I did not claim women were 'over-represented' in vaccine numbers, nor did say men should have been prioritised if they lagged in numbers.
Non. You have not shown that.
It's fine if you want to clarify what you originally meant. I'll accept that you weren't as clear as you intended to be in your original claim that it was unbelievable that an 18 year old black person was at greater risk than a 48 year old white person.
48 year old white people are at a higher risk than 18 year old black people.
However, you would be wrong. Black people in Vermont were many, many, many times more likely to contract COVID and were several times more likely to require hospitalization than were white people. Please see my earlier posts for links to the data.
No, I would not be wrong, and your data does not compare healthy 18 year old BIPOC people to healthy 48 year old white people. Note that is what we are talking about. Healthy 18 year old BIPOCs were prioritised ahead of healthy 48 year old white people.
Sure. I won't trouble myself to point out which posts you said what since you can't be bothered yourself. You are correct: there has been a lag in vaccination of males compared with females, initially at least because of the fact that the first two priority groups: 65+ and health care workers are vastly over-represented by females. At the same time that those 65+ were prioritized for vaccination, so were those with comorbidities of obesity, smoking, heart and lung disease, etc, which are over-represented by men. By your argument, they were adequately prioritized or at least that's the argument that you made with regards to black people vs (some)white people.
No: I said if you make the argument that black people deserved priority because of the higher death rate--an argument you made without controlling for any covariates--then by the same reasoning, men ought be prioritised over women.
But I'll assume that was an argument you were making to further your belief that men should also be targeted/prioritized for vaccination.
I have never claimed such a belief. Please stop lying about what I believe. I did not state that men should be prioritised over women. I made the claim that if you believe, based on raw death rates, that black people should be prioritised over white people, then the same arguments with the same evidence applies to men over women.
Personally, I have no problem with any program that encourages (or frankly, requires) individuals to be vaccinated (assuming there is no medical reason not to be vaccinated).
I certainly have a problem with the State forcibly vaccinating people who don't want to be vaccinated.
At this point, I think that the rest of the nation should take a note from Vermont and look at specific groups who are refusing vaccination and specifically target them to encourage vaccination. It's urgent that we reach a vaccination rate of at least 70%, and preferably higher.
I have no problem with targeted campaigns that encourage vaccine-reluctant people to get vaccinated. I had a problem with the State discriminating by race in its distribution of life-saving vaccines.