How about the severity of cases once caught? If vaccinated people have far lower severity, then that's still lowering potential stress on hospitals.
Dimsum, is that to say that you believe preventing unvaccinated truckers from cross border travel into the U.S., while allowing them to continue driving freely within the country will meaningfully reduce their risk of catching COVID? If so, is it a significant enough reduction of risk to justify denying them their rights under Sections 6 of The Charter?
It is still the same demographics of people in high risk categories (those over 60, severely overweight, diabetics, etc.) that make up the lion's share of persons in hospital and ICUs. When you look at those that are under 60 without known health conplications, then the risk of severe illness is quite small.
For example, in Ontario, when you look at hospitalizations by age, the vast majority are over 60. Those over 80 have the highest hospitalization rates, by far, despite a roughly 97% vaccination rate.
Explore confirmed COVID-19 data in Ontario by: case trends over time including hospitalizations and deaths, age and sex, public health unit, outbreaks, laboratory testing and vaccines.
www.publichealthontario.ca
A vaccinated person over 80 is significantly more likely (over 20x more likely) to be hospitalized from COVID than someone that is unvaccinated and under under 40. It is for this reason that Greece's mandatory vaccination policy only applies to those over 60 years old. In comparison, our PM is decrying a serious need for more children under the age of 12 to be vaccinated (they are already about half vaccinated)... this can be compared to Sweden's recent decision that the risks of vaccination outweigh the benfits for young children unless they have certain health conditions.
If the goal is to keep people out of the hospital by preventing them from being exposed to the virus, then why is it just the unvaccinated and not the elderly that are prevented from travel, dining, etc? Are the policies designed to reduce risk of overcrowded hospitals, or to punish those whose decisions regarding their bodily autonomy fall out of line with the governments' stance.
I'm in no way advocating against vaccination, in general, but what is trying to be gained from all of these coercive measures? Do people think that they will convince the vaccine hesitant to trust in the government more?