The Gateway Pundit was first to report back on March 16, 2020, that the WHO was pushing a completely inaccurate coronavirus mortality rate to frighten the masses.
The WHO Director, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, estimated on March 3, 2020 that the coronavirus mortality rate was 3.4% This was a completely inaccurate number that caused a global panic.
In Switzerland children went back to school on Monday since researchers found that children rarely get virus or transmit it.
Switzerland rolls back coronavirus lockdown earlier than expected. Schools to reopen since children rarely get virus or transmit it. Even better, Swiss tell those over 65 they can resume their lives. https://t.co/y9QrXP1Jmc via @TheLocalSwitzer
— Robbie Sherman (@RobbieSherman77) May 11, 2020
Now a new study from Germany found that every single death was someone who had cancer, lung disease, was a heavy smoker or morbidly obese.
Via Dr. Andrew Bostom.
Head of Forensic Pathology in Hamburg on covid19 autopsy findings: not a single person w/out previous illness has died of the virus in Hamburg. All had cancer, chronic lung dis, were heavy smokers or heavily obese, or had diabetes or cardiovasc dis" 1/3 https://t.co/u4Pi9ntRT0 pic.twitter.com/PaSdh2UnF5
— Andrew Bostom (@andrewbostom) May 11, 2020
3/3 "By focusing strongly on the rather few negative processes, fears are created that are very burdensome. Covid-19 is a deadly disease only in exceptional cases, but in most cases it is a mostly harmless virus infection"
— Andrew Bostom (@andrewbostom) May 11, 2020
We are seeing this a lot lately.
Add it to the pile:
New York City: 99% of fatalities of all age groups had underlying conditions
Italy: 98%
Britain: 95%https://t.co/uAhgn5I9anhttps://t.co/sxqTq51mvkhttps://t.co/TUNgUyFcJf— Karl Dierenbach (@Dierenbach) May 11, 2020
Ninety-five percent of people who have died with COVID-19 in hospitals in England had underlying health issues, according to figures obtained by Sky News.
The data provided by NHS England shows that, as of 5pm on 26 April, 18,749 people had died in hospital with the virus.
In a small number of cases, it was not possible to confirm if a patient did or did not have an underlying health condition.
But for those where it was, 95% were found to have serious pre-existing issues.
In patients over 80-years-old this figure was 96%, 60-79-years-old 95%, 40-59-years-old 88% and 20-39-years-old 82%.
The breakdown for those under the age of 20 who have died cannot be disclosed as the sample is so small it would breach patient confidentiality rules to distinguish between those with or without pre-existing conditions.
The data does not include hospital deaths in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, in the community or in care homes.