In this prior report, it was demonstrated how the proposition that COVID shots reduced risk of death can be statistically ruled-out — because too many populations experienced their very highest excess death after they first reached peak COVID shot uptake. If COVID shots worked, then most nations would have peaked-out sooner.
In an attempt to find the highest-ever recorded weekly excess death rate due to natural causes (such as to acute respiratory infections), I had to go all the way back to 1951. In England & Wales in 1948, they had a year without flu, but when the 1950/51 flu season hit England with a vengeance, then weekly death reached 1918 levels (right):
The weekly all-cause deaths are at right, and the vertical axis has a break in it, so that it begins at 4,000. Even still, there are a couple of weeks near Week 3 of 1951 where the weekly excess death (beyond the “flu-less” 1948 level) was 100% weekly excess. To my knowledge, this is the highest-ever recorded weekly excess death by natural causes.
If a passerby stopped you to tell you that they had one burning question on their mind, causing them sleepless nights:
“Exactly how much excess death can possibly fit inside of a 7-day period?”
Then you can tell them,
“Ohhhh, I know that one: When the excess death is by natural causes, such as from diseases, then the upper limit is 100% weekly excess death — a record which was set 73 years ago, in England and Wales.”
But if 100% weekly excess death is the highest amount of excess death that respiratory diseases can cause, then what can explain the crazy-high COVID numbers?:
The highest value at top-left is Ecuador, with 416% excess weekly death. Second-highest is Guadelupe, with 400% weekly excess death. Third is French Polynesia, with 326% weekly excess. Most of these “ultra-high” peak weekly excess death rates came after COVID shots had rolled out.
Evidence suggests that the recorded peak weekly excess deaths in many populations were due to something other than an acute respiratory infection.
Reference
Viboud C, Tam T, Fleming D, Miller MA, Simonsen L. 1951 influenza epidemic, England and Wales, Canada, and the United States. Emerg Infect Dis. 2006 Apr;12(4):661-8. doi: 10.3201/eid1204.050695. PMID: 16704816; PMCID: PMC3294686. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3294686/
“In Liverpool, where the epidemic was said to originate, it was "the cause of the highest weekly death toll, apart from aerial bombardment, in the city's vital statistics records, since the great cholera epidemic of 1849" (5). This weekly death toll even surpassed that of the 1918 influenza pandemic (Figure 1).”
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. Vol.44. 789. Section of Epidemiology and State Medicine. President-W. H. BRADLEY, D.M., M.R.C.P. [March 16, 1951] DISCUSSION: INFLUENZA 1951. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/003591575104400903