“There was no pandemic” and other dialetheia
A dialetheia is a statement that is both true and false, and its use is called dialetheism. Social engineers love dialetheism in propaganda, in part because it obscures and complicates the underlying deception. That means fewer people will discern the deception; and for those who do, it will be more difficult to explain to others. Dialetheism is useful for conveying a desired false impression, without telling any outright lies that could potentially be exposed.
In this paper I look at a COVID19-related dialetheia I’ve seen a lot lately: “There was no pandemic.” Virus believers have said it, as have people who don’t believe viruses exist—all applying their own definition, making this statement inherently ambiguous. On one hand, it is true, because the virus purportedly killing people in the pandemic has never been proven to exist in real life, much less cause disease. On the other hand, this statement is false, because even though there was no virus, something else caused widespread deaths in the United States starting in March 2020, according to the official mortality data.
This startling pattern of “death waves” is illustrated in the chart below of weekly deaths from 2020 to present (in blue) compared to weekly deaths in 2019 (in brown).
Excess US deaths in 2020 are not in dispute
I haven’t seen any evidence that the death waves in 2021 and 2022 had a different cause than the 2020 death waves. They all had a similar Bell Curve pattern, with the possible exception of the first sharp death spike in Spring 2020; moreover, the vaccination campaign began in the middle of a large death wave. There are people who know whether the pre-vax and post-vax death waves were qualitatively different, but as usual, no one at the Department of Defense is talking.
However, I’m going to focus here only on 2020 excess deaths, for two reasons: First, so as not to muddy the waters with post-vaccine excess deaths in 2021 and 2022 (the vaccination campaign officially began on December 14, 2020).
Second, and more importantly, because there is no significant dispute about the number of excess deaths in 2020.
When it comes to 2021 and 2022, it’s possible to manipulate the number of excess deaths pretty dramatically up or down by either including or excluding the huge number of deaths in 2020 and 2021 from the historical average—you can read more about it here if you’re interested.
However, in 2020, the number of excess deaths will be similar no matter how they are calculated. For example, on my CVax Risk page, I compared monthly 2020 deaths with the 5-year monthly average from 2015-2019—but it’s possible to come up with a slightly higher number of excess deaths by using a 10-year average instead; and it’s possible to come up with a slightly lower number of excess deaths by comparing 2020 deaths only to 2019. But all methods will arrive at a similar result, due to the massive increase in deaths and death rate in 2020, the likes of which hasn’t been seen in at least the last 55 years, as shown in the chart below of US population, deaths, and death rate from 1968-2022 (1). Overall, there were about 591,000 excess deaths in the US in 2020, impacting all adult age groups.
Just to be absolutely clear
If anyone in the media claims, suggests or implies there were little or no excess deaths in the US in 2020, without addressing the official mortality data indicating there were a huge number of excess deaths, there are only 3 possibilities: They are either woefully ignorant of essential facts, or they are trying to deceive you, or both. It really is that simple.
As for the many people in the media who remain silent in the face of democide…that’s a more nuanced situation you’ll have to decide for yourselves.
“There was no pandemic” and excess deaths
From what I’ve seen, those promoting the “There was no pandemic” idea never mention the huge number of excess deaths in the US in 2020—they are either silent about them, or worse, they claim or imply they didn’t happen. They don’t try to refute the official numbers; rather, they ignore the official US numbers altogether, as if they don’t exist or don’t matter, and either cherry-pick data from elsewhere (like Michel Chossudovsky, discussed below), or simply give out whatever bad information suits their agenda.
The latter rudimentary approach has been used by “no-virus” advocate Eric Coppolino, who I’ve written too much about already. In just over a minute, Coppolino managed to convey in this clip that: (1) there was no virus, and therefore, no pandemic; (2) excess deaths are a false belief among people who don’t follow science; and (3) he knows nothing whatsoever about US mortality data. Impressive accomplishment, from a time management perspective.
Michel Chossudovsky: Viruses exist, but there was no new or deadly virus
Viruses do exist, according to popular talking head Professor Michel Chossudovsky; however, the SARS-COV-2 virus, said to cause COVID19, was neither new nor particularly dangerous, and there were little or no excess deaths in 2020. He explained his position recently in this interview (Part 1) and this interview (Part 2).
