This is just a teaser Substack about what is coming up. If you compare the excess death during the COVID era — 3249 excess deaths per million by 6 Mar 2022? — to that found during the 19 months of US engagement in World War I, something seems amiss.
Here are the raw number of deaths growing at an average rate up to the 19th month of COVID and the 19th month of World War:
Critics and detractors will be quick to point out how the US is bigger now, with a larger population base — so that that shifted baseline can be used in order to explain how it is that an acute respiratory virus caused over 7 times the death as you would see during World War.
Over 7 World Wars worth of excess death?
But even correcting for the change in population by reporting deaths as death rates still shows that the excess death seen during COVID was more than twice as deadly as your nation being engaged in a World War:
In an upcoming part, I will address two narratives, one which appears to make the “twice-as-bad-as-World-War” aspect of COVID sound plausible, and the other one which makes it sound impossible.
Like defense and prosecution, both narratives will be applied to evidence in a judicial manner and, pretty soon, court will be in-session …