Yes, but even assuming massive overlap, that still means for every person who died (allowing that 500,000 is reality) there were 124 unique people that considered that one death victim a "loved one"
the math of people lying seems to account for the statistic based on opinionated hearsay by people who have no way to know what "proof" of a cause of death is.
Math doesn't check out. It assumes that each person surveyed didn't know the same person who died.
Yes, but even assuming massive overlap, that still means for every person who died (allowing that 500,000 is reality) there were 124 unique people that considered that one death victim a "loved one"
the math of people lying seems to account for the statistic based on opinionated hearsay by people who have no way to know what "proof" of a cause of death is.