Sigh.
More than three years into the pandemic, hundreds of Americans are still dying from COVID-19 every week.
For the week ending Dec. 9, the last week of complete data, there were 1,614 deaths from COVID, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The last four weeks of complete data show an average of 1,488 weekly deaths.
By comparison, there were 163 weekly deaths from the flu for the week ending Dec. 9, according to CDC data.
How do they tell the difference between the flu and “Covid,” I wonder?
Rather, you might wonder. I don’t wonder, because I already know: it’s totally arbitrary. Assuming you believe that “Covid” was ever something different than a normal flu, all of the symptoms are the same and it had the exact same fatality rate.
Honestly, I don’t know how anyone can believe it was real at this point. There was precisely zero evidence. They just kept talking about “loss of smell,” as if people didn’t lose their sense of smell with the flu since the beginning of history.
They are going to bring it back. The whole virus thing. Guaranteed.