Perjorative said:
Man up, grow a pair, and stand in line for the jab...
I'm not getting any of your reasoning there at all , feel free to explain if i have the wrong end of the stick but why are you so uppity if someone doesn't want the jab ?
The jab doesn't prevent a person from carrying or spreading the virus , its aim is to prevent serious reaction /hospitalisation / death for those deemed most at risk .
I don't see any issue whatsoever if someone should decide they do or don't want it , isn't it their loss ? i certainly don't see it as cowardice & by the time the first 20-30% of the country ( approx 2omillion) have been done it will be time for them to have it again the way this virus mutates so unlikely the ones deemed not at risk will ever get to the part in line where they will get a choice .
I'm 52 , good health , nt overweight & non smoker , when exactly would you forecast my appointment for the vaccine ? :? i'm certainly not expecting it anytime this year .
It surprises me that so many pin the hopes of a return to "normality" with a vaccine & even more so that people expect it to be all good in a short period of time

i only see it protecting the most vulnerable from worse case scenario but unless the jab can be given to the whole of the UK within a short period of time the infection cycle will continue to peak & trough as it has done for the last 9/10 months .
If we are to believe the blurb that current admissions are from all age groups including many under 40 so likely to be 6-8-10 months before they were next up for the needle .
Bearing in mind the priority jabs are being given to the those with recognised illness or aged 70/80/90 isn't it those people who already don't work , socialise infrequently & likely spend long periods of time either alone or at home :? therefore unlikely they are the ones creating a surge in cases so until the other 60 million in uk get immunity we will all either have to stay isolated / locked down or go back to life where cases rise again & so on & so on & so on .