This is highly appropriate
Well, if there’s one thing I’ve learned over the last two years, it is that nothing is worse than getting the coronavirus.
It is worth dying to avoid it.
So the fact that these vaccines are so dangerous is really irrelevant.
A large German health insurer has raised concerns over what its data shows to be an excessive underreporting by government authorities of adverse events after experimental COVID-19 gene-based vaccine injections.
Andreas Schöfbeck, a board member of BKK ProVita, addressed the company’s findings in a formal letter to the government’s Paul Ehrlich Institute (PEI), which had reported earlier this year that there were 244,576 suspected cases of side effects from the gene-based injections in the calendar year 2021.
Andreas Schöfbeck
Speaking to this figure, Schöfbeck wrote, “The data available to our company gives us reason to believe that there is a very considerable under-recording of suspected cases of vaccination side effects after [patients] received the [COVID-19] vaccine.”
Explaining that their sample includes 10,937,716 insured clients, with available data covering only the first 7½ months of 2021, their company had already logged 216,695 cases of adverse reactions for COVID-19 gene-based injections.
Extending this rate for the full year, and then applying it to the full population of Germany (around 83 million), one can estimate that likely 2.5 million to 3 million individuals in the nation were treated by medical professionals for such adverse events.
“According to our calculations, we consider 400,000 visits to the doctor by our policyholders because of vaccination complications to be realistic to this day. Extrapolated to the total population, this value would be three million,” Schöfbeck told WELT news.
This is a “significant alarm signal,” he said in his letter, as it “means around 4-5% of the vaccinated were under medical treatment for side effects,” a rate about 10 times higher than the government’s reported numbers.
Schöfbeck went on to consider the causes of the underreporting in his letter, guessing that since there is “no remuneration” for health agencies to report vaccine side effects, and the “great effort” it takes to do so — requiring 30 minutes per report — and given perhaps three million such reports needed to be filed, this would equate to 1.5 million working hours or “almost the annual work performance of 1,000 doctors.”
A September Project Veritas report in the U.S. corroborates this analysis, documenting the presence of many hospital patients suffering from COVID vaccine injuries yet “nobody” reports them to the federal Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) “because it takes over a half hour to write the damn thing.”
Such enormous shortfalls in the reporting of vaccine adverse events on government-sponsored passive systems have been confirmed by studies and well-known for many years. For example, one 2010 Harvard-executed study commissioned by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) revealed that reported vaccine injuries to VAERS represent “fewer than 1% of vaccine injuries.”
Another study commissioned by vaccine manufacturer Connaught Laboratories calculated “fifty-fold underreporting of adverse events” is likely.
With regards to the COVID-19 gene-based injections, detailed workings by Steve Kirsch and colleagues concluded that underreporting of COVID vaccine death rates could be as significant as 20 times, with their total death estimations being over 150,000 when VAERS showed only 7,149 (US / Territories / Unknown) on August 27, 2021.
Having offered millions of dollars on severaloccasions to anyone of standing who can disprove his theses on this topic, Kirsch has still not found any qualified individual to challenge his rationale.
What anti-vaxers and people who collect data about how dangerous this vaccine is don’t seem to understand is that this vaccine is saving lives.
People who spread disinformation about this vaccine – whether it’s true or not – are actually murderers.
They’re gonna bring them back after they finish the Russia thing