Shocker on the April 2020 death surge; plus, a comparison of state death rates
After my last paper on the worldwide April 2020 death surge, I took a deeper look and discovered something shocking: the 135,000 excess deaths in the US during the surge occurred almost exclusively in New York and New Jersey.
The chart below shows the number of deaths by state in the US, from week 10 through week 24 of 2020, with New York standing out like a monster truck in a MINI Cooper parade. (1)
Notice that in the “Big 3”—California, Florida and Texas—there was no death surge (possibly a very minor one in California). Incredibly, at the peak of the death surge in week 15, there were twice as many deaths in New York as there were in the entire state of California; and there were more deaths in tiny little New Jersey than there were in either Florida or Texas! I think that’s pretty mind-blowing.
Following is the same chart, but with only the handful of states that were affected by the death surge included. What it looks like to me is that a poison was dumped over New York, and some of it drifted in the wind to New Jersey and other neighboring states. That may sound cynical, but there’s no denying this mass fatality event was very, very strange. What’s more, the number of dead dwarfs years worth of fake mass shooting events, even if they were real.
What this information means
In my last paper on the April 2020 death surge, I speculated about some possible causes. I think we can eliminate most of those possibilities, based on this new information that the surge was mostly limited to just 2 states.
These were the possibilities—4 out of 5 don’t really fit the localized nature of the April 2020 death surge:
Toxic COVID19 treatment protocols causing premature death, such as dangerous drugs, and excessive use of ventilators. (Similar protocols were recommended nationwide.)
Neglect of the elderly and others in need of care, due to fear of contagion. (This would occur nationwide.)
Increased personal stress due to fear of death. (This would occur nationwide.)
Hazardous ‘prevention’ strategies, such as constant masking and confinement indoors. (Similar protocols were recommended nationwide.)
Some other environmental toxin, like electromagnetic radiation, or a chemical spill or intentional release. (This is the only one of the possible explanations that’s really consistent with a localized death surge.)
I also speculated about a possible connection between the COVID19 tests and deaths; the localized nature of the death surge doesn’t necessarily eliminate that possibility.
Death rates by state
This chart compares the death rate per 10,000 people in each state for the years 2019 through 2022. It shows death rates for 2019 (gray X box), 2020 (orange square), 2021 (red diamond), and 2022 (blue triangle). At the top, states are sorted by the 2019 death rate, from highest to lowest; at the bottom, states are sorted alphabetically. (2)
For most states, the death rate was highest in 2021, and fell in 2022. There are a few states, like Hawaii, Rhode Island and Utah, with death rates that have hardly changed during the pandemic.
West Virginia is way ahead of the crowd in its death rate for all 4 years. Not a surprise, since it was also ahead of the crowd in forced vaccination of school children some years ago. What’s going on in WV? Its death rate is headed off the chart. Was it built on an ancient toxic waste dump? Is the entire state secretly a pool of unpaid lab rats for Dow? Is the population being farmed by an underground race of cannibals, a la The Time Machine? If so, who’s filling out the death certificates?
Maybe West Virginia should brainstorm solutions to its death problem with Utah, the state where people are almost immortal. Rumor has it they tried once—but discussions broke down after snooty Utah Mormons suggested West Virginians abstain from alcohol, tobacco, coal mining, and crushing poverty.
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NOTES:
1) US deaths by state, week 10 through week 24 of 2020. Run this search.
2) US death rates by state 2019-2022. For the number of deaths, run this search. For population by state for 2020-2022, see this link. For population by state for 2018-2019, see this link. Death rate per 10,000 is calculated by dividing the number of deaths by the size of the population, then multiplying by 10,000.