Applying the CSO's method to prior years, there are several other occasions when "excess deaths" calculated in this way ran into four figures - without making any adjustments for the changing size and age of the Irish population.
To avoid mixing winter seasons, you could instead look at the October-September cycle, to see the impact of the so-called "first wave" on 2019/2020.
Adjusting for population size only, you find that the mortality rate for 2019/2020 is normal - lower than 2017/2018, for example.
If you use the CSO's provisional registrations data and further adjust for age, you find Covid's first wave - Q2 2020 - was very safe by historical standards.
Indeed, how many people realise that Q1 2020 - with very few "Covid deaths" - saw more deaths registered than Q2 2020?
This is even true for those aged 75+.
Death registrations as a proportion of the 75+ population were higher in Q1 2020 than Q2 2020.
This implies that the cold Q1 weather was more dangerous for the elderly than the combination of Covid and healthcare deprivation suffered in Q2:
For those aged 55-64 and 65-74, there were small upticks in deaths registered in Q2 2020 vs. Q1 2020.
Did healthcare deprivation hit these age groups harder than it hit those aged 75+?
But the impact on those aged 55-64 was very slight - Q2 2019 was worse than Q2 2020 for them.
When the current cycle is over, we'll see the real impact of 2nd wave "Covid deaths", and healthcare deprivation, on overall mortality.
Until then, we'll have to keep looking for answers in primary sources - and doing our own analysis, rather than outsourcing it to government.
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“for those with most severe frailty, even relatively mild vaccine side effects can have serious consequences. For those who have very short remaining life span.. benefit of the vaccine may be marginal or irrelevant.”
As I initially suggested when I first read about the Pfizer vaccine, choosing between getting Covid and taking this vaccine might not be the obvious decision that so many people assume it to be:
As I said at the time, taking the vaccine doesn't necessarily mean you won't transmit the virus to someone else. This has been officially acknowledged:
BREAKING: I have the latest monthly death registrations from the Irish government's reporting office:
Let's do another quick thread to expose the scam. 👇👇
I'm now increasingly confident that there were just below 24,000 deaths in the first nine months of 2020 (based on the historic pattern of late registrations).
This is consistent with published death notices - there were 23,700 death notices.
So we get the following picture for total deaths each year.
The second chart is the same as the first, but it excludes the 1,800 "Covid-related deaths", i.e. it pretends they didn't happen.
Hmm. It's almost as if the first chart is more in line with the trend of prior years?