Grand total for 2022 is 303.
Interesting.
The other studies you referenced both looked at young, competitive athletes who died of very specific sudden cardiac events. And who's cases were well documented in the medical system.
On the other hand, the "citizen reports" you reference are, shall we say, less selective:
"This means that provided a person is reasonably fit, healthy and does some athletic activity, rather than an unfit “couch potato,” then they can be included in this list. Needless to say, these are only the persons reported to us by readers or that we discovered during research. Also note that almost all of these have been reported in the media."
A quick scan of the most recent entries shows quite a diversity of causes of death. "Unknown" is by far the most common but just in the last several months we also have:
liver disease
autoimmune disorder
cancer
Hodgkin's lymphoma
brain aneurysm
sepis from Strep A
hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis
pneumonia
"an illness"
mononucleosis
leukemia
"following brain surgery"
...
These are being compared to a very selective subset of deaths from a specific cardiac anomaly..
The data are compelling...
Uh, no.
While about 43% of these cases hit folks under 36 years of age, only 7% of the deaths occur in this age bracket.
Thanks again.
Welcome semimojo. I am sorry to see that you are the one who drew the short straw this morning. Defending the indefensible slaughter of those who trusted the narrative even with the assistance of Google, Fauci, the FDA and CDC is a thankless job that I hope that you are being well compensated for.