According to TheJournal, it's a "far-right conspiracy theory" that "Covid-19 death rates are being inflated as a way of justifying continued restrictions on the public."
TheJournal says "Covid-19 was a factor in all of those 1,806 deaths".
Time for a factcheck by Leo Varadkar.
Varadkar:
"In Ireland we counted all deaths, in all settings, suspected cases even when no lab test was done, and included people with underlying terminal illnesses who died with Covid but not of it."
The death count includes people who died with Covid, not of it. Got that?
Varadkar:
"This was right approach but skewed the numbers. Priority is to save lives not look good in league tables."
Is that clear enough? They skewed the numbers to "save lives", by frightening people into accepting restrictions.
Leo is now a right-wing conspiracy theorist.
TheJournal also says HIQA acknowledged only a "slight overestimation of deaths".
It's true that HIQA is generally supportive of the government narrative.
But their July report found that the official Covid-19 death toll was 40% higher than excess deaths. A slight overestimate?
Reminder that despite the media-induced hysteria, the mortality rate is nothing special this year, and not even as high as 2018. It turns out that the badly disrupted health service plus the arrival of Covid-19 were less dangerous than the cold weather and bad flu of 2018.
If you exclude all so-called Covid-19 deaths, you find that Ireland would have had record low mortality this year. This is simply preposterous, given the disruption to healthcare and the seasonally mild 2019. Low mortality is more likely to follow a season of higher mortality.
The claim that c. 1800 people died "of Covid" in Ireland is one of the most damaging mistruths. In combination with the false and misleading case data, constantly amplified by media and government, it's sadly no surprise the country is in such a mess.
These are the most important things I've learned, and which I apply in my day-to-day routine.
If everyone did these things, their lifestyles would be transformed:
1) assign every dollar (or pound, or euro) a specific job. Like a person, if money is left idle, it will get up to no good.
Do this every month with a written budget, preferably using an app that links to your bank accounts so that your transactions automatically show up there.
2) plan for your major expenses such as cars, holidays, and household improvements.
Putting cash aside for them every single month means not having to go into debt for them later (or liquidating your long-term investments, which is almost as bad).
The incoming auto-enrolment system in Ireland sounds horrible:
- a quasi-mandatory system, reducing take-home pay even more for employees.
- even higher costs for employers.
- a huge new govt subsidy for pensions (how can they afford to do this but not to cut income tax?)
1/5
- govt subsidies are applied equally regardless of tax bracket, so a pension becomes another form of income redistribution.
- money gets locked up in the system for 40+ years.
- new central processing authority to administer it, creating more unnecessary civil servant jobs.
2/5
- the existing PRSI deduction was already supposed to provide a decent pension. But there will be no change to PRSI.
- there will only be FOUR investment funds to choose from, for the entire country! An amazing lack of choice. Maybe let people invest their own money?
3/5
Ireland's "Commission on Taxation and Welfare" has triggered outrage with alleged proposals to reduce inheritance tax relief, raise diesel duty, etc.
As with NPHET, the likely purpose of COTW is to float bad ideas, so that government can see which ones are viable.
A short🧵.
Media reports have disclosed the alleged proposals from COTW, but have said almost nothing about who or what COTW is. The ordinary reader is left wondering who to blame for all of the bad ideas.
This is where I come in with a relevant link and a summary.
We can now calculate Ireland's death rates for every age group and for every year up to and including 2021, with the help of freshly released CSO figures and the CSO's population estimates.
I've done this. Some interesting results:
👇👇👇
Firstly, Covid-19 coincided with Ireland's 85+ population achieving their lowest ever death rates in each of the past two years.
An amazing result in the circumstances:
The results are only slightly less positive for the grey-haired 65-84 cohort.
Three out of the four categories here had a small increase in 2021 over the prior year.
But 2021 was still safer for every category in this cohort compared to 2018: