My 88 year-old aunt died last night from lymphoma, but she didn't have Covid, and around 9000 people die a week in total - so the percentage
dying from Covid is quite small in that regard:
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/bulletins/deathsregisteredweeklyinenglandandwalesprovisional/3september2021
However, the deaths are less important than the treatment people may require to keep them alive if they catch Covid, which is a far higher number, especially among the old or infirm, and the one we need to worry about, as they'll have to be transferred to hospitals.
Personally I don't understand why anyone wouldn't take
any certified vaccine unless they had a very obvious health condition that disallowed it. It's a no-brainer - and it's free. If you go travelling in the far east you'll have to have at least three, and I've not heard many hippies screaming with outrage in the past that they can't go surfing in Bali, because they'd just have the shots and get on with it. Would they turn down the Covid one on principle?
I know some vaccines in the past have screwed up, and I'm not saying they're a magic bullet, because you have to be healthy too, and that's people's own responsibility. The ugly truth that no-one wants to discuss is the shocking state of the average adult person's health, which is by far the biggest cause of serious Covid if infected. I know everyone's read of super-fit people who've died from Covid, but they are very much a tiny minority. If I walk down my street to the town centre, five mins away, I will be immediately surrounded by fat people - and I mean the majority. I could shoot video to prove it if it didn't breach privacy laws.