Writing

Writings on social engineering and other things

by Virginia “Ginny” Stoner, MA, JD

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The 4/20 NYC massacre, my oh my

I don’t understand much in this song except “my oh my” and “liar, liar, liar” and “fire, fire, fire”—so it seemed to fit well here.

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If the Centers for Disease Control’s death records are correct, there was a mass casualty event in New York City and the surrounding area in April 2020, which killed 50,000 people over the course of 8 weeks, then ended just as suddenly as it began.

Don’t be surprised if you haven’t heard about it—most people outside the Department of Defense haven’t, and even there, it’s on a need-to-know basis.

I’ve written about the April 2020 death surge a couple of times here and here, where I showed that the vast majority of excess deaths in the US happened in New Jersey and New York. In this paper I briefly touch on the state comparison again, and look deeper to show that:

Chart 1. See Note 1 for the source of this data.

  • Most excess deaths in NJ and NY occurred in a small geographic area, with an obvious epicenter in NYC.

  • Deaths increased dramatically for adults of all ages during the 4/20 surge, and tripled for all ages 45 and up.

  • Although COVID19 was listed as the underlying cause of many deaths, deaths from many other underlying causes doubled or tripled or more during the surge, including heart, brain, lung, and kidney related deaths.

In this paper I focus in on 25 counties in NJ and NY where deaths doubled or more in April 2020. These 25 counties in and around NYC accounted for 93% of all excess deaths in NJ and NY during the 8-week surge.

Chart 1 shows a summary of the death numbers in the top 25 counties. In 2018 and 2019, both typical years for deaths, about 22,000 people died in weeks 13-20; in 2020, 72,000 people died. I think that makes “massacre” a fair description of this troubling and unexplained event in recent hidden history.

New Jersey and New York compared to other states

Chart 2 below shows the percent change in weekly deaths in 2020 compared to 2019, in the 12 states with the highest population, which together comprise about 58% of the total US population. New York (in red) and New Jersey (in blue) stand out like Rottweilers in a Chihuahua parade, with stunning spikes in excess deaths in 2020 that dwarfed all the others.

Chart 2. See Note 2 for the source of this data.

No need to strain your eyes reading the tiny numbers in the table, because they’re color coded. Green in the table denotes little or no increase in deaths from 2019 to 2020, and shows deaths were at normal levels in all the top 12 states when the World Health Organization (WHO) declared a global pandemic in Week 11 of 2020. By Week 13 ending March 28, there was a sizeable increase in deaths in several states, including Illinois, Michigan and Pennsylvania, shown in yellow/peach—but they were tame compared to the extraordinary surge of deaths in New Jersey and New York, where weekly deaths suddenly spiked by 200%, 300% or more, shown in red—then just as suddenly returned to normal.

NYC: The epicenter of the 4/20 massacre

To limit the “noise” of unrelated deaths as much as possible, I focused in on 25 counties in NJ and NY that experienced a 100% or more increase in deaths in April 2020 compared to 2019, shown in red in Table 1 on the left side of the graphic below. Incredibly, there were death increases of more than 500% at the epicenter in Queens County and Kings County, NY,and Hudson County, NJ. 93% of all excess deaths in NJ and NY during the surge occurred in these 25 counties, which were all clustered in and around the NYC epicenter, shown in the graphic below.

Table 1. See Note 3 for the source of this data. Note that NJ is smaller in comparison to NY than it appears here.

Massive increase in “non-COVID19” deaths

My assumption going in was that “COVID19” would be listed as the underlying cause of death in most excess deaths, given the lax diagnostic criteria, sketchy tests, and generous financial incentives for identifying COVID19 cases and deaths in those days. But that turned out to be only partially correct, because there were a lot more excess deaths than there were deaths with COVID19 listed as the underlying cause. In fact, if we disregarded COVID19 deaths altogether, we would still have a stunning 67% excess death rate for the surge period in Weeks 13-20.

