US Life Expectancy Finally Bounces Back Up
12/08/2023
“Game over, man! Game over!” --Bill Paxton as Private Hudson in Aliens
As I wrote in these pages a couple of years ago, the US suddenly lost a whopping 1.3 years of average life expectancy due to COVID. It had that big of an impact on the country in excess deaths. And before some moron starts saying it was due to vaccine deaths, the down turn in life expectancy, or the increase in excess deaths (i.e., deaths more than expected based on actuarial predictions) began before the vaccines rolled out and just after the virus appeared. Furthermore, the upturn in life expectancy occurred after the vaccines were delivered, as well as after the virus evolved from Delta to a less lethal variant. In the early days of COVID vaccination before vaccines were widely distributed, data showed that unvaccinated people were 11 times more likely to die from the virus than vaccinated people. At one point, 95% of hospitalizations and 99% of deaths were in unvaccinated people. The vaccines clearly prevent death, they do not cause death (unless you listen to Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. or Marjorie Taylor Greene, more on her later).
The graph below shows the dramatic drop in life expectancy beginning in 2019 and reversing about 2021. If vaccines were killing rather than saving people, you would think the curve would continue downward.
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