>>13176513Short answer? Probably, but nothing is ever 100% and things like this are risks like any other.
Long Answer? Since this was the biggest clusterfuck of a global pandemic since Spanish Flu, the whole world has had its eyes on a vaccine. Every World Government, plenty of universities, independent labs, ect. have been documenting and auditing these vaccines. They are perhaps the most well documented (at least in the short term) vaccines in history. On top of lots of independent studies, the mRNA encoding has been sequenced by third parties and put up on Github, both Pfizer and Moderna, for the whole world to see. You can check it out here, but you're likely not going to know what you're looking at
https://github.com/NAalytics/Assemblies-of-putative-SARS-CoV2-spike-encoding-mRNA-sequences-for-vaccines-BNT-162b2-and-mRNA-1273 Yes, mRNA vaccines are a relatively new thing. Should that concern you? Maybe, but it helps to know that we've used RNA based therapies for things like cancer since at least the 90's, so the methodology behind RNA based medicine was not just a theoretical thing before these vaccines, but has been well established.
Yes, you can get Covid if you're vaccinated. This is true of most, if not all, other vaccines. Nothing is 100%. It just makes you statistically unlikely, and lessens symptoms if you do get infected. You can also still spread Covid, this is just common sense when you break it down. If I'm vaccinated for polio, and I touch a piece of paper that has polio all over it, and then touch an un-vaccinated individual, then I have a good chance of spreading polio to that person vaccinated or not.
Will there be long term side effects? We don't know, but from what we can see they appear to be unlikely. At least more unlikely than long term side effects from Covid itself.
Should you? Well, I wouldn't ask 4chan, or Reddit, or Facebook, or whatever. I'd say to go talk to your doctor, or pharmacist, if you're really concerned.