22:10
@leslietownes Yes, I've heard the same, and they often explain, in the same manner, why folks' second shot might lead to brief symptoms (given the immune system's memory of the first shot.) For me, both shots led only to an itsy bitsy muscle soreness in my upper left arm. Just like my weekly allergy shots as a kid. Of course, I was lucky in that respect, with respect to the covid shot. I imagine my upcoming booster shot might lead to 24 hours of feeling ill.
The think is, if you or eye refused a booster, so that dose can go to someone elsewhere on the globe who needs to get a first or second dose, that particular dose would never get to them. It's a matter of wealthier countries dedicated to help immunize those in need, globally. It's not really a matter of charity, but a matter of reducing, globally, the risk of covid. But then you get protest from the "America first" folks, with an attitude: Why should we be responsible for others in the world?
I can't imagine how people throughout the world, who have not yet been vaccinated, but desperately want to be, can stomach folks like Aaron Rodgers, and the arrogant refusal to be vaccinated, when there are tens of thousand, hundreds of thousands, of people patiently waiting for the opportunity to be vaccinated. :(