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The Forum > Article Comments > Excess deaths: the world is facing the most alarming health emergency of modern times > Comments

Excess deaths: the world is facing the most alarming health emergency of modern times : Comments

By Murray Hunter, published 13/3/2024

Excess deaths are the disease X. Where is the WHO?

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By 2030 we may lose up to 30 million to cancer PA. Yes, we have made some strides in treating cancer with some very costly remedies that pad big pharma's humungous profits!

Even as a virtually costless miracle cancer cure, we've had for nigh on a quarter of a century, goes begging.

For big pharma it's a case of profit before people!? And here I am referring to MSR thorium and one of its nuclear decay products bismuths 213.

As for disease X. The hidden aftereffects of COVID 19 even in healthy A symptomatic, may be alarming, with heart disease, kidney disease and various other health issues.
Alan B
Posted by Alan B., Wednesday, 13 March 2024 10:46:25 AM
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Global life expectancy fell by 1.6 years during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, but Australia was one of the few countries where people were still expected to live longer.

A new study published on Tuesday in medical journal The Lancet provides the most comprehensive look at the pandemic's toll on human health so far.

Australia and New Zealand were among only 32 countries and territories, out of 204 studied, to record an increase in life expectancy across the first two years of the pandemic.

It will be interesting to see how the measures taken by these countries contributed to increase in life expectancy.

Which measures taken during the pandemic were of high value and which had a limited/no/detrimental effect?

It may take years of analysis to find out.

We (as well as those living in those other countries) should be grateful that governments took the action they did. Procedures developed to combat the spread of SARS-CoV-1, at least, helped inform health bodies.

The sooner that health organisation start looking for common patterns in those countries where life expectancy rose rather than fell the better they will be equipped in the future.
Posted by WTF? - Not Again, Wednesday, 13 March 2024 1:01:07 PM
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WTF, really: "We (as well as those living in those other countries) should be grateful that governments took the action they did. Procedures developed to combat the spread of SARS-CoV-1, at least, helped inform health bodies."
Like lockdowns that included the world's longest in Victoria, police thugs firing rubber bullets and using paper spray on protesers including the elderly, hitting them with rifle buts, mandating vaccines that don't prevent contraction or spread of the disease and have an acknowledged chance of killing or maiming you. No wonder we are seeing so many sudden deaths from heart attack and other causes, and the spread of "turbo cancers" as well as business closures and suicides.
Contrast all that with Sweden which had no mandates or lockdowns and is doing better than most other countries https://www.cato.org/policy-analysis/sweden-during-pandemi
Posted by Mikko2, Saturday, 16 March 2024 5:10:53 PM
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