just tend not to - as exemplified by statements like, "antivaxxers' opinions are impossible to find."
But how do we actually know by virtue of their being unvaccinated and nothing more?
What's the inherent connection between a person being unvaccinated and how much they know about COVID, vaccines, and the like?
I think people get unvaccinated and antivaxxers mixed up to tell you honestly. Not all unvaccinated are against vaccination just as not all people who decide not to take, say, Advil are telling others and believe the medication doesn't work in and of itself. People's personal opinions about others are not always based on facts no matter how strong and emotionally driven those opinions are.
That's a fascinating question - why do you think people make decisions against their best interests?
I don't get the point behind the question... I do better with direct point(s) with/without a question to avoid guessing.
What I was saying/asking, though, is just because someone made a decision we find immoral doesn't mean we have to try to justify them as ignorant or so have you; to me, it sounds like it helps the person make sense of the other person's actions not that that other person is actually ignorant in and of itself-they don't know. The unvaccinated "could be" the smartest people in the world they just made a decision that to others is not in the best interest of themselves and others.
The CDC still lists possible risks of vaccination:
Possible Side effects from Vaccines | CDC
It was this site
Benefits of Getting a COVID-19 Vaccine
It was title pros and cons of COVID vaccine for months or so. When you click on it in google, it went to this site. About a week or go when I posted this (the actual title), I went back and they changed it to the above. I assume maybe google keeps track of how many times people click on links.
I don't know what YT's rules are regarding COVID misinformation.
This line of reasoning reminds me of something a flat earther or young earth creationist would say.
It wasn't misinformation. It was from the CDC itself.
Edit.
I found it
Mandatory Vaccinations?
"Pros and Cons of the Vaccines | COVID-19 Vaccine FAQ | cdc.gov" before they changed it recently.
People don't need to be misinformed to make a decision we feel is contrary to the health of ourselves and others.