If it sounds far-fetched on the surface, it shouldn't. Let's characterize it this way...
The rate depends on how old you are, but just suppose that every couple of years or so someone you're acquainted with dies. In the US, about 2.8M people die in a normal year. So if the vaxx killed off that many people, you only would likely know 2 people that had died in the last couple of years. If it killed off 5-6M, it would have only been 2 extra on average. Every person is different, and probably only about 3-5% of the shots were weaponized.
The counter-argument that goes, "I don't know anyone that got injured or died from the shot!" is brainless. It's been estimated that only 1 out of 50,000 rounds fired in the Vietnam War killed someone, so maybe you can find a veteran and tell him that ACKSHUALLY bullets aren't dangerous.
If it sounds far-fetched on the surface, it shouldn't. Let's characterize it this way...
The rate depends on how old you are, but just suppose that every couple of years or so someone you're acquainted with dies. In the US, about 2.8M people die in a normal year. So if the vaxx killed off that many people, you only would likely know 2 people that had died in the last couple of years. If it killed off 5-6M, it would have only been 2 extra on average. Every person is different, and probably only about 3-5% of the shots were weaponized.
The counter-argument that goes, "I don't know anyone that got injured or died from the shot!" is brainless. It's been estimated that only 1 out of 50,000 rounds fired in the Vietnam War killed someone, so maybe you can find a veteran and tell him that ACKSHUALLY bullets aren't dangerous.