cymatica":ovacqb0n said:
He said he was immunized, and frankly it's no ones business. The league and the team knew exactly what his treatment was. The media and fans don't need to know about someones personal medical decisions.
The media, btw, said he acted selfish. Was he more selfish than the players who took their Pfizer shot, without actually doing any research, and later contracted and spread Covid? yJust wondering if anyone has bothered to use their brain before joining the covid cult and shaming people for something they are completely ignorant about.
You can still spread covid and get grandma sick if you had your shot, so isolate yourself at home or you are just as selfish as the dirty unvaxxed
If Rodgers felt it was nobody's business, then he should have said so when he was asked the question, but he didn't. Instead, when he was asked if he was vaccinated, the first word out of his mouth was
"Yeah", a positive response, so he did lie about it. He then, like a slick lawyer, played a little game of semantics when he qualified his statement by saying
"immunized" in a blatant and intentional attempt to create the impression that he was vaccinated. I have no sympathy whatsoever for his being shamed by the media and others. He brought it on himself.
The selfish part wasn't so much his refusal to get the jab, it was his intentional disregard for the protocols that put other people at risk. As far as who's more likely to spread the disease, a vaccinated vs. unvaccinated individual, the answer is so simple that a grade schooler could understand it. If you're less likely to catch it, you're less likely to spread it.