Wednesday, November 3, 2021

My COVID Rap: What I have learned so far, by Ye Editor

We knew many months ago
that COVID vaccines were
the highest risk vaccines,
by far, in US vaccine history. 

We knew vaccine-induced
antibody counts drop rapidly,
perhaps even faster than
conventional influenza vaccines,
which are for only "one flu season".

We know data reporting about
the COVID vaccines has been biased
in favor of the vaccines.  More like
propaganda than unbiased reporting.

The problems I often spot in COVID case,
hospitalization and death data:


(1) Shots do not prevent infections or spread. They also encourage less social distancing and more travel, both of which should increase
infections.

(2) PCR tests at a CT rate of 35x or higher
will produce too many false positives ("cases") for people not infected, with no symptoms.

In the US, the CDC recommended CT
was lowered to from 35x to 28x in March 2021, but only for the vaccinated, to reduce
false positives, ONLY among the vaccinated.

(3) Hospitalizations for any respiratory problem could be falsely described as a COVID hospitalization, because there are so many common symptoms

(4) People hospitalized for other medical problems, who are then tested for COVID, and found to be positive, may be counted as COVID hospitalizations

(5) People who had a positive PCR test, and then died for any reason in the next 30 or 60 days may be listed as a COVID death.  It doesn't matter if their car hit a tree in the minutes before their death. Likely to be reported as a COVID death?

In late 2020, we knew many reasons why
COVID deaths should be lower in 2021
than they were in 2020 (any errors in counting methodology would affect both years, so should not affect 
year to year comparisons)

(1) There are more people with natural antibodiesin every month after March 2020.  Some would not even know they had been infected.

(2) Alpha COVID was likely to mutate
into a less deadly variant, as has been
common with influenza epidemics
in the past.  True of the 1918 swine
flu for one example. I believe Delta COVID

is less deadly.

(3) The most vulnerable people -- the elderly in nursing homes -- were hit hard in 2020, and obviously can not die again in 2021

(4) The vaccines were designed to reduce hospitalizations and deaths

(5) Some use of ivermectin in 2021
prevented some deaths, although far from enough use of that miracle drug

When you add up 
(1) through (5), the 
expectation was for fewer 
COVID deaths in 2021, 
versus 2020.
 
Unfortunately we already know
average US COVID deaths
per day in 2021
will significantly exceed 
average US COVID deaths
per day in 2020, 
because they already have
(The last 9 months of 2020 versus 
the first 9 months of 2021).
 
As the vaccine effectiveness
dclines in late 2021, it's not
likely that COVID deaths
will suddenly decline
in November and December
of 2021. 
 
More COVID deaths in 2021
was not supposed to happen 
with so many people over 
age 60 getting vaccinated
early in 2021, because that 
was the age group most likely 
to die from COVID.

The low number of COVID deaths
per month in the warm months
of 2021 looked great, but COVID
deaths are highly seasonal.
They were almost as low in the
warm months of 2020, with
no vaccines.

MY  CONCLUSION:
These data do not add up to COVID
vaccine success in the U.S.,
even before considering the 
enormous numbers of short term 
adverse side effects, and unknown 
long term adverse side effects.