sars said:
We have finite resources, thus we should concentrate the vaccines on those most vulnerable, giving it to children and adults, <30 years, unless there is a medical need is a waste of resources.
You are completely missing the point.
Although younger people are highly unlikely to die of C-19 or even have a serious illness from the virus, they can still become infected by the virus, and whilst infected, they can spread it to others, thus perpetuating the pandemic.
The extremely high incidence of C-19 in Care Homes demonstrates that younger people employed as care workers, can bring the virus into the care homes, where it can spread rapidly and tragically amongst the elderly residents, whom lie within the most vulnerable groups on account of age and co-morbidities, where it can then spread amongst other care workers who take the virus back outside the care home into the wider community, where they can then spread the virus to all the age groups not in care homes, including both you and your daughter, etc.
The rationale of a vaccination programme is not about protecting individuals only, but is all about protecting the greatest number of the wider population at large.
Whilst individuals within the UK do have freedom of choice to be vaccinated or not, it seems clear to me that those whom will not participate either do not understand how vaccination programmes operate or they selfishly choose not to seek to protect the most vulnerable in our society.
A vaccination programme with a very high uptake of the vaccine by the population will create the much needed herd-immunity so that normal life in the UK can be resumed as soon as possible.