True, but you could say the same thing about any disease.
Did you get your children vaccinated against chicken pox? It's not a particularly deadly disease. How bad would a disease need to be before you got a vaccine that was given emergency authorization?
No, you can't.
Chicken Pox is relatively harmless as a childhood disease. Adults who did not get Chicken Pox as kids, and manage to get it will suffer some serious complications. Having 'Chicken Pox Parties' was once a thing, as it was best to expose kids early so that they would be done with it. The vaccine for it is a neutered pathogen, much like the Smallpox vaccine, which creates a natural immunity. Numerous childhood and adult diseases are treated in this fashion, and because of this prevalence of vaccinated people the diseases in question were nearly unheard of in these parts. Until, that is, a horde of unvaccinated disease carriers came swarming up across the Mexican border... But, that is another story.
The CCP virus mRNA "vaccine" isn't like all the aforementioned vaccines. It modifies the cells of the injected person to produce the spike proteins to which their immune systems would then react. The idea is that having antibodies present in the body would prevent any infection of the CCP virus through this generated antibody reaction. Problem is, not nearly enough time has elapsed to truly understand the follow-on issues of an mRNA modification to one's cells, especially in those who are younger and are either still developing or are of childbearing years.
As pointed out above, the CCP virus has little effect on those younger than 50, and those younger than 25 suffer few effects at all. Their younger and more robust immune systems quickly chew up the CCP virus and their systems are then immune to future infection. Thus, the rush to give the jab to younger people is puzzling, given the near-complete lack of mortality in the young, and the possibility of terrible complications in the future. The risk/reward calculus makes no sense.