I've been thinking about the 2020 and 2021 excess deaths, trying to figure out what might explain them. It might help to see deaths/100K by age group by month for each major cause of death, from 2015 through 2021, to see if that reveals any insights. Could also add up the plausible covid-spike categories (blood clot-related and consequent damage) and look at those aggregates. But the data has been eluding me. Do you have a way to find this detail?
Another input is the number of covid cases per 100K for 2020/2021. It's plausible that some cases of covid would result in spike at the same level (or higher) than vaccination, so could cause the same injuries we see from the vaccine. What's curious is that ER visits seem to be elevated from vaccine injuries in 2021, but did we see that in 2020? So ER visits by age group by month would also help.
I feel like there are pieces of this here and there, but it's hard to really analyze without all the data in one easy-to-manipulate place...
Do you have any thoughts on what of this is available, where to get it, etc? Would you like to talk about this, voice can be much more productive.
The good data I've used for hospitalizations only goes back to last summer and the age group data only focuses on COVID admissions. Trying to piece all this together is a chore. Some sort of crowdsourcing would be great.
Thanks. The best explanation I can see for excess deaths in 2020 and 2021 is covid/spike in 2020, covid-spike+vaccine-spike in 2021, but easy to be wrong about all this stuff. Would be nice to be able to see if the data is consistent with this.
The curious thing about this explanation is that all the people who were saying "covid isn't serious if you don't have a co-morbid condition" (including me) would be wrong -- covid is serious for everyone if it progresses to a point where significant spike is created.
But it also makes the public health solution quite deranged: to vaccinate everyone with covid spike.
Also makes it really clear that getting vaccinated after natural immunity is really dangerous, will just pile on the damage.
And there's always this: "Probable Misclassification of Vaccine Deaths as COVID-19 Deaths"
https://roundingtheearth.substack.com/p/probable-misclassification-of-vaccine
I've been thinking about the 2020 and 2021 excess deaths, trying to figure out what might explain them. It might help to see deaths/100K by age group by month for each major cause of death, from 2015 through 2021, to see if that reveals any insights. Could also add up the plausible covid-spike categories (blood clot-related and consequent damage) and look at those aggregates. But the data has been eluding me. Do you have a way to find this detail?
Another input is the number of covid cases per 100K for 2020/2021. It's plausible that some cases of covid would result in spike at the same level (or higher) than vaccination, so could cause the same injuries we see from the vaccine. What's curious is that ER visits seem to be elevated from vaccine injuries in 2021, but did we see that in 2020? So ER visits by age group by month would also help.
I feel like there are pieces of this here and there, but it's hard to really analyze without all the data in one easy-to-manipulate place...
Do you have any thoughts on what of this is available, where to get it, etc? Would you like to talk about this, voice can be much more productive.
I have not seen a good comprehensive source for cause of death. Someone on twitter pointed me to pretty good data for IL through 2020 & I made a dashboard: https://public.tableau.com/views/IllinoisMortality/ILMortality?:language=en-US&:display_count=n&:origin=viz_share_link
The good data I've used for hospitalizations only goes back to last summer and the age group data only focuses on COVID admissions. Trying to piece all this together is a chore. Some sort of crowdsourcing would be great.
Thanks. The best explanation I can see for excess deaths in 2020 and 2021 is covid/spike in 2020, covid-spike+vaccine-spike in 2021, but easy to be wrong about all this stuff. Would be nice to be able to see if the data is consistent with this.
The curious thing about this explanation is that all the people who were saying "covid isn't serious if you don't have a co-morbid condition" (including me) would be wrong -- covid is serious for everyone if it progresses to a point where significant spike is created.
But it also makes the public health solution quite deranged: to vaccinate everyone with covid spike.
Also makes it really clear that getting vaccinated after natural immunity is really dangerous, will just pile on the damage.
And it obviously makes early treatment critical, because the goal is to limit spike production.
Go to: https://www.nrscotland.gov.uk/covid19stats
Data and charts (Excel).
Table 2 (2021) Wk.45: 1327 deaths.
Average for Wk.45 from 2015 till 2019: 1105 deaths
Table 3 (2021) Wk.45: 92 Covid deaths
From what did the rest of the 222 excess mortality come from?