In the week ending 18 December 2020, there were just 984 deaths in England and Wales from respiratory diseases other than COVID-19. That's nearly half the 1,839 deaths from respiratory diseases in the same week last year.
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/datasets/weeklyprovisionalfiguresondeathsregisteredinenglandandwales
Overall deaths in the same week this year were 13,011, which is 1,085 more than the 11,926 deaths last year. However, since 2,986 of these deaths were attributed to COVID-19, deaths from all other causes this week are officially down by an astonishing 1,901 deaths from last year.
Outside of deaths attributed to COVID-19, in a year in which care for the illnesses that cause the largest number of deaths in the UK (cancer, heart disease, dementia, diabetes) has been withdrawn or reduced, we've never been in such amazing health.
Yet at the same time, records report huge increases in deaths in England this year from heart disease (up 26%), bowel cancer (46%), prostate cancer (53%), breast cancer (47%), dementia (79%) and diabetes (86%). So where have all the excess deaths gone?
The only logical answer to that question is RT-PCR tests being used on the order of Public Health England at 40 cycles of amplification, around 4.5 billion times more than the threshold of 30 cycles at which they can detect live, infectious virus.
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