An emperor who doesn’t have any clothes on recently posted on SubStack about how there looks to be something fishy about UK death data.
Fishy indeed.
While weekly changes in total mortality may exceed 10% — such as during war, where a large share of death is by external causes — weekly changes in deaths by natural causes are typically about 5% or 10%.
If you have 90 weekly deaths per million in one week, you may see something like 85 to 95 weekly deaths per million in the next week.
More rarely, you’ll see something like 80 to 100 weekly deaths per million in the following week — a natural upper limit (~10% per week) on the rate of change in weekly death (when deaths are by natural causes).
But among those of age 50 to age 90 in the UK, weekly deaths doubled in two weeks time post-vaccine, as found when examining the first and third week after getting vaccinated.
The horizontal red line in the charts represents a doubling from the Week 1 death level. All four age groups showing reached that doubling of death inside of two weeks.
Because deaths by natural causes do not change fast enough in order to cover a doubling within 14 days, this means that the recorded death changes in the four age groups can be presumed to not be from natural causes — such as from diseases — but are more than likely from external causes, instead.
Reference
“Table 9. Whole period counts of all registered deaths grouped by how many weeks after vaccination the deaths occurred ... .” Age-standardised mortality rates for deaths by vaccination status, England: deaths occurring between 1 January 2021 and 31 March 2022: 16 May 2022. https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/datasets/deathsbyvaccinationstatusengland