7 Comments

2020-2023 Germany, where nothing happened and no-one saw anything. Again.

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And no-one was doing anything wrong.

Sigh.

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Different reporting rates might be explained by different vaccinations. This report here suggests that batches were very different: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/eci.13998

For this reason, I think reported rates of vaccine injuries should be seen im comparison with (elevated) mortality rates. Only if two countries have the same excess mortality is there a reason to expect same rates of vaccine injuries.

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That makes a lot of sense; I mean, we've known from the US that lots were spread out across multiple jurisdictions/states to hide the possible AEs. This has been going on for some time, and I suspect it might be the Achilles Heel of the digitised surveillance systems in place: it's impossible to hide if you have US- and EU-wide database/reporting systems. Talk about the revolution eating its own children…

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In UK data has not been published since last September, I think. I also think the longer period from jab to having AE or SAE would not be reported either even though a young person having stroke or heart attack is unusual. All cause mortality and disability data cannot be fudged.

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Same here in Norway: the last AE report for the Covid injections from the Nat'l Medicines Agency dates from 11 April 2023, with the next one scheduled to appear 'in autumn'. Nothing to see here, folks, move on.

As to the all-cause mortality issue, sure, but since most gov'ts and their statistics offices typically delay publication by as much as half a year (which is the norm here in Norway), media and people's attention has long moved on since.

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Anyone looked at batches/lot numbers?

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