Is the CDC "cooking the books" on numbers of deaths?
The CDC used to have a straightforward list of total deaths in the U.S. by year for at least the last 60 years. So today I searched the CDC website for "U.S. Deaths from all causes 2022" and "Total U.S. deaths by year."
The search had entries for "overdose deaths," "deaths associated with covid-19," "lightning strike deaths," "pregnancy-related deaths" and similar--but not "total" or "all causes." Hmmm...
So I clicked a menu item called "Data & Stats" (https://search.cdc.gov/datastatistics/index.html )
Instead of data, the page that appeared had a one line message:
"The resource you are looking for has been removed, had its name changed, or is temporarily unavailable."If the reason was "page re-named" you'd think there would be a link, eh? But there was no link to whatever they'd re-named it, which left "has been removed" or "temporarily unavailable." (I plan to keep trying, to see if "temporarily" actually means "until you die.")
I found that odd, because they're obviously still in the business of totalling all death and disease info for the country, eh? So if re-named, why no link to the new web page?
Try it yourself.
But finally I recalled that as you'd expect for all government agencies, the CDC wouldn't call anything by its common name. So "total deaths" was filed under "MMWR"--the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
But since most people don't know that, you'd think that a search for the term "deaths" (which virtually all citizens would use) would automatically pull that up, eh? But no.
And in the MMWR we finally find a figure purporting to be total deaths from all causes in 2020 and 2021. (The CDC says death totals for one year appear 11 months after the end of that year, cuz it takes lotsa time to "investigate" the causes of death. I'm calling bullshit on that, but in any case the figures for 2022 will supposedly be out in November of this year.
For reference: Year U.S. population % increase over prior year
1/ 2023 339,996,563 0.50 %
1/ 2022 338,289,857 0.38%1/ 2021 336,997,624 0.31%
1/ 2020 335,942,003 0.49%
Now take a look at the CDC's MMWR page below. Specifically, look at the figures for total deaths for 2020 and 2021, and then "rate," which the CDC defines as "per 100,000 standard population."
Multiply the two and divide by ten and you get a "standard population" for 2020 of about 282,677,000.
But as you see above, the actual population for 2020 was 335,942,003. That's a difference of about 50 MILLION people.
Try the same thing for 2021: The CDC says 3,458,697 all-cause deaths, and a claimed rate of 841.6 per 100,000. You get a "standard population" of 291,084,000. But the actual population for 2021 was 336,997,624-- a difference of about 46 million.
These differences between what the CDC is apparently using for "standard population" and actual population are so
huge that we must assume that every figure the CDC publishes bears the
same resemblance to reality. Which is to say, none at all.
Why would the CDC need to use an artificial population--touted as "standard"--instead of the actual, y'know, population?
Another "anomaly": The official number of deaths from all causes reported by the CDC for 2021 vs. 2020 increased by 2.21% (3,458,697 vs. 3,383,729). But the population (note this is from the source above (not the CDC's fictitious "standard population," which can't be validated by any other source) increased just 0.31% (three-tenths of one percent).
Since the number of deaths reported by the CDC rose seven 2.2% while real population increased just 0.3%,, that should have pushed the "rate" way up. But the CDC says the "rate"--based on their unverifiable "standard population"--only increased by 0.7%.
Something's way off there.
Okay, one more thing: "Everyone knows" duh Chyna virus killed almost everyone, eh? It was so bad that the CDC recommended--and still recommends--that kids as young as 6 MONTHS old take the jab. And Democrat-ruled school boards in blue shithole cities are already saying all public school students will have to have proof of the jab to attend school this semester. So how many American kids between the ages of 1 and 4 do ya think died of duh Chyna virus in 2020? Ask your liberal friends what they think.
Answer, per the CDC, was...25. And same question for 2021: CDC answer: 63. And keep in mind that the CDC is the agency that offered hospitals $35,000 for every patient who died in that hospital with a diagnosis of "Covid," which was guaranteed to over-count victims by a significant factor. Based on that it's likely that the real death figure is lower. But even so: 25 and 63. See how your friends guess.
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