I know this might be a bad analogy, but it was one of the things that went through my mind during all of this as a software engineer:<p>"We have this bug in production which is a Sev-1. We have a possible fix that won't make things worse we can rollout that should make things better."<p>Yes, we have all been here where someone did this and it made things worse, but we also have thousands of people looking at this change and been in situations where this was required.<p>I guess what I'm saying is: The spike protein is in the vaccine and the virus - injecting ourselves with a spike protein to build immunity is likely less impactful than getting the entire virus. If it is truly the spike protein that causes myocarditis, then it causing issues in vaccination is a non-issue. There is a (in my mind high, but we need controlled studies on it) chance that the same people would have gotten myocarditis from Covid. If we can limit the number of other side-effects that people have during the myocarditis then it seems like a win.<p>I am by no means a virologist or an expert in vaccines, just my thought process.