Posted on 01/10/2022 6:31:19 PM PST by MinorityRepublican


Places with highest daily reported cases per capita
Seven-day average of daily new reported cases per 100,000 residents
Its methods strike me as entirely haphazard, and I think the CDC supplies it with data and then uses Worldometer as a 'unbiased source' to then base its own statements about the overtaxxed medical system (circular reporting).
Here are two examples of the overall inaccurate plandemic reporting 'system'.
And FReeperd SeekAndFind and FreedomPoster posted threads which provide additional proof the statistics are not accurate:
What Is the Death Rate of Omicron? It’s WAY Less Than You Think
PJ Media ^ | 01/07/2022 | Matt Margolis
Posted on 1/7/2022, 10:13:31 PM by SeekAndFind
Media, CDC Quietly Admit 3 COVID Truths After 2 Years Of Lies. Did They Think We Wouldn’t Notice?
The Federalist ^ | JANUARY 10, 2022 | ELLE REYNOLDS
Posted on 1/10/2022, 5:33:59 PM by FreedomPoster
Highest are all demonrat places
Yup, riiiiight.
She’s your typical leftist dumbass.
No more.
Perhaps much less.
PR and DC seem to hit peak and dropping. They were ahead of the pack in starting. The south will continuing increasing with the cold.
They said they would end the unreliable PCR tests Jan. 1.
They didn’t.
Over cycled tests leads to many false positives.
I don’t trust the news anymore at all. Started to figure it out 35 years ago.
The state of NY was over 10% of total deaths today. Big day for them. Have to wait a few weeks for the NYC Excess Deaths. Very possible those numbers were from outside the city, as vax wears off.
According to the CDC director’s latest revelation, I calculate that 751.5 of those deaths had at least four additional co-morbidities.
Texas Delta/Omicron Deaths with 100K cases a day is less than straight Delta Deaths with only 5K Cases/day.
Omicron is the Variant we needed last summer.
If Texas deaths stay below 100/day avg by the Jan 15-20, the Pandemic is over in Texas by Feb 15.
Might very well have been so.
That’s the gold part of the Excess Deaths gold standard. If you are seeing excess, it means deaths are occurring at a higher count than in previous years, during which those same comorbidities existed on average.
And . . . the ED curves match the Covid curves. Hard to escape that.
Many EDs should also be attributed to adverse lockdown effects: Suicide, drug overdoses, failure to get timely cancer screenings due to fear of going to hospitals, failure to treat heart attack victims due to decisions to prioritize COVID, supply-chain disruptions, and of course the vaxes themselves.
The new tests are still PCR tests, just using different instrumentation that can test for covid, flu, and other things simultaneously.
Those issues have been brought up before and shot down. The bullets were what happened in March/April 2020. The EDs rose with Covid, precisely, and there were no mitigation measures in place at that time. Nothing that would cause people to defer surgery. There were no lockdowns yet to generate business loss and suicide. It was too soon. But the ED curve aligned directly with the Covid curve.
Now, if Covid filled ICUs and generated other deaths that way, those are real Covid deaths, even if never tested positive. They died because of Covid. They are Excess and derived from Covid.
The virus trumps everything. Govt has no power over it. Business has no power over it. No one does.
Just remember, EDs are the gold standard and thank God we have them because otherwise agenda and other crap would erase useful data.
Does anyone have a list of the conditions that qualify as a co-morbidity? Not looking for arguments, just a list of what the CDC defines to be a co-morbidity.
I went looking once. State of Pennsylvania posted a list in order of frequent appearance. But I think I ran into something from the CDC that was much more complex.
The PA list was something like this, from memory:
1) Dementia
2) Hypertension
3) Diabetes
4) Congestive Heart Failure
5) Cancer
6) Obesity
I think obesity is that low in frequency because Covid deaths are distributed densely at the older ages, and people obese don’t live that long.
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