That surge began well before the vaccines were available, let alone widely administered, so it clearly isn't vaccine-caused. And since they have been available the trend in deaths is down.
Show the data that says fewer circulatory deaths since the start of vaccination.
The vaccines were widely available to the adult population in the spring of 2021. I've arbitrarily chosen week 18 for comparison but feel free to look at other weeks.
In week 18 of 2021 there were 16,976 circulatory deaths reported and in the most recent week available, week 46 of 2022, there were 14,180 deaths reported. That's 2,796 fewer.
No matter which weeks you choose there's no question the trend has been down.
You said:
"Purported vaccine deaths are circulatory in nature, and you're seeing up to 60% increases in these types of deaths. They may not be skewing the excess death category yet, but it is a profound change.
The trend of the data says we aren't going to see a surge in excess deaths related to the vaccines.
1. You fail to point out that the highest weekly circulatory death of all five years is 2022 Week 2 at 22,011. Those people are still dead!
2. And you keep pointing to 2022 Week 46, where the line is dropping like a stone. I said it’s probably incomplete data, and then I noticed the pop-up when pointing to the line. I quote:
“Data in recent weeks are incomplete. Only 60% of death records are submitted to NCHS within 10 days of the date of death, and completeness varies by jurisdiction.”
Circulatory deaths are up in 2021-2022, and pointing to the incomplete last few weeks as a “trend” is deceitful.
Obviously, being “right” is more important to you than being truthful.
I wish I could post the charts here for all to see, but they are a gobbledygook collection of data, and not complete images.