Quote:
Originally Posted by KhalDrogo
I mean, the risk of any adverse event secondary to the vaccine is greater than the risk that he even gets Covid at this time if he truly had it twice. Additionally, his myocarditis risk after vaccination is greater than his risk of hospitalization as a result of a Covid infection.
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/wr/mm7027e2.htm
Hospitalization risk after vaccination in the US is 50.8 per million for all ages, sexes, and comorbidities. Certainly lower for a young, healthy athlete like MPJ. So again, MPJ has made the informed decision that risk of vaccination outweighs benefit for him. How is he wrong for that?
Agreed. Honesty, I think the structure of max contracts prevents parity. If there was no max, the true superstars would command more and super teams wouldn't be as easily formed.
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There's probably more risk variance when his Uber pulls up with a V6 instead of a V8. That's why it's silly that he won't get the vaccine to A. decrease the likelihood he gets COVID again (and spreads it) and B. to avoid all the unvaccinated NBA guidelines (which will most likely result missed games/practices).