From the top shall we?
Some of the so called "anti-vax" crowd don't believe that at all.
(No, they actually do. Whenever one or more individuals believes in "personal preference" over science, its denialism). They perhaps believe some combination of:
1. Health "experts" provided a tremendous amount of false information. In some cases, the claims were knowingly questionable or even knowingly false (e.g., Fauci admitting he fudged numbers to what he felt the public would accept). Why did these experts so completely oversell what they really knew?
This, and others, are conspiracy theories, some by Jerome Corsi, who falsly claimed that Fauci released false information about the vaccine, virus origin or that he had US patents for a glycoprotein that is in SARS-Cov2. All have been debunked by Wapo, NYTimes, Snopes or Politifact.2. Unquestionably, health "experts" misrepresented and mischaracterized the effectiveness and impact of the Covid vaccines (e.g., initially being told that vaccinated people could not infect others). It was an exigency, so that may not have been intentional - at least initially. But the health "experts" didn't present it that way. They presented their assertions as "unquestionable science" that could not be questioned.
False. This one is always at the top of the list in terms of the "I told you so" crowd. Its too much to write but a good explanation of debunking this myth is here:
https://www.factcheck.org/2022/08/scicheck-widespread-claims-misrepresent-effectiveness-of-covid-19-vaccines/3. Many "anti-vax" people thinks that "health experts" suck at making public policy which should include considerations beyond "health". Health "experts" supported/imposed a tremendous number of onerous (and some might say dictatorial) emergency measures that proved tremendously harmful (e.g., school closure) and often ineffective (masking in most circumstances). Again, we were told these mandates were "science' and therefore not subject to debate or dissent.
Who should then make public health policy? Politicians? Parents? How does a country or health jurisdiction offer a coherent strategy against an outbreak or other public health emergency? Let's say for example, the schools remained open. We didn't lock down. No one needed to wear a mask. What would have happened? Herd immunity? Unlikely. The virus mutated too quickly. And this is what I've heard countless times over and over. Had Trump (yes Trump) not ordered a lockdown, millions more would have died. And at the point of the lockdown, no one knew what we were up against. Its revisionist history and pure politics to theorize doing nothing would have worked. And these mandates were science. That is a fact. 4. Some of these people chose not to use an experimental vaccine because they felt the benefits did not outweigh the risks - in large part because they were not at risk statistically speaking (e.g., healthy people under 30). Yet the health "experts" (and vaccine scolds like Kimmel and many on this board) insist these people were crazy/wrong for wanting to make a personal health decision.
The all out pursuit of a vaccine was pushed in no small part to public demand! No one wanted to stay indoors. No one wanted to live as shut ins or not go to a restuarant or bar. Again, its revisionist history to suggest that this vaccine was "pushed" on the public when in face to face with a dire public health crisis - you look to a vaccine! A personal health decision with wide ranging consequences for themselves and people around them. All of the views above - which are nuanced and personal - are often characterized as anti-vax. In hindsight, many of the so-called anti-vax people were correct in many respects - as a matter of science.
Nuanced and personal can often be drilled down to "I read somewhere (conservative media) that the vaccine is dangerous, that masks are taking away my liberty and that anything the government wants me to do is a threat to my freedom". The anti-vax people have not been proven right. Far from it. I can provide a personal example. I personally chose to be vaccinated early on and had several boosters. I am in my 50s and have some health issues. After being vaxxed, I got covid and it was a mild case. I'm sure the vax helped. I also get flu vax, shingles vax, etc. I'm not anti-vax.
Congratulations on being responsible! At the same time, the Covid policy, as it was applied to my kids (aged 18 and 21), was insane and wrong. Due to the "recommendations" of the "health experts", my son who had ALREADY had COVID, was forced to take many vaxes as a condition to attending school. No discussion of the health benefits to him - there were virtually none. Just a bunch of geriatric health "experts" demanding they comply and attempting to quash any dissent under the false mantra of "science."
How was it insane and wrong when on March 13th, at least in California, they stopped classes? Did we know enough at that point to have any idea what the virus was or how it was transmitted or how to treat it? And are you saying you're against vaccinations for polio, Tdap, MMR, Hep B, and Varicella? Seriously??And does it matter whether these health experts are/were geriatric? Surely a pediatrician chimed in at some point. They certainly did in my school district. The health "experts" did this to themselves. Had they been honest from the beginning - by acknowledging their recommendations were based on the best available information but might be wrong - there would not be such justifiable distrust. Instead, they compromised themselves in favor of what they felt were "good lies."
Its people that were somehow against government "intrusion" into their lives with a mask mandate or a private or public sector vax mandate, all pushed by conspiracy theorists - that built vaccine hesitancy. None of it is grounded in fact. Couple that with conspiracy theories around Fauci and the NHI about gain of function, its tragic. There was a website called sorryantivaxxer.com that listed all the people who were outspoken against the vaccine - to their deaths. From covid.