The Last Gasp
New research signals tragic and astonishing damage inflicted by ventilators and iatrogenesis
Attorney Michael Senger has released a fascinating research piece.
His analysis contends around 30,000 Americans appear to have been killed by mechanical ventilators back in April 2020.
Senger begins by delving into CDC data on reported excess deaths by state.
Here is where he notices the first pattern.
Excess deaths were extremely high in areas surrounding New York. This includes the likes of New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. All of these states are cold with what he calls “dense low-income areas” compared to Florida and California, which are sparse and relatively rich.
Now, this suggests a deadly covid variant ravaged its way around New York to surrounding areas during that time. One, because the cold weather can help respiratory viruses spread and two, closely populated areas are much more susceptible to spreading.
But one glaring contradiction stands in the way of that theory.
Other states close to New York, like Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, which are also relatively densely populated and cold, experienced few, if any, excess deaths.
Senger reveals an interesting trend that emanated from areas such as New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Connecticut that all experienced high excess deaths even though they are relatively close to other areas such as Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont.
In all the prior high excess death states, search engine results yielded significantly more results for headlines pertaining to ventilator usage and requirements than in the latter low excess death states.
Indeed, most of the headlines used panic-inducing words such as “scrambling”, “critical”, “shortage”, “life-saving”, and “immediately” to describe the overwhelming urgency. And as you’ve probably guessed by now, search engine results listed significantly fewer headlines about ventilators for states that possessed relatively low excess deaths throughout that spring period.
Now we come to the meaty bit.
A comprehensive New York study released at the very same time in April 2020 documented a 97.2% mortality rate among those over 65 who were put on mechanical ventilators as opposed to a 26.6% mortality rate among those over 65 who weren’t put on mechanical ventilators. This means that patients 65 and over were more than 26 times as likely to survive if they were not placed on mechanical ventilators.
It would appear these headlines were not exclusive to areas surrounding New York. Our very own papers in the UK acknowledged experts’ warnings about mechanical ventilators back in April 2020:
And these articles appeared in tandem with ventilator hysteria (we found dozens):
By September, it appears the UK government finally caught onto the potentially damaging effects as they ceased usage:
Accordingly, Senger continues his analysis by comparing percentages of excess deaths in states that did not experience as much ventilator hysteria. To be conservative in his estimates, he chooses Michigan as the comparable to high excess death states because Michigan did not possess the same ventilator hysteria and also recorded excess deaths at levels closer to the average of other states.
Here is what he came up with:
These numbers were reached by subtracting the number of excess deaths each state would have experienced (using Michigan as the example) from the number of excess deaths each high excess death state actually experienced.
The results show “approximately 17,289 deaths in New York City, 7,347 deaths in New Jersey, 803 deaths in Massachusetts, 788 deaths in Connecticut, and 3,725 deaths in New York outside New York City were attributable to the overuse of mechanical ventilators or other iatrogenesis”.
So when did the government discover these ventilators were potentially harmful and how many patients were put on them before they did?
In the UK, figures from April 2020 already showed two-thirds of covid sufferers put on ventilators were not surviving. This occurred while the NHS and the government desperately searched for more ventilators.
It is clear at least by late 2020, some procedural change with ventilators in the UK took place…
As one doctor eerily told the Wall Street Journal in December 2020, “We were intubating sick patients very early. Not for the patients’ benefit, but in order to control the epidemic… That felt awful.”
Does this mean they risked lives upon a presumption that cases would overwhelm hospital capacity… Watch this space
My coworker was feeling sick for some time, then popped a fever on our mandatory temperature checks. Work sent him immediately to the hospital. The hospital took one look at him, declared “COVID!” And tried to stick him on a ventilator. He fought them…physically fought them off. Finally, another doctor decided to do more tests in order to shut him up, and discovered that it was stage 3 lung cancer. Last I heard, he is doing well and is back home with his family.
Had he not fought back, he would’ve been shoved on a vent, died, declared a COVID death, and all of us at work would’ve been like, “wooooah…. COVID is so scary, it killed Joe.”
No questions asked.
I HIGHLY doubt I am an anomaly. So the question is…. How many did they murder in this manner?
Ventilators and Remdesivir, deadly cocktail.