Quote:
Originally Posted by Mohawksin
>> 400,000 deaths in the US from covid<<
or is it 400,000 deaths in the US with covid symptoms?
If someone dies of a heart attack and had a common cold, do we say the cold caused it?
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and, 66 deaths after being vaccinated, who died as a direct result of the vaccine? Or who would have died anyway, and the vaccine just gave them a couple more symptoms to tip them over the edge a few days sooner?
During the trial period, 2 people died. One had a heart attack 2 months after being vaccinated (in other words - he would've had that heart attack anyway, the vaccine wasn't close enough to date to have any effect on it at all). The other died of complications from artheriosclerosis - which would have had to be killing them before they were ever vaccinated.
Regarding the article itself: correlation does not equal causation. If you do a search you can find some actual scientific journals that have this situation covered. Supposedly it can take up to three months to find out why those people died. 13 of them have already been investigated and they don't believe the vaccine was, itself, the cause of death. These were sick people in end-of-life care. It's thought that the typical, common, mundane side effects of the vaccine (general malaise, coughing, a low fever) might have tipped these people from "dead within the next month" to "dead within the next day."
Meanwhile, since the OP chose to disobey copyright law - the source of the OP's post is this:
23 nursing home residents in Norway die after COVID vaccine - New York Daily News
The OP didn't write any of that post, it's a direct copy and paste of someone else's work.