Chossudovsky is an editor and author at the well-known publication Global Research, where I found this impressive bio:
“Michel Chossudovsky is an award-winning author, Professor of Economics (emeritus) at the University of Ottawa, Founder and Director of the Centre for Research on Globalization (CRG), Montreal, Editor of Global Research. He has taught as visiting professor in Western Europe, Southeast Asia, the Pacific and Latin America. He has served as economic adviser to governments of developing countries and has acted as a consultant for several international organizations. He is the author of 13 books. He is a contributor to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. His writings have been published in more than twenty languages. In 2014, he was awarded the Gold Medal for Merit of the Republic of Serbia for his writings on NATO's war of aggression against Yugoslavia.”
This clip is from Chossudovsky’s own introduction in Part 2, in which he claims World Health Organization (WHO) data confirmed there was no pandemic—although he acknowledged people were “getting sick.”
I watched both Part 1 and Part 2 of this interview, and saw no evidence to support Chossudovsky’s claim about WHO mortality data, and I personally haven’t looked into it. The only evidence Chossudovsky presented along those lines were these charts from Germany and Australia, discussed in Part 1, both showing there were little or no excess deaths in 2020 in those countries.
Chossudovsky also presented evidence of COVID19 vaccine dangers, including cause of death data from England and Whales, and data from the US Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS). This subject is beyond the scope of this paper, but I mention VAERS because it shows that Chososudovsky must be familiar with the CDC WONDER database, in which both VAERS and US mortality data is stored, and available to the public.
Chossudovsky holds himself out as knowledgeable, saying he’s been researching this issue for 3 years. Are we supposed to believe he was simply unaware of the massive increase in deaths in the US in 2020? Apparently so. He also oddly omitted any mention of excess mortality in Canada, where he’s based.
I understand people cannot include all the evidence of all their claims in 2 short video presentations. However, the US and Canada are both major countries of the world—why would he not mention them when claiming there were little or no excess deaths globally?
I don’t know about Canada, because I haven’t looked into excess deaths there—but I do know about excess deaths in the US, and I assume Chossudovsky didn’t talk about it because it conflicts with his claim there weren’t many excess deaths in 2020. But I’m being too gentle—the US mortality data is like a high heel grinding Chossudovsky’s no excess death claims into the ground.
Professor, these boots were made for walking.
Short note on a related dialetheia: “The pandemic killed mostly the elderly”
There’s another dialetheia related to the democide coverup that you should be aware of, which goes something like, “The pandemic killed mostly the elderly.” Focusing on the “killed” part of this statement, it is true on one hand—but that’s because mostly the elderly die every year. Historically, the number of deaths increases with age in adulthood, as shown in this chart of US deaths by age group.
On the other hand, “killed mostly the elderly” is false, because there were excess deaths across the board in all adult age groups starting in 2020—and some younger age groups had a much higher percentage increase in deaths than the elderly. For example, deaths in the 35-44 year age group increased 43% in 2020-2022, whereas deaths among ages 85+ only increased 10%. For more information, see this link.
Yes, Virginia, there was a democide
I’m going to stop making any bones about this: If there was no virus, which I don’t think there was; and if the official US mortality data is accurate, which I think it is; then something else killed more than a half-million extra people in the US in 2020. If that something else was not a naturally occurring agent, which I don’t think it was, then it was a democide. Can you think of any other possibilities?
There were about 1.7 million excess deaths among adults of all ages in the US from 2020-2022, including 50,000 people who died over 8 weeks in the devastating Spring 2020 New York City mass casualty event, illustrated in the chart below. But the “there was no pandemic” dialetheia, combined with silence or wrong information about excess deaths, tends to cause people to erroneously conflate “no pandemic” with “no excess deaths,” regardless of their views on viruses.
Consider this: Of all the deeply horrible things the powers-that-be do, or have been accused of doing, what do you think might be among the absolute worst things that could possibly be exposed? Pedophilia? Cannibalism? Dangerous vaccines? All these horribles are more widely discussed than the possibility involved here—the one that is always discussed in hushed and horrified tones: mass-murder by government. If the US democide were ever widely exposed, you might as well rename Trump and Biden the Sons of Hitler. On a positive note, both Republicans and Democrats would surely both disappear like the Nazi party.
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NOTES
1) This data requires several different searches. Citations are below. To run these saved searches in the WONDER database, use these links:
Compressed Mortality, 1968-1978: https://wonder.cdc.gov/controller/saved/D74/D371F474
Compressed Mortality, 1979-1998: https://wonder.cdc.gov/controller/saved/D16/D371F470
Underlying Cause of Death, 1999-2020: https://wonder.cdc.gov/controller/saved/D76/D371F467
Provisional Mortality Statistics, 2018 through Last Week: https://wonder.cdc.gov/controller/saved/D176/D371F475