I don't ever recall seeing that picture in DIA. That must be a photoshop. The paintings are very weird for sure, but I don't think any of the murals had children wearing masks. At least not that I can recall.
Here is the Israeli Covid dashboard for reference (you'll need to translate the page).
They do not break down deaths among vaccinated and un-vaccinated people, but they do show "seriously ill patients" broken down by vaccination status. It's roughly a 50/50 split. But if you look at the split based on "per 100k", it's very obvious that the un-vaccinated make up a disproportionately large share of the hospitalized census. There are a lot of vaccinated people in the hospital because there are a lot of vaccinated people in general.
I have a feeling the same could be said about this data from NV. Granted, 60% of deaths from vaccinated people would be a higher rate than you would expect based on the Israeli data. It would be nice if it was possible to see the vaccination status of deaths per 100k, like the Israeli data. I bet if you did, it wouldn't seem as dramatic as it seems at first glance.
I know there are several posts trashing the Catholic Church, but yours was the first I put in the quote block. Not responding to just you with this, but also several others. Just didn't want to have a huge quote block...
I think it's fair to criticize the Catholic Church as an institution. Like any organization, you'll find some bad actors in the ranks of the organization. Some of the history of some of the popes who have lead the Church at different points is quite revolting. The Church's handling of the pedophiles within it might be one of the most diabolical things I've ever seen.
Still, I make a big distinction when I apply this to the common church goers. These people are devout Christians in every sense of the definition. There are countless people in the Catholic Church, both lay people and leadership, who do very good things in this world. They might have some traditions and worship formats that are different than yours, but in the end all these differences are minor and superfluous. If you believe that Jesus is the son of God, sent to die for your salvation, and raised from the dead, that is what really matters.
I remember one of the local evangelical church's pastor saying that the Catholic Church was a "false church". One day he was discovered in a motel room with a bunch of meth and a male prostitute. The whole time he was railing on about the "false church", he was literally a cock-sucking meth head. That church had many devout Christians, and it still does, but it's not fair to cast their prior pastor as a blemish on them.
I understand your analogy with antibiotics and pesticides. I just don't think that they would apply to a virus like this. There's a difference between applying this logic to a complex living organism and a simple virus. Also, wouldn't all of the mutation logic you hold against vaccines also apply to natural immunity? From the standpoint of the virus, natural immunity presents an even stronger need for the virus to mutate since it is a broader immunity.