Table 2. See Note 4 for the source of this data.

Table 1 shows the major changes that happened to underlying causes of death during the 4/20 surge, compared to 2019. On the right side of the table, causes of death that increased by 50% or more are highlighted in yellow, and increases of 100% or more are highlighted in red. In the “CHANGE” column, underlying causes of death with 50 or more excess deaths are highlighted in yellow, and those with 100 or more excess deaths are highlighted in red. For a complete list of underlying causes of death, run the saved search in Note 4.

Notice the dramatic increases in a many different causes of death involving many different parts of the body, including the heart and circulatory system, brain, lungs and kidneys:

Heart and circulatory disorders: There were large spikes in death from atherosclerotic heart disease (2931 excess deaths, a 109% increase); atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (1649 excess deaths, 221% increase); hypertensive heart disease without congestive heart failure (1006 excess deaths, 290% increase); cardiac arrest, unspecified (160 excess deaths, 110% increase); and many more.

Brain disorders: There were large spikes in death from unspecified dementia (756 excess deaths, a 100% increase); Alzheimer’s disease (496 excess deaths, a 94% increase); senile degeneration of the brain (180 excess deaths, 114% increase); senility (141 excess deaths, 320% increase); cerebral atherosclerosis (83 excess deaths, 268% increase); and more.

Lung disorders: There were large increases in deaths from pneumonia, unspecified (634 excess deaths, 186% increase); chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with acute lower respiratory infection (155 excess deaths, 134% increase); asthma, unspecified (71 excess deaths, 165% increase); acute respiratory failure (61 excess deaths, 165% increase), and more.

Kidney disorders: Increases in death from kidney disorders included acute renal failure, unspecified (68 excess deaths, 200% increase); hypertensive heart and renal disease with renal failure (51 excess deaths, a 268% increase); and more.

Diabetes: Apparently, the increases in diabetes deaths we’re seeing these days started with the 4/20 NYC massacre, with a spike in deaths from unspecified diabetes mellitus, without complications (484 excess deaths, a 132% increase); and non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, without complications (102 excess deaths; a 148% increase).

(NOTE: Each death in the CDC WONDER database has 1 “underlying cause of death.” Another search can be done for multiple causes of death, which list up to 20 different causes that contributed to each death. I’ve done this search on the 4/20 NYC massacre, and will probably do a separate write-up on it in the future, because it contains a lot of clues about what “COVID19” actually means (since it is not a viral disease as we’ve been told); and whether it’s a unique disease caused by “something else,” or a reclassification of other traditional diseases, or…?)

Deaths in adults of all ages increased

Table 3. See Note 5 for the source of this data.

Whatever killed 50,000 people during the 4/20 massacre, it only killed adults, but it didn’t only kill the elderly, or even mostly the elderly, as you can see in Table 3. Again, this data is narrowly focused in on the top 25 counties in NJ and NY (for deaths), during Weeks 13-20, compared to 2019.

There were no increases in death among ages 14 and younger—in fact, deaths decreased quite a bit among children. But deaths more than doubled among 25-44-year-olds, and more than tripled after age 45.

Table 3 also notes the number deaths in each age group that listed COVID19 as the underlying cause of death. About 28% of excess deaths listed an underlying cause of death other than COVID19.

Discussion

Was the 4/20 NYC death wave different than the others?

There were a series of “death waves” across the US from 2020 through 2022, shown in the chart below, which affected different states at different times and in various amounts; there was also a general overall elevation in the number of deaths across the county. The result was that all states experienced an unprecedented number of excess deaths in 2020-2022. I don’t know at this point whether the other death waves were qualitatively different from the 4/20 wave, because 4/20 is the only one I’ve taken this close of a look at. However, I know the December 2020 death wave, which I wrote about here, primarily affected California; and the August 2021 death wave, which I wrote about here, primarily affected Florida and Texas.

