Horowitz: Why does nobody care about the pandemic of mystery deaths?

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We have more governments and more media outlets focusing on public policy than at any point in human history. There is no greater public policy issue than the survival of the human race. Why, then, is there absolutely zero curiosity about finding the reason for shocking excess mortality skyrocketing concurrently with precipitous drops in birth rates? It’s only our survival that’s at stake.

Earlier this month, the Scottish government published vital statistics on mortality and birth covering the second quarter of 2023. The statistics compare birth and death rates relative to the same period over the previous six years — minus the pandemic year of 2020. The results are shocking and reveal the death of a civilization.

Among the report’s key points:

  • “There were 11,061 births registered in Scotland between 1 April and 30 June 2023. This is 9.1 percent lower than the quarter-two average of 12,164.”
  • 14,987 people died in Scotland in the second quarter of 2023 — 7.3% higher than the five-year, second-quarter average of 13,963.
  • Adjusting for age, the Scottish mortality rate for the second quarter of 2023 was 1,079 per 100,000 population — 1.4% higher than the five-year average for the second quarter. “This rate takes into account the growing and [aging] population and is therefore the best indicator of the direction of the mortality trend.”
  • There were 51 stillbirths, 8.6% above the quarter-two average of 43.
  • There were 50 infant deaths, 21.4% above the quarter-two average of 41.
  • 7,628 marriages were recorded in Scotland in the second quarter of 2023 — 0.5% lower than the recent average.
  • 261 same-sex marriages were recorded, compared with the five-year average of 247.
  • There were 38 same-sex “civil partnerships,” compared with the five-year average of 19.

In short, births are down, deaths are up, stillbirths are up, and infant deaths are up considerably. These numbers should be jarring in any country, especially such a small one, but I have not seen any media coverage on these statistics.

But fear not, gay marriages are increasing, so there is yet hope for the future of procreation in Scotland. Oh, wait!

Obviously, marriages and births have been waning for decades in Western countries, but the sudden, steep decline in birth rates from just a few years ago is a mystery. It’s a pattern we’re seeing all over the world, not just in Scotland.

And what explains the excess mortality and the shocking rise in stillbirths and neonatal deaths? As I reported last year, Scotland has already breached the warning level for the upper limit of neonatal deaths three times since 2021, which has triggered investigations. All we were told is that the culprit is not COVID and it’s not the COVID shots — even though investigators never checked the vaccination status of mothers, and we now know from Pfizer’s documents that it transfers “transplacentally.”

The only official statement we have about the new data came from Daniel Burns, a vital events statistician at the National Records of Scotland, who noted in a press release that the excess deaths came from “cancer, coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease and respiratory disease.” He also cautioned: “While the number of deaths was up by 7% this doesn’t take into account the changing size and age profile of the population so the mortality rate is the more accurate measure to use.”

Sure, the population is getting older, but again, that doesn’t explain such a precipitous rise, especially as it coincides with the drop in births and surge in stillbirths and neonatal deaths. What could be causing more cancers, cardiovascular deaths, vascular disease, and respiratory disorders that also happens to affect reproductive health at the same time? I mean, it’s only all of civilization on the line here.

Last year, Public Health Scotland announced it had no intention of identifying vaccination status of mothers of dead babies because such an analysis “had the potential to be used to harm vaccine confidence at this critical time.” Since then, the warning level for neonatal deaths has been breached again, and stillbirths were 32% higher in April than even during lockdowns.

Obviously, none of us can affirmatively prove that the vaccine is responsible for all of the sudden deaths and sudden reproductive problems in every country. But a budding Sherlock Holmes might want to start his inquiry with a new bioproduct that was introduced right around the time these deaths and other troubling ailments began to appear.

The Scottish numbers cannot be analyzed in a vacuum. A recent analysis by former BlackRock executive Ed Dowd found that the U.K. at large experienced an excess death rate from cardiovascular diseases of 30% and 44% in 2021 and 2022, respectively, in people ages 15-44. It’s part of a broader trend of accelerated excess deaths, particularly among younger people, accelerating since 2021 with the rise of the vaccines — over and beyond the pandemic deaths of 2020.

The United States is experiencing similar trends. Life insurance claims from group employee plans rose 34% in the fourth quarter of 2022 for those ages 35-44. As SOA Research Institute actuaries note, “COVID-19 claims do not fully explain the increase in reported claim incidence over the baseline period.”

The chief executive of a large Indiana life insurance company was clearly troubled by what he said was a 40% increase in the third quarter of 2021 in people between the ages of 18 and 64.

“We are seeing, right now, the highest death rates we have seen in the history of this business — not just at OneAmerica,” warned Scott Davison, CEO of Indiana-based OneAmerica Life Insurance, in a news conference nearly two years before others in the industry noticed the same trend.

The U.K.-based Institute and Faculty of Actuaries issued a report in April with this shocking observation about the first quarter of 2023, long after the pandemic was over:

Cumulative mortality rates for the older age groups are relatively high compared to the other years shown. Mortality for the younger age groups is particularly high, with the 20-44 age group having similar levels of mortality as seen in the same period in 2021, the worst pandemic year for that age group.

So why the lack of panic? Since when have global governments and the media ever shied away from alarming people over trends much less menacing to our survival? This enigma would jar the imagination of any casual observer of current events even without the introduction of the shots. The fact that the European database EudraVigilance is now reporting 46,999 fatalities and 4,731,833 injuries following injections of five mRNA COVID vaccines makes the lack of curiosity all the more stupefying.

Perhaps more concerning than their dismissal of the known dangerous shots as the culprit is the fact that they are not even bothered by the trend itself we are all witnessing. They don’t seem to want to get to the bottom of it — almost as if they are not bothered by the outcomes of higher deaths and fewer births.

That should scare you. A lot.

 

Source: Horowitz: Why does nobody care about the pandemic of mystery deaths? – Conservative Review


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