For me, the decision about getting the vaccine is not political at all. It's a measure of risks and benefits.
Since I already had an infection, my doctor specifically told me to NOT get the vaccine, at least at this time. See the entire thread how natural immunity is superior to vaccine immunity. That is why I don't bother with the vaccine, because there is very marginal benefit and some very small level of known and unknown risks with the vaccines.
What if I never had an infection? I consider myself to be in good health overall, and my immune system is normally very strong. I bet that I put myself at a higher risk of death every time I drive up to the mountains and go skiing for a weekend than what I would face from Covid (especially the way I've been skiing lately...). Still, I am in my late 40s, and I do have a wife and two young children. I would probably get the vaccine (pref. J&J) when I consider the responsibility I have to my family to be alive. The data that the vaccines reduce the chance of severe infection is overwhelming. In other words, the benefits outweigh the risks of the vaccine.
Now if I was single, with no dependents, and in my 20s or even early 30s, I would probably skip the vaccine because Covid would basically be a cold to me. When I (try to) remember some of the crazy things (and drugs) I did in my 20s, I realize that I routinely put myself at much greater risk of death than I would have ever faced from Covid. It would have been more rational for me to not take the road trip to Las Vegas to see the Grateful Dead, because the combined risk of death from that entire experience is probably a couple orders of magnitude greater than the risk from Covid. With that in mind, of course I went to Vegas!
Risk is not an absolute measure. Nothing is zero-risk. Risk is a relative measure. Put the risk from Covid, and the vaccines for that matter, into perspective.