Age is key, isn't it? Jessica Rose normalized covid deaths by vaxx stats normalized to percent "injected", but her point was weak because she ignored age. Older people are 10x more likely to die in Feb. than young people. But taking it out to April, when the older people were vaccinated, we see a 3.5x mortality difference between the "injected" and "uninjected," which is actually stronger as regards her point.
Looking at US working age deaths for 2021 v. 2020, we see a HUGE 17.5% increase, most of which is likely due to vaccination causing increased rates of heart disease, cancer, and stroke in younger people. (Respiratory deaths were only up 12% in 2021 v 2020.) By way of contrast, deaths in the 85+ y.o. group were down a WHOPPING 14% in 2021 v. 2020. Those people typically die of heart disease, cancer, and stroke, but the Big Three killers were level from 2020 to 2021, so deaths from the Big Three must have come from working age.
I can't even imagine those blue states NOT "massaging the data" every which way possible anyway. Especially after they send everyone home and then pull the suitcases out from under the tables.
Thanks for this. I would be curious to see comparative all-cause deaths by age against some baseline. I've pulling CDC provisional death counts throughout the pandemic. 40 of the 50 states had early 2022 all-cause deaths in excess of 2021 for the first 7 weeks of the year. CA early 2022 deaths however are nearly 20% below 2021 for the first 7 weeks of the year.
How did you account for migration to states like FL and TX? I understood that there was a significant exodus from states like CA and NY to these two states in 2021.
I Numero, your dashboard is phenomenal!
As my uncle used to say, "No applause, just money." 😁
Great dashboard. Thank you for your effort!!
Well done. Appreciated.
Age is key, isn't it? Jessica Rose normalized covid deaths by vaxx stats normalized to percent "injected", but her point was weak because she ignored age. Older people are 10x more likely to die in Feb. than young people. But taking it out to April, when the older people were vaccinated, we see a 3.5x mortality difference between the "injected" and "uninjected," which is actually stronger as regards her point.
Looking at US working age deaths for 2021 v. 2020, we see a HUGE 17.5% increase, most of which is likely due to vaccination causing increased rates of heart disease, cancer, and stroke in younger people. (Respiratory deaths were only up 12% in 2021 v 2020.) By way of contrast, deaths in the 85+ y.o. group were down a WHOPPING 14% in 2021 v. 2020. Those people typically die of heart disease, cancer, and stroke, but the Big Three killers were level from 2020 to 2021, so deaths from the Big Three must have come from working age.
I relied on deadorkicking for my data.
I can't even imagine those blue states NOT "massaging the data" every which way possible anyway. Especially after they send everyone home and then pull the suitcases out from under the tables.
Thanks for this. I would be curious to see comparative all-cause deaths by age against some baseline. I've pulling CDC provisional death counts throughout the pandemic. 40 of the 50 states had early 2022 all-cause deaths in excess of 2021 for the first 7 weeks of the year. CA early 2022 deaths however are nearly 20% below 2021 for the first 7 weeks of the year.
How did you account for migration to states like FL and TX? I understood that there was a significant exodus from states like CA and NY to these two states in 2021.
Wow, excellent dashboard! 👏👍🏼💕