I browsed the VAERS spreadsheet and that's probably true. At least half the deaths are directly attributable IMO. I made a huge mistake on one of Kaslin's threads yesterday and said there were only 70 deaths. But I accidentally grepped for only deceased instead of deceased, died, or death which I thought I was doing.
So I loaded the spreadsheet into Excel and changed the Y to 1 in the Died column. Excel then counted 1957 deaths. Then I read through 100's of those deaths and concluded well over half are not coincidental deaths. There are many coincidental deaths from 10's of millions of vaccinations and I want to exclude those.
But let's say 50 million vaccinations and 1000 deaths since there are unreported deaths from recent vaccinations. That's 0.002% chance of death. The disease itself has 30 million known cases, but let's say 100 million cases to include a lot of undetected cases. With 500,000 deaths that's a 0.5% chance of death.
Compared to other vaccines the COVID vaccines are not very good but a lot better than nothing. I will hold off myself (I am 58) and let some more grocery store employees get theirs first.
One reason I took the vaccine (held out for the J&J despite state pushing the other two) is that I’m going to Los Angeles in two weeks for a visit and will no doubt face the Covid police as that county is in lockdown.
If you plan to fly in, you have to fill out and sign a customs-like form prior to arrival that says if you are there for “non-essential” business (i.e. visits, tourism, recreation, etc.) you must self-quarantine for ten-days. To enforce that you check a box that says you understand that the penalty for failure to comply is a $500 fine. The rules apply for other types of out-of-state arrival too, but I’ve devised a way (not by driving) that hopefully will allow me to get around them.
From what I have read about testing it’s almost worthless. If the testing is no good how good can the vaccine be? I’m no doctor but everything about the entire covid19 BS plannendemic wreaks of just another op to get us in line.