Excessive disabilities and death trend has not broken from the high and is holding at 23%.
https://rumble.com/v2lspyq-nci-vancouve ... ith-j.html
"The trends, while off the high from the official mandates, are not improving. That has me alarmed."
"These numbers are so off the chart statistically, that if there wasn't an establishment coverup, they would be screaming from the rooftops about these events. They are so off the charts that we should be hearing everyone raising alarm bells. The silence from the CDC, NIH, and the media shows a cover up in process."
"Were in the early days of this becoming a general public awareness. I'm just mortified that the agencies that were developed to protect us have been bought and compromised."
Around -1:55:
"In the group life actuary, I've got early looks at the numbers, so I'll tell you what I'm being told. The actual report won't come out until later this year that will talk about what happened in '22 and whats going on in '23.
What I do know is for millennials, and I choose this group because these people should not die because of the very nature of their age, the excess mortality is still running around 23% for millennials. That's still way too high. That was the rate going around into the second quarter of 2022.
So, we seem to be stabilizing at 23% excess mortality and that's bad. That's very bad. The reason why I say that's bad is because booster uptake is way down. So there may be some medium term effects lingering. The other thing that has me concerned is the overall disability number is still near the highs and last month women went to an all time of high of disabilities.
The rate of change has slowed but the trend hasn't broken and its not going back to normal. So that's alarming.
The brunt of the acceleration came in 2022 so I'm concerned that even though some people aren't disabled or dead they are compromised - and these numbers of disabled and dead are not static. The injured can move into those two pockets. This is a devastating impact on the economy of the U.S. and the globe because its a productivity decline that we are going to see."