Writing

Writings on social engineering and other things

by Virginia “Ginny” Stoner, MA, JD

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The “Death Wave” phenomenon nobody is talking about

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Lately I’ve been writing about several unusual surges in US deaths that occurred from 2020 to 2022. I haven’t looked at all the surges individually yet, but I decided to jump straight to this discussion of all the surges collectively, after the high strangeness of the situation hit me.

During these surges, deaths rose and fell in a Bell Curve pattern over several weeks. Ordinarily, deaths don’t surge that way—they don’t change much from week-to-week, although they decline somewhat in summer, and increase in winter.

Just how strange were the 2020-2022 “death waves”? See what you think, based on the following 2 charts comparing weekly deaths in the US in 2020-2022 (in blue), with weekly deaths in 2019 (in brown). I’ve outlined the death surges in white, and labeled them—they haven’t been identified using statistical analyses, only visual appearances, and reasonable people could definitely disagree about exactly when they began and ended. But, I don’t think anyone could disagree that it’s fair to characterize them as “death surges.” In fact, “mind-boggling mass extermination events” would probably be more accurate.

See Note 1 for the source of this data and a data table.

Notice how little variation there was from week-to-week in deaths in 2019, which was a typical year for deaths. They gradually declined as we headed toward summer, and gradually rose again as we headed toward winter—the predictable historical pattern. This pattern was totally disrupted in 2020, as you can see in the chart below of monthly US deaths from 1999-2022.

See Note 2 for the source of this data.

What’s behind the Death Wave phenomenon?

I’d like to see how this “death wave” data fits in with everyone’s COVID19-related hypotheses. I don’t pretend to have thought through all the implications and possibilities, but here are some initial thoughts:

RE the dangerous virus hypothesis: People promoting the official narrative of a dangerous virus should explain why there were no excess deaths in the US before the World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) pronouncement of a pandemic in March 2020; then immediately following the WHO’s pronouncement, there were simultaneous death surges around the world. US death surges also occurred simultaneously in multiple states, and at odd times of year, not in the traditional ‘flu season’—are these things consistent with a virus cause? They should also acknowledge, of course, that no SARS-COV-2 virus has ever been proven to exist anywhere except in silico—that is, in computer code.

RE the miracle vaccine hypothesis: People promoting COVID19 vaccination should explain why the death surges continued and even got worse, long after the COVID19 vaccines were introduced in December 2020, with more deaths in 2021 than the previous year.

RE the dangerous vaccine hypothesis: Personally, I think the entire vaccine paradigm is fundamentally flawed, and all vaccines are inherently dangerous, so I’m on board with this hypothesis. Nevertheless, the reality is the vaccines weren’t around when the April 2020 death surge occurred, or when the July 2020 mini-surge occurred. In addition, the December 2020 death surge may have started too soon to be attributable to vaccination—but it’s not clear because it seems like a lot of people were receiving early vaccinations. Regardless, these things indicate that vaccination isn’t the only piece of the puzzle of Death Waves.

The Squirrel Thinker. Image credit unknown.

RE the electromagnetic energy hypothesis: I’d like to know whether any of the death surges match up to changes made in the wireless energy grid. Were a bunch of 5G towers turned on in New York in April 2020, coinciding with an explosion of deaths there? Did the same thing happen in California in December 2020, or in Florida and Texas in August 2021?

The good news is, whatever was causing the Death Waves seems to be gone, or at least dormant, since the numbers have been looking better in 2023. On the other hand, it seems to take several months to get a reasonably complete death count in the US—so keep your fingers crossed.

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NOTES

TIP: To run a saved search in WONDER, click the link and agree to the terms of service. If the search does not run automatically, hit the Send button.

1) For weekly US deaths from 2020-2023, run this search. For weekly US deaths for 2019, run this search. Citations and a table are below.

2) For monthly deaths from 1999-2019, run this search. For monthly deaths from 2020-2022, run this search. Citations are below.

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