I am glad you and yours are having no problems.
And the 100-200 coworkers in my building - no loss of employees.
And the 1500-2000 employees of my company in the SF Bay Area - no loss of employees.
And the 3 or 4 thousand members who attend my church every weekend - no loss of members.
And the thousands -sometimes 10s of thousands - of runners and volunteers at running events in just the SF Bay Area
every weekend of the year, plus or minus a holiday weekend or two - no loss of participants.
And the hundreds or thousands of commuters I see every weekday morning and evening, their presence indicating that employers and schools have not experienced losses of employees and/or students.
And shoppers at malls - no loss of customers.
And patrons at restaurants - no loss of diners.
And no increase in patients at a large hospital.
And no increase in patients at a hospice, which is in communication with hospitals, other hospice organizations, and mortuaries.
And no increase in funerals at a large cemetery which does still have space.
The crescent from Fremont to south San Jose to Palo Alto has about 2 or 3 million people. I'm just one person, which is the point of the quote above, but my and my family's daily and weekly experiences have a view of a fairly large portion of that population. The idea that Covid vaccines are deadly but we could see zero evidence of it in any of our experiences in population segments that are 80%-100% vaccinated is implausible or just ludicrous.
As to the comment that some people would be allergic to a Covid vaccine, that is not news. However, is it news to anyone disagreeing with my comments that screening is done before Covid - or any other - vaccination, and among the screening questions was a question whether the potential recipient had had an allergic reaction to any vaccine? Of course, allergic reactions is another

, but easily answered.