18 Comments

Actuaries call those born between the wars "the golden generation." Maybe because :-

Less exposure to toxins especially when young, ie less vaccinations, better diet ie less insecticides, fungicides, fertilisers etc. on mainly wholefoods (no fast food rubbish), far less exposure to MSM lies, less totally unnecessary but also harmful bigpharma products aka the iatrogenic effect.

The above are not confined just to deaths, more and more now suffer from chronic illnesses and at earlier ages.

And since early 2021 we have the effects of the Elephant in the room to contend with...

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🎯

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I have heard them called "The Silent Generation" because they didn't complain or demand or expect anything really. They were all mostly quite grateful if they made it to old age in a reasonable condition. In the UK they were also generally the ones who believed in the "cradle to grave" social system.

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Doesn’t it look like the post-war generation (baby boomers) were the lucky ones?

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Wow. Spot on!

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Brilliant Joel.

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Thank you, Fabian. Much appreciated. We are getting there!

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Is it suspicious that the "deaths registered by single year of age" ONS UK dataset has not been updated since Jan 2022? Can anyone confirm that dataset will be maintained ?

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If we're going to do their job for them, somebody thought, well, we may as well charge them for the data too!

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Let us know the ONS quote...

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Did a massive increase in childhood vaccinations occur for those born around 1960, around a decade later, just like in the US? Those of us born in the late 50's became subject to mandatory MASS vaccination at school with the mumps jab, measles jab and a sugar cube (polio) -- at least this happened at my elementary school in either 1968 or 69 -- and it seemed to be we all just had to line up one day: no parent consent, didn't matter if we had these diseases prior, didn't matter if we had been vaccinated already. They shot one arm, spun you around, shot the other arm and then gave you the cube. It was an assembly line.

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I remember that clearly .

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Why is it so hard to produce datasets based on actual DOD?

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Gatekeepers. They have all the death certificate data that can easily be deidentified and made available as raw data but they explicitly choose not to, even after FOI request. Their persistent excuse is that analyses have to be changed retrospectively if based on occurrence-date data when it gets updated (well yeah, duh!!!). And, that the registration delays are not significant enough to make a difference since "most deaths are registered within a week". Those are not the deaths we're interested in... The fact that this is the official line from the very top tells you the magnitude of ignorance.

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Fascinating analysis thank you. I'm reminded of something I read about the 1918 Flu, in that it was thought that an earlier ILI conferred a natural immunity which is why in 1918 the Flu killed the working aged generation who missed this natural "vaccine". Either that or it was the small pox vaccine et al that set back a generation...

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If I can share an editorial comment/suggestion, it would be this: Substack readers need to become a part of the “10 percent (paid)” … not the current 1 to 4 percent.

Just like our adversaries are tripling down on their lies and cover-ups, our side needs to triple down on our support of the people who scare them the most.

In my latest article, I expound on several key Substack metrics and present one easy “solution” that would help our side more effectively fight - and scare - our adversaries …

Please read and share if you happen to think like I do.

https://billricejr.substack.com/p/fear-probably-explains-why-substacks?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

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This is fascinating. And if we wanted to help fund obtaining the dataset, how would we do it?

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Ideally, we're just looking for one or two sponsors who we would recognise in the publication (in a medical journal). However, if a number of people really want to support this, I don't see why we shouldn't be able to accommodate that. Once I get the quote, I'll make a formal proposal.

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