Steve Kirsch recently wrote an article suggesting that Google searches for adverse events have coincided with the vaccine roll-out, and much in the same way an unprecedented spike occurred in VAERS, the same was observed for these trends. In many cases, it appears the interest in common vaccine side effects predated “misinformation spreaders” popularizing them, suggesting there was a real life basis for this interest. This article is a supplement to Kirsch’s article and meant to make the information behind these trends easier to observe. Additional commentary can be found within his article:
When putting this data into context, it is important to understand the timeline of the vaccine rollout. It was as follows:
•December 8, 2020: First U.K. Vaccination-December 14: Health care workers and Nursing home residents are eligible for vaccination.-January 18, 2021: Individuals aged 75 years and older are eligible for vaccination.-January 23, 2021: Individuals aged 65-74 years of age are eligible for vaccination.-February 27, 2021: Essential workers are eligible for vaccination.-April 1, 2021: Individuals age 50-64 years old are eligible for vaccination.-April 15, 2021: Individuals age 16 and older are eligible for vaccination.-May 12, 2021: Individuals age 12 and older are eligible for vaccination.•September 22, 2021: EUA for Pfizer booster authorized
These data points directly correlate with the USA vaccination uptake:
The graph below is marked at 12/14/20, the date when U.S. health care workers received the first vaccines and interest in this topic likely emerged.
Myocarditis:
The graph below is marked at 4/1/21, the date when vaccines began to be available to the general population. Myocarditis following vaccination is typically observed in younger individuals and typically takes a few weeks to months to appear.
Died Suddenly:
9/9/21, the date of Biden’s vaccine mandate is marked below:
Both the previous and following graphs suggest sudden death following vaccination typically occurs months after vaccination, which I suspect is a result of a critical threshold being passed for the cumulative buildup of spike protein (which continues indefinitely as synthetic vaccine mRNA was designed to resist being broken down by the body). This could also be due to greater awareness being brought to this topic as a political response to Biden’s mandate.
9/9/21, the date of Biden’s vaccine mandate is marked below:
This graph below has been marked at 4/1, the date the vaccine became available to the general public.
For context, menstrual issues are one of the most common side effects of the vaccine, especially for women of childbearing age. As this article (based on this recent study) shows, like Sudden Adult Syndrome and pediatric strokes, menstrual irregularities are increasingly being normalized by the media to conceal where it originated from:
This graph below has been marked at 4/1, the date the vaccine became available to the general public. For context, headaches are one of the most common vaccine side effects I have come across.
Severe Headaches:
This graph below has been marked at 4/1, the date the vaccine became available to the general public. The best explanation I have found to explain the severe headaches frequently reported after vaccination are that they arise from an impairment of the microcirculation within the brain (presently this can only be detected by directly observing the blood or indirectly by a d-dimer test).
Miscarriages:
As Kirsch highlighted, the interest in miscarriage after vaccination spiked prior to attention being brought to this issue. 12/14, the date the first US healthcare worker received the vaccine has been marked on this graph. Healthcare workers likely observed this trend before anyone else.
Bell’s Palsy:
While Justin Bieber has done a remarkable job of bringing attention to this vaccine side effect, interest in this side effect predated his experience. However, when this trend is examined more closely, it is difficult to directly correlate it with effects from the vaccine roll out; rather it was more likely to be due to healthcare worker interest in this potential side effect while researching the vaccination. The graph below is marked at 12/14, the day the first US healthcare worker received a vaccine.
Guillain–Barré syndrome:
Thrombosis (Blood Clots):
4/1/21, the date of the vaccines being available to the general public has been marked below:
Blood Clots:
4/1/21, the date of the vaccines being available to the general public has been marked below:
Conclusion:
The most common argument used to dismiss adverse events that individuals attribute to vaccination is that "correlation does not equal causation.“ I believe that a lack of correlation clearly disproves causation, but when a correlation is present, it requires further investigation to be done to assess if a causation is present. Using the lack of additional confirmatory studies to "debunk” a concerning correlation it is an intellectually dishonest tactic you frequently observe.
Because so many correlations exist, it is often very easy to selectively pick out correlations that affirm or refute your pre-existing biases (and this is what almost always happens). For that reason, I made sure in this article to subject every single trend Steve Kirsch highlighted to the same standard, and to disclose that the interest in Bell's Palsy did not appear to correlate to the vaccine rollout, and that it was difficult to draw a conclusion from the search interest in Guillain–Barré syndrome.
I also searched for a few other common side effects of vaccination such as tinnitus and dizziness, and did not observe any meaningful correlation present between the search interest and the vaccine rollouts. Like the disability data, there is significantly more room for additional analysis of these trends and their correlation with the population uptake of vaccination and adverse event reporting to VAERS (for instance I am gradually working on this for the disability data with a team).