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What I meant by this is that if a suprisingly high rate of unexpected or unexplained deaths start happening in the vaccinated population then they may take notice. If not, there will be even more pressure and more hesitants will go ahead.
I mean what is the death rate right now from vaccines in %. It must be really low otherwise most people would get scared and not proceed (not everyone).
This is the con with making predictions such as ADE. The people who made these predictions will inst lose all credibility but will also inject mega doubt to those who believed in them...
It's a good idea, but where have all the flu deaths gone? Either they're counting them as covid cases, or the viruses are competing and communicating with each other. I suspect the former.
They've also, as we know, gamed the numbers with false statistics, such as counting unvaccinated (or 14 days or less before the 2nd dose) people who come in to hospitals for unrelated things as covid cases if they have any symptom, one guy went in for a knee issue but he answered yes to having diarrhea in the past few days so they marked his medical checkup as covid possible. He counted as a case.
But if someone goes in who is vaccinated (both doses and more than 14 days later) and has delta (which they can't test for) and dies of it, or dies from side effects of the vax, they don't report it to VAERs and they mark it as "died of natural causes" or "heart failure", etc.
What needs to happen is that these policies need to be leaked to the public by people who work in hospitals, especially if in memo form that has hospital letterhead and says "These are the CDC guidelines." - that evidence is vital to being able to sue them for what they're doing.
What's also really needed is to insist on autopsies, insisting they check for both covid and vaccine spikes (there are minor differences, might be detectable) and then making the results public. Sadly this can only happen if a member of your family dies from it and you can afford the cost. :(
It's a ghoulish thought.
You see a lot of recent famous people die young for unspecified reasons and it's always "please respect the family's privacy." - but the person is dead, so not sure what the privacy implication is of reporting it. People in the 20s and 30s who were at least on the surface, appeared to be healthy. (And I don't mean the recent meme of that 16 year old obese girl.)
Anyone work for an undertaker might have some insight into some of these things - perhaps they're told about covid cases.
Porque no los dos?