Quote:
Originally Posted by GeriS
Remember last summer when the CDC quietly admitted that only 6% of Covid deaths were specifically from Covid and that the other 94% had an average of two comorbidities, which were the true cause of death?
They've now changed it again to 5% and an average of FOUR comorbidities for the remaining 95%.
So lets break this down...
The "total claim" for Covid 19 deaths in the US is currently at 568,000.
5% of 568,000 is 28,400 people who have died from Covid-19 in the United States in 15 months.
That breaks down to 63 people per day, or just over one person per state.
For reference, almost 3,300 people die PER DAY in AUTO ACCIDENTS.
Meaning that over the past 15 months an American citizen has been 52 times more likely to die in an auto accident than of Covid-19. Yet many people don't even wear a seatbelt or think twice about their safety when driving.
What's the difference?
<more rant and conspiracy deleted>
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<yawn>
I think you will find, if you look, that the number of auto accident deaths in the *US* is about 38,000 per year.
here and
here
There were more than 500,000 additional deaths in 2020 than in 2017, 2018, or 2019. You can throw around the terms "of Covid" and "with Covid" all you want but the fact remains that due to Covid 500,000 people in the US died who otherwise would not have.
To me, it's *that* simple.