The CDC recently confirmed over 800 “accidental” Covid-19 deaths in 2021 for people under 60. These are deaths which obviously had little to do with Covid – but they logged them that way anyways. Here are 46 of those deaths from 2021 many just related to “falls” and others to events described.
1. A 32-year-old white male died in December from an unspecified fall that resulted in an unspecified injury of the head, mental and behavioral disorders related to alcohol use, convulsions, and a kidney tumor. He also had COVID-19.
2. A 57-year-old white male died in November from an “other fall on the same level” that resulted in a rib fracture, injury of the liver or gallbladder, malaise and fatigue, syncope and collapse, and COVID-19.
3. A 56-year-old white male died in March from an unspecified fall that resulted in cardiac arrest, stroke, other intracranial injuries, COVID-19, hypertension, and diabetes. He also had mental and behavioral disorders related to tobacco use.
[The CDC has known of its data unreliability for almost the entirety of the last three years by counting deaths (and hospitalizations) CORRELATED to a COVID diagnosis as opposed to CAUSED by a COVID diagnosis. I’ve written numerous posts on this issue, starting specifically in May 2021 but more broadly even earlier than that. A year ago, the CDC promised to fix its reporting, but it still lumps in correlative cases with a much smaller number of causative cases. Why? Because lumping them together maintains the illusion of crisis, which enables their claim to emergency authority. — Ed]
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