I don't think you want that to be the expectation.
A majority of epidemiologists believe it is very likely that the coronavirus will be endemic, that it will not go away. A combined 89 percent believe it's likely or very likely that it will become endemic.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-00396-2
There is an optimistic view that if everyone would just get vaccinated and socially distance for a few weeks, the disease will disappear. But the vaccine isn't expected to be available to everyone in the world for another two years, so that's probably unrealistic.
It seems worrisome to suggest that pointing out something accurate (that
there is an argument that vaccination is a good thing, but it shouldn't be mandated in the context of a discussion about Covid-19 where the vaccines were made available through emergency use authorization less than a year ago) is getting people killed.
I wasn't even suggesting vaccine mandates are bad, or unmerited when it comes to Covid-19. However, we should be able to discuss all facets of politics openly and honestly, including the implications of the views held by other people.