It's showing excess deaths spiking in 2020 BEFORE the shots.
You thought people won't check the sources and you could get away with lying?
Yet, if we all take a little time to see some of the many strange examples of excess spikes in mortality via data from insurance companies...
- People falling off roofs (e.g. private homeowners and the construction roofing industry)
- Swimming Pool Deaths (more people go to water when the weather is hotter)
- Swimming in Lake Deaths (more people go to water when the weather is hotter)
- Violent Crime
- Death by Fire (e.g. they're estimating there will be 9,000 excess deaths in 2023 from U.S. wildfires)
Smoke particulates from wildfires could cause 4,000 to 9,200 premature deaths and may cost between $36 billion and $82 billion each year in the United States, according to the new study. Wildfires release fine particulate matter, or PM2.5, into the air, and these very tiny particles can travel deep into the lungs and bloodstream and trigger an asthma attack, heart attack, sudden cardiac arrests or strokes, among other risks...don't blame Canada for sending their wildfire smoke to the United States.
- Diabetes (increasing obesity among youths)
- Indirectly the result of the pandemic but not caused by COVID-19 directly (e.g. some people have been unable to access prevention and treatment for other health conditions during the pandemic, leading to higher-than-expected mortality...resulting in for example...higher cancer deaths that had been treatable if they had access to treatment)
- Lack of health insurance coverage (e.g. insurance companies show a link between excess deaths and those the lack health insurance)
- Excessive Heat (states in the U.S. with the highest heat temperature ratings had higher excess mortality)
- In just three years, opioid-related deaths spiked an average of 121%, across the globe. The vast majority of these sudden deaths were linked to Fentanyl, an extremely potent synthetic opioid. A new record was set in 2022 and we're on pace here in 2023 to break the record of 2022.
In 2021, the death toll surged to 80,411, more than ten times the number of U.S. military service members killed in the post-9/11 wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
wrbtrader
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