Where is the Vaccine Data?

We are told to follow the science.  We are told that the data tells us to get vaccinated.  We were once told that it was a pandemic of the unvaccinated.  We have continually been told that the COVID vaccines are safe and effective.

Where is the data?  The placebo groups in the vaccine trials were told to go ahead and get jabbed because it was so important to be vaccinated.  So we have no control group from the vaccine trials, which was done on purpose.  We do have a control group in the tens of millions of Americans who were able to avoid the shots, but there is no tracking of the impacts (on purpose).

In a recent NBC “News” article, it says all of these wonderful things about the COVID shots in spite of their shortcomings.  Yet there are two sentences that make a surprising admission.

“Six in 10 adults who died of Covid in August were vaccinated or boosted, according to a report by KFF, a nonprofit health think tank.  And for the most part, vaccinated people don’t avoid infections or reinfections anymore.”

So the establishment mouthpiece of NBC is admitting that the majority of COVID deaths are people who are vaccinated.  Now, I understand the counterarguments quite well.  There are more people who are vaccinated than non-vaccinated. Amongst older people, there are an even higher percentage of people vaccinated, and it is mostly older people who supposedly die of COVID.

Still, what kind of “vaccines” are these?  Does this really count for being “effective”?  If the majority of people who die of COVID are vaccinated, then the vaccines are doing a lousy job of being effective.

My guess is that the rate of vaccinated deaths is actually much higher than what is being stated here, if for nothing else that we have been continually lied to.  There are other reasons to doubt the data as well.

But even if we trust this data, it is not a good selling point for the vaccines.  And it is also the wrong overall measure.  The question isn’t whether the vaccines make you less likely to die of COVID.  The question is whether the vaccines make you less likely to die.  And this is the big missing statistic.

It actually goes beyond death too.  You can have a vaccine injury that does not necessarily result in a premature death but does result in a reduced lifestyle.  Let’s say I am told that a vaccine will reduce my risk of death by 50% for something that kills 1 out of 10,000 people.  But if I take the vaccine, there is a one out of a thousand risk of an autoimmune disease or partial paralysis of my body.  I would probably choose not to take the vaccine.

Still, even if we just use death as a measurement, we have to look at the overall mortality rate.  In the Pfizer trial (see page 23), more people died in the vaccinated group than in the non-vaccinated group, yet they hailed it as a success because there was one less person in the vaccinated group who died of COVID.

If a vaccine saves you from one thing but kills you anyway, then what’s the point?

It is very hard to get overall mortality statistics out of the CDC, but we know that there has been excess mortality since 2020.  The excess deaths in 2020 can be explained by COVID, or more likely, the mistreatment of people who tested positive for COVID.  The lockdowns and the fear of the virus could have also contributed to premature death for some.

So how do you explain that deaths were even higher in 2021?  Insurance companies have reported a spike in deaths since 2021 for younger (working age) people.  Wouldn’t the number of deaths go down with a working vaccine?

It is actually probably worse than this because some people died prematurely in 2020, which means the death rate should have gone down from there.  Think of it this way.  In 2020, you have a person who is 85 years old.  He gets COVID and goes to the hospital.  He is put on a ventilator and dies.  If he hadn’t gotten COVID and been put on a ventilator, maybe he would have lived to be 87.  But since he died in 2020, he can’t die in 2022.  So that is one less death for 2022 because it happened earlier.

Yet, in 2021, and probably in 2022, we are still getting excess deaths.  But nobody seems to want to talk about this except for the hardcore vaccine skeptics.

It would be interesting to know what percentage of the people who have died in the last 18 to 22 months were vaccinated as compared to the rest of the population.  It would be particularly interesting to know about younger people.

But we won’t see these statistics come out of the government or the pharmaceutical companies.  They don’t want them to be known for a reason.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *