19 Comments

Thank you!

Careful with government population estimates, especially these days. They're horrible.

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How do you perform the age standardization?

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Have you considered my method? https://metatron.substack.com/p/methodology-for-estimating-excess-2de. Want me to run Sweden's numbers through it? Not sure they have single year of age data?

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If Sweden has no excess mortality, then I conclude that the mRNA shots are not the reason for excess mortality in other countries, and hence are not as dangerous as typically portrayed!

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Sweden has excess mortality in the datasets, and only one EU country saw negative excess mortality in the 2020-2023 range - Norway, during 2020 when nobody was vaccinated. Every other country has seen excess mortality in every other year.

Other notes:

1) Sweden has the 6th lowest vaccination rate for children and one of the highest Legatum health index ranges.

2) They're not the biggest net vaccinator (that dubious dishonour goes to Portugal)

3) At no point did Sweden have negative excess deaths (proving the shots don't work)

4) Romania was the lowest for excess deaths in 2022 (Sweden came second but still had a whopping 3.88 rate)

5) Sweden was only the lowest for 2021, but that's not saying much given they came ~11th in rankings in 2020

6) Sweden also was the 13th biggest administrator of the shots (by dose ratio v population size), and is beaten out by the following countries:

Portugal

Italy

Ireland

Denmark

Belgium

Finland

France

Malta

Spain

Iceland

Germany

Austria

Norway

https://thedailybeagle.substack.com/p/solving-the-swedish-mystery

The idea that Sweden offers any proof that the shots don't cause harms is a fallacy perpetuated by the vaccine industry which relies on heavy omission of crucial context setting data.

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You could've at least explained that the reason why Sweden had low excess mortality in the flu season 2019-2020 is because Sweden had negative excess mortality before COVID (including both January and February 2020 and late 2019): https://www.mortality.watch/explorer/?c=SWE&t=asmr_excess&ct=monthly&df=2018+Jan&p=1&v=2. The subhead of this article says that "No statistical significant excess mortality detected by any method." But you could've explained that there is still statistically significant excess mortality on a monthly or quarterly scale, and even on a yearly scale if you look at 2020 instead of the flu season of 2019-2020.

The spikes in excess deaths in Sweden coincide with spikes in COVID deaths, PCR positivity rate, number of patients hospitalized for COVID, and amount of SARS-CoV-2 detected in wastewater: https://i.ibb.co/1f8JZ8X/sweden-wastewater.png.

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