1034
Comments (49)
sorted by:
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
-4
Staatssicherheit -4 points ago +1 / -5

You weaken the argument by falsely portraying the other side. There have 500,000 US deaths from covid. Is this insignificant? No. Are the lives of hudnreds of millions of people effected by the shutdown insignificant? No. Is there a balance between lives and livelihoods? Absolutely.

2
CucksForTheDonald 2 points ago +2 / -0

There aren't 500,000 US deaths from Covid. There are 500,000 US deaths with Covid. These are deaths that occurred during an ostensible Covid pandemic, where people tested positive for Covid and died for any reason whatsoever in 30-60 days.

The tests were done on everyone in the population who is an idiot (so therefore, nearly everyone), on many people they were done multiple times, and the tests had 10-12% false positives. (Which does not mean 10% of positives were false: it means nearly all positive results were false positives.)

There was indeed a spike of excess deaths – and it corresponds roughly with a time when governors of 5 states (NY, PA, NJ, CA, MI) instructed hospitals to send people recovering from respiratory issues, who tested positive for "Covid", to nursing homes, and forced the nursing homes to accept these patients.

2
ViagraFalls 2 points ago +2 / -0

I have heard they got money for blaming covid, so the thug that had 5 gunshot wounds and got a shitty test that said he was positive ended up dying of covid-19. That's how things were done.

A lot of the died-of-covid crowd were very old or very unhealthy as a result of one or more unrelated conditions. It's like trying to blame scaring someone for giving them a heart attack. Nope. People get scared all the time. It's the unhealthy lifestyle that made the heart susceptible to such an event.