10 Comments
Apr 19Liked by epimetheus

Yale Univ & Boston Univ doing research, and so is UK, but US govt?

from The Hill report:

"Actuarial reports ...show deaths occurring disproportionately among young working-age people. Nonetheless, America’s chief health manager, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, opted in September to archive its excess deaths webpage with a note stating, 'these datasets will no longer be updated' "

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Apr 19Liked by epimetheus

Absolutely anything, anything whatsoever, will be blamed for the excess deaths ad nauseam... a sudden proliferation of rodents, bedbugs, cow farts, pollen allergies, sandstorms, lack of sleep, the earth's magnetic field, trump, flat earthers .. Anything but their beloved fucking depopulation clotshots. The first rule of the game is to never mention it.

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Apr 19Liked by epimetheus

U.S.:

https://thehill.com/opinion/healthcare/4354004-this-is-bigger-than-covid-why-are-so-many-americans-dying-early/

". . .Therein lies the most pressing question for insurers, epidemiologists and health agency officials. Why is the traditionally healthiest sector of our society — young, employed, insured workers — dying at such rates? Public health officials aggressively oversaw the pandemic response, for better or worse. Why aren’t they looking into this? 

In the United Kingdom, where post-pandemic excess deaths in similar demographics also persist, a government-funded independent inquiry is underway. 'With each passing week of the COVID inquiry,' the BBC reported recently, 'it is clear there were deep flaws in the way decisions were made and information provided during the pandemic.' 

The United States needs such an examination of the measures taken to fight the pandemic. This probe — by a high-level, unbiased commission — should focus on what worked and what did not.

Lockdowns limited access to education, social interaction and health care with documented harm to childhood development, mental health and the economy. Treatment protocols dictated how doctors should deliver COVID care — primarily in hospitals and with expensive medicines — and limited early access to generic drugs that might have helped. 

Vaccines were given to more than 270 million people, among them babies, pregnant women and workers under employer mandates. The therapeutic’s 'warp speed,' emergency use authorization must be part of any post-pandemic analysis, in light of more than 1 million reports of possible harm to the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System and a new Yale University study validating a chronic post-vaccination syndrome. "

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Apr 19Liked by epimetheus

A “proliferation of rodents” is an apt description of the lying, corrupt and unaccountable bureaucrats who infest western governments.

They are supposed to work for us, not the other way around.

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I have a serious suspicion that coroners in many locations are recording suicides as 'accidents.'

The statistics around mental health are totally out of control but (at least in Australia) we have not seen an increase in suicides.

I have no evidence for this, but if I were to prevent people from seeing how bad things really are, this is what I would do.

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Apr 19Liked by epimetheus

Weird that Norway would differ that much from Sweden on this issue. Excess mortality here is 4.4%, even when using age-adjustment, and when comparing it to pre-Covid years, and using corrected numbers for elders (the projections were initially made without accounting for migration, so they need adjusting) - it still comes to 4.4% excess mortality.

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