According to Wikipedia, there were 1.10 fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles travelled in 2019 (or one fatality per 90.9 million miles) in the United States. A study by the AAA Foundation in 2015 concluded that the average American travelled 29.2 miles per day.
So, if an American got in the car and drove for one day, he would have just a 0.00003212% chance of actually dying in a car accident (or 1 in 3113000)
>https://www.kbtx.com/2021/04/14/covid-in-context-the-virus-has-a-1-in-56-death-rate-the-johnson-johnson-vaccine-has-an-unconfirmed-1-in-1140000-blood-clot-rate/According to this, the J&J vaccine has a 1 in 1140000 chance of giving you a potentially fatal blood clot.
Now, if you’re getting the vaccine once, and put that alongside driving a vehicle once for fair comparison, then...you’re three times likelier to get the blood clot than die in your vehicle.
Twitter screencapper BTFO by math.