First of all, I want to make it 100% clear that I am not anti-vax
I'm already vaccinated and would encourage everyone who has access to vaccine to become vaccinated as well.
but does not the fact that there are around 150,000,000 folks in the US (not all dunderheads as often portrayed, let's keep it real)
Well, for one thing, I think that it's important to not dismiss the unvaccinated as "antivaxxers".
Here in the United States, not enough vaccine doses have been produced to fully vaccinate everyone. Latest figures seem to be that 403,047,000 doses have been distributed and 348,966,000 (86%) have been administered. While that's enough to cover the entire population with one dose, full vaccination in most cases requires two doses. So at upwards of an 86% usage rate (many of the unused doses are in transit or awaiting use), they don't seem to be having a lot of trouble finding people to take it.
Vaccination rates very by age. The highest rates are among those 65 and over who received access to vaccines first. The lowest vaccination rates are among children, who are at least risk from the disease (though they can spread it). That's as it should be with the highest risk population vaccinated first and the lowest-risk population vaccinated last.
Vaccination rates vary by urban vs rural, with higher rates in urban areas. That's likely a function both of vaccine availablity and perceived need, since rural people are already somewhat "social distanced" and perceive themelves to be in less contact with possibly infected strangers than big city dwellers would be on public transit or on a crowded street.
So to some extent I think that the whole spectre of "anti-vaxxers" is a creation of the media, something of a caricature created for political ends.
who apparently don't trust the government or our healthcare system give reason to pause and reconsider? Who's really to blame for the lack of trust?
I think that there is indeed considerable distrust of the health care authorities here in the United States. Perhaps the largest single driver of that distrust is how health-care is perceived as having been weaponized for political purposes. (That isn't surprising in a culture in which almost everything has been weaponized for political putposes.) And I lay the blame for that directly at the feet of the
Democratic Party. From the very beginning they have politicized covid in hopes of using it to attack Trump.
Prior to the 2020 election, we saw Andrew Cuomo telling Anderson Cooper that half the population was unwilling to take "Trump's vaccine". Joe Biden suggested at the time that he didn't personally trust the vaccines. Kamala Harris said upfront that she wouldn't take them. Then after the election the whole mainstream media narrative took an abrupt and obvious 180.
In real life what Republican Governors have done isn't halt vaccinations in their states or anything remotely like that. They have tried instead to go light on repressive measures that kill the Middle class and mainstreet business, along with the wholesale erosions of civil liberties that we have been seeing around covid. Placing whole populations under what amounts to house arrest. Government controls on where people can go and what they can do when they leave their homes. Covid passports. Forcing everyone to wear muzzles.
The issue isn't so much being anti-vaccine as it is being against the kind of police state apparatus that's being advocated in response to the covid issue. The media seem to be trying to focus attention on the caricature that they have created of the "anti-vaxxer" so as to allow the latter to fly under the radar.