This article was originally published by Tyler Durden at ZeroHedge.
EDITOR’S NOTE: This data is all based on the premise that the PCR tests are actually diagnostic tools (which they are not) and that SARS-CoV-2 has been isolated so it can be tested for (it has not) and that the vaccines are vaccines (they are not) and that the deaths are accurately being contributed to the common cold being called COVID-19 (they are not.)
COVID-19 has killed more people in 2021 than in 2020.
The virus was reported as the underlying cause of death (or a contributing cause of death) for an estimated 377,883 people in 2020, accounting for 11.3% of deaths, according to the CDC. As of Monday, more than 770,000 people have died from the coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University data. That means over 15,000 more people have died in 2021 than last year from COVID-19 – and there’s still more than a month left.
This has happened despite the fact that last year no Americans were vaccinated (now 59% of all eligible Americans have had the “life-saving” jab) and some 17% have received booster shots…
The 2021 U.S. death toll caught some doctors by surprise. They had expected vaccinations and precautionary measures like social distancing and scaled-down public events to curb the spread of infections and minimize severe cases. But, The Wall Street Journal has its own explanation, suggesting lower-than-expected immunization rates, as well as fatigue with precautionary measures like masks, allowed the highly contagious Delta variant to spread, largely among the unvaccinated, epidemiologists say.
Among missteps, Dr. Abraar Karan, an infectious-diseases doctor at Stanford University, said, public-health officials failed to effectively communicate that the purpose of vaccines is to protect against severe cases of Covid-19 rather than to prevent the spread of infection entirely, which may have led some to doubt the effectiveness of the shots.
CDC has an excuse too, claiming that there was a larger undercount of Covid-19 deaths in 2020, when the disease was newer and a scarcity of tests made confirming some infections difficult.
Deaths remain concentrated in older people (81% of 2020 deaths were among people aged 65 and above, and 69% of the same cohort in 2021).
Still could be worse (and still could be if this latest trend continues in the US)…
“The vaccine is not a panacea,” said Ana Bento, an epidemiologist at Indiana University-Bloomington.
Well, that’s pretty clear now, eh!?
This wasn’t supposed to happen…
The post US COVID Deaths In 2021 Have Surpassed 2020’s Total… Despite Vaccines, Treatments first appeared on SHTF Plan – When It Hits The Fan, Don’t Say We Didn’t Warn You.