The Department of Education announced last week that it will be delaying the start of fall sports and requiring all student-athletes, athletic staff and volunteers to be vaccinated. The announcement came as students began full in-person learning for the first time in 18 months, and the number of daily COVID-19 cases continued to surge.
The decision sparked the usual backlash blend of genuine disappointment, exhausted frustration and reactionary outrage. It鈥檚 much easier to sympathize with the first two.
Competition is an important experience for a lot of people, and I don鈥檛 trivialize how truly life-changing it can be. Sports can push us to our physical and mental limits; you tend to learn a lot about yourself when your heart is pounding and your legs are burning and a team, school or community is investing their hopes in you. You learn to be aware of how your actions can impact others around you, a lesson that is in dire need right now.
For most people, high school is the highest level of competitive athletics they鈥檒l get to participate in. After local athletes had their final seasons cut short last school year 鈥 and the school year before that, if they played spring season sports 鈥 it鈥檚 not hard to understand and commiserate with the impatience and anxiety a lot of people feel.
Then there鈥檚 the reactionary posturing, which thrives online and takes the form of all the usual bad faith arguments: 鈥淎 vaccine mandate is an infringement on my rights鈥 or 鈥渧accines are just as dangerous as COVID-19.鈥 Let鈥檚 investigate those claims.
A found the vast majority of new COVID cases have been among the unvaccinated. More than Americans have been fully vaccinated and another 28 million are partially vaccinated. So far, — a total of 716 reports of heart inflammation; 143 reports of either temporary or permanent nerve damage; and 41 reports of blood clotting. Roughly two to five people per million have had severe allergic reactions, which can be treated on the spot. And while there have been 6,490 reports of death after the vaccine, that number includes all deaths that took place after vaccination, even when the vaccine was not determined to be the cause.
Compare that to over 616,000 deaths in nearly 36 million cases of COVID-19. That鈥檚 95 times more deaths associated with COVID compared to deaths associated with any of the COVID vaccines, despite the amount of COVID cases accounting for about one-10th of the amount of vaccine doses administered. The virus has killed way more people with way fewer opportunities, to say nothing of the long-term risk for heart problems, even among .
The DOE鈥檚 job is to make sports as safe as possible for students. The data clearly shows that being vaccinated is a whole lot safer than getting COVID-19, and playing sports magnifies the risk of exposure.
With few exceptions, most sports either necessitate prolonged and close physical contact with other players, or they take place in poorly ventilated gymnasiums. The likelihood of viral transmission is significantly higher in those circumstances; I can think of no more comfortable arena for COVID-19 than a scrimmage line in a football game, where linemen are inches from each other鈥檚 faces grunting, shouting and sweating.
You could make the case for some sports to be exempted from the vaccine mandate, like tennis or golf, but the problem at that point is logistical: it鈥檚 hard to manage a situation like this on a granular, sport-by-sport basis, especially when so many athletes play more than one sport in high school. It鈥檚 both the simplest and most thorough solution to require all student-athletes to be vaccinated.
It鈥檚 hard to take seriously the people arguing that vaccine mandates are an infringement on freedom and individual rights. Not only has the DOE for years required numerous vaccinations — for hepatitis, HPV, polio and chickenpox, among others — in order to play sports, the very concept of freedom in this context is incredibly specious.
If you have any kind of public life outside of your home — which the student-athletes in question do, since they attend school — your actions affect other people. It鈥檚 not always on purpose or something we鈥檙e consciously aware of, but it happens, because we share living spaces with one another.
People have always confused freedom with entitlement, but freedom does not mean getting to do whatever you feel like. It is not an infringement of liberty, for instance, to legally require people to go to designated places to use the bathroom. There are rules you have to follow to ensure the health and safety of other people, even if it means you can鈥檛 do some things you may wish to do. Real freedom can only be built on a foundation of responsibility to those around you.
Despite a deeply cynical appropriation of the pro-abortion slogan 鈥渕y body, my choice,鈥 the consequences of vaccination extend beyond your body and can directly affect the bodies of numerous others around you. No one has the right to magnify other people鈥檚 risk of getting sick. This is intuitive, but it鈥檚 also constitutional. Vaccine mandates have been implemented and upheld for .
All of this fails to mention that if you have a legitimate reason to not get vaccinated, you don鈥檛 have to and you can still play sports — so long as you get tested regularly.
What is lost amid all the social media shrieking is that requiring vaccines is the compromise. The safest, most prudent thing to do is to cancel sports again. Instead, the DOE has provided multiple avenues to mitigate risks so that the seasons can go on as scheduled. Seems reasonable to me.
Vaccines have their limits. Fully vaccinated people can still get infected, and they can still transmit the virus to others. But the data we have is fairly clear that the severity of infection is greatly reduced among vaccinated populations. Even if that were the only benefit, it is reason enough to require vaccines.
My feeling is that a lot of the resentment toward mandated vaccines is a proxy for resentment toward visitors. I can sympathize with that; it鈥檚 frustrating to feel like residents have to abide by more rules than tourists do, even though there are more tourists here than residents in any given year. I鈥檓 on board with the idea of requiring full vaccination for all visitors. We鈥檙e experiencing a surge, so why not apply the same requirement for our student-athletes to tourists?
This situation sucks, and my heart goes out to the players for having to leap yet another hurdle when all they want to do is play. But this is a reasonable and fair requirement. Vaccines are free and, for the most part, easily accessible. If a student-athlete is still not convinced to get vaccinated, that鈥檚 their call, but there are consequences for our decisions. In this case, the consequences are to either submit to regular testing, or to not play sports in the OIA.
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About the Author
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Eric Stinton is a writer and teacher from Kailua, where he lives with his wife and dogs. He鈥檚 a combat sports columnist for Sherdog, and his fiction, nonfiction and journalism have appeared in Bamboo Ridge, The Classical, Harvard Review Online, Ka Wai Ola, Longreads, Medium and Vice Sports, among others. You can reach him on Twitter at @TombstoneStint and find his work at