So you think it is a coincidence that small pox just happened to die out once mankind started vaccinating against it? It is not a tiny payoff, you are simply getting by on herd immunity which works as long as enough people get immunized.
Yes, there are some side effects and they can very rarely be serious. Then again, vaccines aren't used for fun, those risks are nothing compared to the diseases they ward us against. I think vaccination deniers are ultimately selfish and they get by by leeching off those who take the risks (although statistically those risks aren't significant).
I have been down these rabbit trails on these forums before. There is some value to vaccinations, but it is not as great as many assume. The idea that people want to be vaccinated against chicken pox is ridiculous. Polio, ok, at one time that was probably a great benefit.
THe negative effects on society as a result of vaccinations are easily demonstrated. Of course, many people don't do any more research into these things than watching the evening news and believing what the pharma companies tell them.
People actually believe that flu vaccines work, even though they have to take them every year (hint: if they worked, you would never need more than one) "But there are different strains" etc etc. Right, hook, line and sinker and the vaccine companies laugh all the way to the bank. I had two grandmothers, one never got the flu vaccine and never got the flu. One got the shot every year and got the flu almost every year.
As one example, look at the rise in shingles. Shingles occurs in older people who contract(ed) varicella, the same virus that causes chicken pox in the younger populations.
used to be that most people get chicken pox at a young age and as they grow, they come into contact with other people who have chicken pox and that contact is like an immune booster (what booster shots attempt to mimic). now that more of the population is being vaccinated against chicken pox, less people are coming into contact with the natural immune booster and therefore the incidence of shingles is on the rise. What do the pharma companies suggest? A shingles vaccine! They create the first problem, and make money off of the solution.
I had a titer done on MMR and varicella and I was negative for MMR immunity but positive for varicella. coincidentally, my varicella antibodies were very high, and we recently had a few kids in church get chicken pox. I assume I got an immunity boost from being in thier proximity.
And even though I was vaccinated as a child for MMR, and even had one round just two years before my titer, I came up negative for MMR immunity and had to get another vaccine in order to work. Vaccines do not work, and they are dangerous to overall health.
If there is a polio outbreak, or bird flu or some other such disease, then it may be an option, but for general health, it is not worth it.