See the CVax Risk page for the source of this data.

A dangerous virus?

Let’s pretend for a minute that a virus SARS-COV-2 has been scientifically proven to exist in real life, not just in silico (in computer code), and that it’s been proven to cause a unique and potentially fatal disease called COVID19.

First, as I’ve pointed out, the COVID19 narrative, even if it were completely true, couldn’t explain all the excess deaths that occurred during the 4/20 massacre, because many were attributed to causes other than COVID19, including a wide variety of heart, lung, brain and kidney malfunctions that aren’t typically associated with viruses.

Second, if the 4/20 massacre was caused by a dangerous virus, where did it go? The mortality data suggests it either totally died off in the NYC region, or it left of its own accord—and who could blame it? Or maybe, if we want to be fanciful, it got trumped by so-called herd immunity after just 8 weeks. Certainly its disappearance had nothing to do with any COVID19 vaccines, which didn’t exist at the time—unless maybe they were covert aerosol vaccines, secretly disbursed from the air to ‘help’ us.

Third, why did the alleged virus uncharacteristically increase deaths pretty much equally across the board among adults of all ages, rather than mostly among the elderly? Why did it uncharacteristically cause a surge of deaths in spring, rather than the usual winter ‘flu season’?

Toxic treatment and mitigation protocols?

There’s a popular belief out there, especially among virus non-believers like me, that any excess deaths prior to the introduction of the “death vax” in December 2020 were all caused by toxic treatment protocols and mitigation measures, and the general shutdown of society. Does this hypothesis fit the mortality data?

It makes sense that toxic treatment and mitigation protocols could have had a major impact on deaths. If you look at the smaller and more widespread surges in excess deaths across the United States, they very well could be due to those things.

But that doesn’t mean we can assume the dramatic 4/20 death wave that mostly impacted NYC was caused by the same thing. Or the December 2020 death wave that mostly impacted California, or the August 2021 death wave that mostly impacted Florida and Texas, or any of the other death waves. If there is no virus, then we would expect to see similar concentrations of excess deaths in many areas of high population concentration, since many of them implemented similar COVID19 treatment and mitigation strategies. The toxic treatment and mitigation hypothesis doesn’t explain huge increases in death that are localized in particular geographic regions—although there might be an explanation, if someone looked into it.

Chemical weapon?

The first question that came to my mind based on the mortality data was whether a chemical weapon was released into the air somewhere in the vicinity of the Statue of Liberty on or around March 21, 2020. This seems like an obvious question, given the excess deaths were highly concentrated in a small geographic area, and gradually decreased with distance from the epicenter. I haven’t examined any wind maps or anything like that, I’m just going on common sense.

The wide variety of causes of death that proliferated during the 4/20 massacre is potentially consistent with intentional mass poisoning of some kind, possibly via an aerosol, IMO.

Infrasound?

The wide variety of causes of death is potentially consistent with toxic infrasound, if it had a powerful enough source emanating from somewhere in the vicinity of the Statue of Liberty, IMO.

What are your thoughts?

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NOTES

1) Deaths in 2018, 2019 & 2020 in the 25 most affected counties in NY & NJ. Run this search in the WONDER database. Citation is below.

2) Percent change in weekly deaths in 2020 compared to 2019, in the 12 states with the highest population. Run this search in the WONDER database. Citation is below..

3) Deaths by month in 2020 in NY & NJ counties. Run this saved search in the WONDER database. Citation is below.

4) Underlying causes of death in the top 25 NJ & NY counties in Weeks 13-20 of 2020. To see a complete list of underlying causes of death (the table in text is partial), run this saved search for 2019 numbers, and run this saved search for 2020 numbers. Citations are below.

5) Deaths by age group in the top 25 NY & NJ counties, Weeks 13-20. For 2019 deaths, run this saved search; for 2020 deaths, run this saved search. For COVID19 deaths, run this saved search. Citations are below.

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