Re: the anecdotal nurse story..
"One of the nurses who works in our clinic contracted COVID-19. She follows the same protocols as everyone else, and does not know how she contracted it. Unfortunately, she was initially hesitant to take the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines offered by the hospital to all employees, so she only received one dose before she became ill."
A huge take away here is that she followed protocols and still contracted it, even after the first dose.
Following protocols is not a guarantee any more than wearing a seat belt in a car with airbags, cameras/auto brake/stop, etc. will prevent serious injury in a car crash, but you know, we do it anyway because it reduces the odds.
The only way to practically eliminate the risk of serious injury from a car accident is to not ever be in a car or near one.
The nurse contracted it because she was exposed and it got in. It's not a matter of needing to know how. She's on the front lines at a clinic. It's no mystery. It could be an asymptomatic carrier. It could be another like her who only got one shot. It could be from someone with both shots, but not 2 weeks later immunized, or even yes, from someone with both shots and fully immunized. There's not a guarantee with any of this.
Yet some might see this as she did everything she could, got vaccinated, still caught it, got sick and survived, just like a flu, so why are their "liberties" being curtailed. That's sad and scary. All the more reason for pressures of many kinds to be imposed to get people vaccinated, whether they be vaccine passports, discussions with the reluctant, and yes, I still maintain the idea of a reduction in insurance coverage for those that refuse any vaccine if allowed to get it( yes, barring documented medical reasons, but not "beliefs") That's a pressure that hits the pocketbook, sometimes the only one people can accept.
Just pulling up Wisconsin as an example re: insurance companies reducing coverage re: seatbelts...
Wisconsin law requires drivers and passengers to wear seatbelts. Not wearing a seatbelt can affect how much money you recover from an insurance company for damages and injuries sustained in an accident. Wisconsin's law requiring safety belt use allows a damage claim to be reduced by as much as 15 percent for parties not wearing safety belts, according to Brent Smith, a Johns, Flaherty & Collins attorney.
This is a global pandemic in which a lot of things were put on hold for good reason and a lot of restrictions were enacted with penalties for non-compliance for the public good. It's not unreasonable to think other restrictions or compliance requirements be added with penalties of one kind or another, such as the right for businesses to refuse service to those without a vaccine passport.
I am amazed at the reports of people only getting the first dose of the two dose vaccines. Referring to those who voluntarily refuse the second dose, what are they thinking?