Mainstream news outlets seemed to be on board in touting the necessity and success of the COVID-19 lockdowns, with Reuters claiming that they “saved lives”. Source. Now The Telegraph, another mainstream news outlet in the UK, reports on what various scientists and doctors (known generally as ‘conspiracy theorists’, especially those that opposed lockdowns and vaccine mandates) have been saying for some time now, that there has recently been a mysterious spike in non-COVID-19 deaths. They explain that in the UK “around 1,000 more people than usual are currently dying each week from conditions other than the virus”, and even that “the number of excess deaths not from Covid dwarfs the number linked to the virus”. They recognise that “the figures suggest the country is facing a new silent health crisis linked to the pandemic response rather than to the virus itself”, with lockdowns posited as a likely culprit, amidst the “concern that the deaths are linked to delays to and deferment of treatment for conditions such as cancer, diabetes and heart disease”.
MSM acknowledges non-COVID excess deaths. Lockdowns? Vaccines?
MSM acknowledges non-COVID excess deaths…
MSM acknowledges non-COVID excess deaths. Lockdowns? Vaccines?
Mainstream news outlets seemed to be on board in touting the necessity and success of the COVID-19 lockdowns, with Reuters claiming that they “saved lives”. Source. Now The Telegraph, another mainstream news outlet in the UK, reports on what various scientists and doctors (known generally as ‘conspiracy theorists’, especially those that opposed lockdowns and vaccine mandates) have been saying for some time now, that there has recently been a mysterious spike in non-COVID-19 deaths. They explain that in the UK “around 1,000 more people than usual are currently dying each week from conditions other than the virus”, and even that “the number of excess deaths not from Covid dwarfs the number linked to the virus”. They recognise that “the figures suggest the country is facing a new silent health crisis linked to the pandemic response rather than to the virus itself”, with lockdowns posited as a likely culprit, amidst the “concern that the deaths are linked to delays to and deferment of treatment for conditions such as cancer, diabetes and heart disease”.