Not a sock puppet, and it's been stated before that the vaccine doesn't stop the spread and only somewhat reduces symptoms, which defeats the "selfishness" argument, since it's literally a personal choice at that point. Just look at all of the Omicron cases in fully vaccinated people.
Edit: As a side note, how is it selfish to not take the shot if I feel the potential side effects for a younger male (myocarditis, muscle spasms, etc) are not worth it? I have no recourse if something in the shot fucks me up. Isn't it selfish to threaten people's livelihood for making a personal decision involving their health? Where's the concern for obese people or anyone else making unhealthy lifestyle choices using up hospital resources?
You state it, doesn't mean it's correct.
Vaccinated means, yes less symptoms, but also less likely to get infected, and if infected, quicker recovery, so shortening the window in which you are infectious. That reduces spread.
Also not to forget if you have milder symptoms, you are not soaking up limited and expensive medical resources.
Who pays for your hospital stay? Are you paying 100%, or do you just expect others to pay your way because you are being a bitch about a needle for a cheap and plentiful vaccine? Talk about entitlement.
Lastly, as far as side effects go, those rare side effects you list are also a side effect of infection, but much more intense. Making a risk argument still makes no sense when the risk differential is still better for vaccination.
Omicron may have shifted the balance a bit, but if you've been unvaccinated this long, let's not pretend you've been holding out based on a principled, scientific argument.