Since you asked, here's what I've learned.
I've learned that people I know can die from COVID.
I've also learned the following:
"There is no increased risk for mortality among COVID-19 vaccine recipients."
This report describes lower non-COVID-19 death rates among COVID-19 vaccinated people.
www.cdc.gov
I've also learned that during the most recent wave of COVID in New York City, unvaccinated people were about 10 times as likely to end up in the hospital:
View attachment 53537
10 times is just a rough estimate based on eyeballing the graph. You can compare the blue line (unvaccinated) to the red line (vaccinated) and draw your own conclusions
Cases and hospitalizations by vaccination status
coronavirus.health.ny.gov
See that black line in the graph above? That's the estimated vaccine effectiveness. See that little slope near the end going from about 95% to about 90%? I've learned that some people look at that little downward slope in the black line and declare "The vaccines should be pulled off the market. They clearly are not solving the problem.”
'The vaccines should be pulled off the market, they clearly are not solving the problem.'
www.clarkcountytoday.com
So, another thing I've learned is that I think of these people as being idiots.
Another thing I've learned is that yet another double blind trial of ivermectin this past year did not show any benefits:
>>>In the very same presentation, the very same trial that showed this antidepressant might lessen the symptoms of Covid-19
also showed that the antiparasitic drug ivermectin—you’ve heard about that one, right?—doesn’t help at all. In the Together trial, that drug, commonly used against things like river blindness and intestinal roundworms, didn’t keep anyone with Covid out of the hospital any better than a placebo. Of 677 people with Covid who got 400 micrograms per kilogram of weight per day for three days, 86 ended up in the ER or hospital; of the 678 people who got a placebo, 95 went. That’s not a significant difference, and Mills’ team dropped it from the study.<<<
https://www.wired.com/story/better-data-on-ivermectin-is-finally-on-its-way/
Another thing I've learned is that in clinical trials, Paxlovid was highly effective in treating COVID:
>>>Pfizer’s oral antiviral drug paxlovid significantly reduces hospital admissions and deaths among people with covid-19 who are at high risk of severe illness, when compared with placebo, the company has reported.
The interim analysis of the phase II-III data, outlined in a press release, included 1219 adults who were enrolled by 29 September 2021. It found that, among participants who received treatments within three days of covid-19 symptoms starting, the risk of covid related hospital admission or death from any cause was 89% lower in the paxlovid group than the placebo group.<<<
Pfizer’s oral antiviral drug paxlovid significantly reduces hospital admissions and deaths among people with covid-19 who are at high risk of severe illness, when compared with placebo, the company has reported. The interim analysis of the phase II-III data, outlined in a press release...
www.bmj.com