Unveiled Artist
Veteran Member
They don't need to dismiss statistics to know whether those statistics warrant their immediate response. If it doesn't, it's not that they dismissed it (or in your context reject it), just they thought for themselves and said "hey, this doesn't apply to me."Different people react differently to various situations, but hopefully you understand why most people don't just dismiss or ignore statistics from other countries when it comes to COVID. This dovetails with my response to the second part of your post:
This is in general, though. Most people are vaccinated for whatever reason-not all did so because of statistics.
I get the impression you're talking about this "side of her" as if it were something to blame her for. Why? If you believe in freedom of choice and don't want to get vaccinated for any given reason, it shouldn't be difficult to see why she also has the freedom to refuse to hang out with unvaccinated people, friends or not. Some people may not mind it (I wouldn't mind it myself unless my friend stopped observing preventive measures), but she has children and could very well not be ready to take the increased risk of transmission to her or her children that comes from hanging out with an unvaccinated person.
No. I've known her for 20 years and she's more of a logic-minded person. I haven't seen her fear anything and I never seen her cry even when we dated. Everyone reacts differently to fear and concern. I'm more fearful of immediate and personal threats to my life and others.
But I did say I understood since she has children and I don't.
Vaccines don't fully prevent transmission, but they do reduce the probability thereof. I view it as reasonable for a parent to want to avoid any extra risk even if that means not hanging out with unvaccinated friends, especially now that there are more transmissible variants of the virus circulating around. I would miss my vaccinated friends if they told me they'd rather wait until I was vaccinated to hang out with me, but I'd also understand and respect that. It's nothing personal; it's just that the virus doesn't care who is or isn't a friend when it infects someone.
True. I never blamed her for it. We just have different views on vaccination status not whether or not I may potentially infect her and her children. I'm the one that told her not to come where I live because of her feelings about unvaccinated people. We'd just have to wait until they say the pandemic is over for everyone to drop their guard.
You're free not to get vaccinated, but you're not free to impose this decision on anyone else. People are also free to choose who to hang out with based on medical consensus about probability of transmission from unvaccinated people compared to vaccinated ones.
Where have I imposed this decision on someone else?
That sounds like you're (or people I'm referring to) threatened by my decisions. I said nothing of the kind.