How do you know when a bureaucrat is lying? His lips are moving.
To argue a jump of almost 10% in deaths after the rollout of the Covid vaccine had nothing to do with the vaccine is absurd.
Another failed attempt to get the bureaucracy to tell the truth.
Deaths in 2021 jumped by 9,400 from the year before. 400 can be attributed to an increase in COVID deaths. The other 9,000 can’t be attributed to COVID.
The increase in deaths occurred in the last 8 months which equates to a jump of almost 10% for that period.
The 1.2% quoted by Phillip Gould is a contrived lie. He is using excess deaths which are modelled figures not actual deaths.
The ABS like the BOM create models when reality doesn’t suit their narrative.
The spin about deaths jumping every May is also a lie. The seasonal increase in deaths from winter doesn’t kick in until July. Year on year monthly increases are usually around 2% not the 7.2% increase we see in May and the 12.1% we see in June. These increases can’t be explained by Covid as there weren’t enough cases in the community.
As for the claim there were 500,000 Covid cases, there was 380,000 and most of them were in the last month of the year when the borders opened. The idea that thousands of people died from Covid undetected is absurd, especially given the amount of testing going on.
The bottom line in all of this is that the Government is never going to admit they murdered thousands of people because they refuse to admit the vaccine wasn’t safe.
They can spin it all they like but they can’t fool us.
Further reading:
https://infogram.com/1p0lp9vmnqd3n9te63x3q090ketnx57evn5?live=
Committee on 13/06/2024
Community Affairs References Committee
13/06/2024
Excess Mortality
Senator RENNICK: Okay. My last question is this: you said earlier on that you can’t necessarily take time correlation as an indication of evidence for causation, but reality is that temporal association is a significant indicator of causation and, within that time frame there, you have said that it is not unusual for deaths to jump around May. I have looked at that data series. They generally jump around July, so when the kicks in June, it takes about a month with the secondary bacterial infection, so they generally spike in July, August, September. But the significant thing about the jump in deaths was that this jumped in May, the month after the vaccine rollout; deaths jumped, spiked, or caused mortality, that is, blunt that it is. And then it basically went through for the next two years. So there were no seasonal variants. There was just a spike, and it has come off a little bit but it was not like a temporal thing associated to the winter. More, it was temporally associated to the rollout of the vaccine.
Dr Gould: As you know, I’m a time series person so I don’t want to disparage the power of time series analysis; I think it is very powerful. In terms of the exact example that you are talking about—let’s say the rise in mortality in May of 2021—if you took any given year over the last 10 years, it is very likely that you will see an increase in May compared to April, and you would continue to see an increase into the peak of flu season, or the season where we have respiratory illnesses. So that is a typical thing that we see. As a time series person, one way that I might look at this—and I have actually taken a look at it—would be to say, ‘Well, the concept of excess mortality actually takes into account seasonal variations,’ so I would be looking at—rather than a spike or an increase in mortality during that period, rather than a month-on-month increase in mortality between, let’s say May and April—an increase in excess mortality, because that takes out the seasonal factors that we normally see.
Senator RENNICK: But is that agreeing with what I just said, where we have just had a big jump and it has not really come off at all?
Dr Gould: Can I give some numbers which I think are quite useful. These numbers are based on the ABS weekly reports, and the challenge with the ABS weekly mortality numbers is that it is hard to align them directly with a month, but I’m doing my best to do that. If you look at excess mortality in 2021, between January and April, that was running at 1.9 per cent. And after May, it was running from May to December, post-vaccine rollout, at 1.2 per cent, so it was actually lower. We have, as well, talked about potential reasons for higher mortality in 2021, and one of those reasons is the concept of death displacement, which we would expect to see, particularly coming off the back of a relatively low mortality year in 2020—indeed one that had negative excess mortality.
Senator RENNICK: Yes, except that we had lockdowns again in 2021. But I will leave that as a statement.