Yes, the chance of dying from the jabs is much higher! And the long covid thing is "vaccine" injury.
I do think adverse effects are likely underreported, but I am the only person I know of personally that
may-- and I stress the uncertainty, because I could also have had a breakthrough-- have had an adverse reaction to the vaccine that was systemic and lasted more than a few days. As someone who is cautious with vaccines, I may wait a bit before I have a fourth shot, or try a different one, or see what
peer reviewed research from reliable sources has to say about the fourth shot before getting it, if I get it at all.
I kind of know what it feels like to have a bad reaction to a vaccine, because I had a far worse reaction to Shingrix-- that one gave my a fever and heart palpitations that lasted around a year. And the mRNA vaccines can make people feel weird in ways that can be distinctly unsettling. The weird dreams are very strange.
Not only did my reaction to the Pfizer vaccine turn out to be much less severe than my reaction to Shingrix, but... I now have noticed a distinct and pervasive feeling not-deadness. I can also report with very little uncertainty that I don't even have an 'almost dead' feeling, because I have almost died on a few occasions from various health problems or other mishaps-- blood clots, regulator failure when scuba diving, guns pointed at my head, car accidents, etc.-- and this feels nothing like any of those things whatsoever.
I also had pericarditis as a teenager, which you can get from the vaccine, but are more likely to get from COVID, and I did not get pericarditis again. This thread is now in such a highly speculative realm that I suppose we could consider the possibility that the vaccines side effects
propagated backwards in time, so that a vaccine given to me at 64 years old caused pericarditis when I was 15, but I'm thinking of that as a low-percentage scenario.
A friend who is a three-time cancer survivor and 2x stroke survivor who also has lupus called me the other night. Four shots, absolutely no side effects, new job at 60 years old that requires great physical alertness and stamina, but, I'm happy to say, reported no harbingers of deadness, either, and at least on the phone, exhibited none of the prodromal symptoms of those who are at risk of being imminently dead. And this is a guy I drove home from the hospital after he almost did die, so I know what 'almost dead' looks like for him specifically, and what he was experiencing at that time seemed categorically quite different from where he is today/
My conclusion remains that he isn't dead, I'm not dead, that no one I've ever known who has taken the vaccine has died from it. I'm searching for some other explanation, but it just seems like the only possible conclusion. No one around me is behaving as if I am dead. My dogs, my friends, my wife... none of them show the telltale signs that might suggest they have been hanging out with a dead person. They exhibit little in the way of horror or revulsion, with the possible exception of my wife on rare occasions, but I think anyone who has experimented with matrimony has experienced that at one time or another.
I have seen recent video of myself that strongly suggests my general animation.
Or, put another way: If this is what being dead feels like? We've all been worrying way too much about it.
If I
am dead? As the young folks say, er... how shall I put this? This sh*t is tight. Dead is totally dope.