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Conspiracies The Covid Narrative

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The majority of the population don't want frontline healthcare workers to be unvaccinated which is fair enough, isn't it? The majority of frontline healthcare workers also want their co-workers to be vaccinated... It seems like your attitude (not you specifically @RomanJ) is: a very small minority should call the shots? That's not a democracy.

That's because people think they actually work and they're somehow immune when they're not
 
Question– Why is mortality in Scotland higher in 2021 than 2020?


Answer– Because more people are dying. And the reason more people are dying is because more people have been vaccinated. In other words, there’s a link between rising mortality and the Covid-19 vaccine.


Question– You can’t prove that.


Answer– You’re right, I can’t. The evidence is all circumstantial. But it is compelling, all the same. For example, rising mortality isn’t just happening in Scotland. It’s happening in many of the countries that launched mass vaccination campaigns earlier in the year. They’re all seeing a significant uptick in all-cause mortality. Why is that? What are they doing differently in 2021 than they did in the years before?


Question– I can see what you’re getting at, but I still don’t think you have enough evidence to make your case.


Answer– Okay, then you tell me: Why are more people dying in 2021 than 2020? And, keep in mind, all-cause mortality isn’t just up a bit; it’s smashing the five-year average. Check out this recent post from Alex Berenson at Substack......


 
@Mr. Krinkle

Most of those questions aren't questions.

There was one question.

I'll answer it.

Why is mortality in Scotland higher in 2021 than 2020?

It isn't.


Click on the tab that says deaths and change it to cases.

In 2020, Scotland had a peak of 80 deaths per day and a peak of less than 3,000 cases per day... In 2021, they have peaked around 40 deaths a day despite cases peaking at 6,000.

...

In terms of general mortality in Scotland, there is no evidence of a massive spike. There is a spike in reporting. See this graph:


There is no evidence of a spike in overall numbers.

There are less than 10k deaths reported in Scotland from COVID since the beginning of the pandemic. More of them happened in 2020, despite there being less cases that year, because: people weren't vaccinated back then.

These are the numbers of registered deaths in Scotland, so far, for the first 39 weeks of 2020 versus the first 39 weeks of 2021. 2020 is the higher number.

source: https://www.nrscotland.gov.uk/stati...s-and-deaths/weekly-data-on-births-and-deaths

47,435​
46,539​
 
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There is always a delay when reporting deaths. Excess annual deaths are typically best calculated a year or two later. This is especially true during times of crisis.

We will see.
 
Here's a story everyone can relate to.

I got my 3rd COVID test today on the way home from work. I live (and work) in the middle of nowhere, suburb-wise so there were cars lined-up right down the street waiting for a nurse to violently shove something up their nostrils. The woman who got intimate with my mucus membranes said she'd been working in the rain since 9AM. They aren't gentle these nurses. We are like cattle to them.

So - anyway - I stop in at the drive thru bottle-shop to get a six pack on the way to the testing site and I'm drinking beer waiting in this long line of cars. The woman in the car behind me was giving me funny looks but fuck her. I've had a long day.

Then, it strikes me. I'm going to be here for fucking hours. How am I going to take a piss?

Thankfully, human intuition saved the day. I relieved myself in a an McDonald's cup that literally had black mould growing in it... then I opened the door and poured it out on the street.

I am a class act.

Fun times.
 
My last jab was 5 months ago, but I don't think it's covid. Any cold/flu symptoms need to be tested just in case so we don't kill the vulnerable people we look after at work.

If I did happen to be a breakthrough case that doesn't change broad statistics.
 
My last jab was 5 months ago, but I don't think it's covid. Any cold/flu symptoms need to be tested just in case so we don't kill the vulnerable people we look after at work.

If I did happen to be a breakthrough case that doesn't change broad statistics.


Do you work at an old folks home?

No - if you have a "breakthrough infection", it just means the vaccine isn't working for you
 
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