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New Analysis in Florida Proves Covid Vaccines Did Not Save Lives

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The benefits of the Covid injections are mainly reliant on a measure of the number of fatalities per case (now restricted to an assertion that they avoid severe disease and deaths – assertions that infections or transmission are decreased have been abandoned). Unfortunately, these data must be interpreted with a grain of salt because of irregularities in how “cases” are counted.

Furthermore, there is little historical information on how the number of cases of past respiratory viruses varied over time. For a third wave of an influenza variety, a disproportionately high number of cases per fatality may be the norm. Nobody is aware. All that is known is that each year, waves of hospitalizations and influenza-related mortality have traditionally had a similar size and duration.

Joel Smalley has analysed data from Florida and has broke it down by age group. Here are the death curves for the over-65s in Florida. It is a repeating pattern of several waves of similar size.

Figure 1: Deaths in Florida for over-65 year-olds. Total deaths (black line) over the baseline (dotted black line) at the top and Covid deaths (green) with the weekly excess deaths in grey bars.

Compared to waves in recent years caused by other respiratory viruses there were more deaths in these waves attributed to Covid.

People somehow bought into the myth that the decline starting in August 2020 was caused by lockdown and the decline beginning in January 2021 was caused by vaccinations. However, the same individuals agree that both the fall in August 2021 and the fall in January 2022 were natural occurrences. Those views are challenging to reconcile. The fact that the earlier peaks occurred at the same time of year as the later ones indicates that each wave experienced a natural peak. Given that the size and duration of these death waves are the same before and after injection, it becomes exceedingly difficult to discern any benefit from a vaccine. In order for the injections to have been 95% effective against death, the third wave is said to have been close to 20 times greater in the absence of immunization. That is a rather bold assertion.

Having established the impact Covid had in Florida on the more vulnerable over-65 year-olds we are ready to look at the impact on younger age groups. Here are 25-44 year-olds.

Figure 2: Deaths in Florida for 25-44 year-olds. Total deaths (black line) over the baseline (dotted black line) at the top and Covid deaths (green) with the weekly excess deaths in grey bars.

Covid barely affected this age group. There is a faint peak in July 2020 but none in January 2021 or January 2022. Instead, a rise from lockdown occurred, but it is a plateau rather than a wave. Then there is the shocking increase in deaths in the summer of 2021.

The official story is a combination of:

  1. There were more cases for Delta
  2. Delta was more deadly in the young
  3. It was the unvaccinated young who were dying

The first relies on case statistics, which are not a trustworthy indicator because they depend on testing rates, reporting rates, and the manner in which the testing is conducted. The second is predicated on the notion that a virus’s biology can be drastically altered by very little alterations. There is insufficient proof that these mutations have significantly altered either the pathology it causes or its transmissibility or deadliness. Comparing transmissibility over the duration of an entire wave, for instance, reveals that the proportion of contacts who contracted the disease was identical for each varian.

Omicron contained multiple spike protein mutations, which altered its pathology even though it was less lethal. There was no difference in the death rate by age group even with Omicron. Thirdly, many patients whose vaccination status was not recorded were assumed to be “unvaccinated,” the first two weeks following injection were labeled as “unvaccinated,” and the size of the unvaccinated population was underestimated. As a result, the claims that unvaccinated people were more likely to die were greatly skewed.

Importantly, by May 2021, nearly 30% of 25-44 year olds had been injected.

That is a huge proportion and you can bet it included all – or nearly all – of those who were at risk of dying from Covid.

Figure 3: The total percentage of each age group to have received an injection in Florida

So why did the young in Florida die, right at the time when they were being injected?

Florida immunized children at a time when there was a noticeable wave of Covid, in contrast to the U.K. Synthetic spike consumption keeps the immune system incredibly active. It is unable to fully perform its day work during that time. We are aware of this for a number of reasons.

First, Pfizer reported on the impact on one type of white blood cell in the first few weeks. After a week it had recovered but it certainly fell and we don’t know how low.

Figure 4: The count of the white blood cells, lymphocytes, in the blood in patients injected with the Pfizer product at different periods before and after vaccination. The left graph shows a molecule that was rejected for having too severe an effect. The others show the molecule used (central graph 18-55 year-olds and right hand side 65-85 year-olds). The measure at day 1-3 was still low and it is not clear how low it went before that measure.

There is other evidence of the impact, such as the high rates of shingles and the around 40% higher rates of Covid infection in the first two weeks after injection.

If the lack of Covid vaccine had really resulted in a significant increase in Delta wave deaths, then low vaccination countries would have seen extremely large Delta waves.

Take, for example, South Africa, where only 10% were injected by August 2021. The pre-Omicron waves were all of a similar magnitude. This was true for both Covid-labelled deaths and excess deaths.

Figure 5: Covid attributed deaths in South Africa
Figure 6: Excess deaths as percentage of baseline in South Africa

Palestine, which is comparable to Israel, would serve as another illustration. In both the pre- and post-vaccination eras, excess mortality waves in Palestine were greater, but over time, the waves within each nation were of comparable size. Only 20% of Palestinians have received injections by September 2021, compared to 64% of Israelis. As the Covid branded deaths had a comparable size regardless, the lower excess deaths in Israel are probably related to having experienced significant numbers of deaths earlier.

Figure 7: Covid labelled deaths in Israel and Palestine
Figure 8: Excess deaths as percentage of baseline in Palestine and Israel

Bahrain and Oman, two countries on the Arabian Peninsula that performed worse than others, might serve as another example. Both have received numerous vaccinations, but the timing was noticeably different. By the end of April 2021, Bahrain had immunized half its people. Oman had only vaccinated 7% of the population as of the beginning of June 2021, and it took until the middle of August to achieve 50%. With the introduction of the vaccination in May 2021, a sizable Delta wave surged in Bahrain but did not reach Oman until June. In the end, the delay in immunization in Oman until the summer had no negative effects. (There are no excess death statistics for Bahrain.)

Figure 9: Percentage of population vaccinated in Bahrain and Oman
Figure 10: Covid attributed deaths in Bahrain and Oman 
Figure 11: Cumulative covid attributed deaths in Bahrain and Oman

The claim that Covid vaccines saved lives does not stand up to any scrutiny.

Dr. Clare Craig is a diagnostic pathologist and co-Chair of the HART groupThis article was first published by HART.

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