In my previous post on New Brunswick:
COVID-[Jab]-related Strokes and Heart Attacks in New Brunswick
CBC, May 18, 2023: “After N.B.'s deadliest year, COVID-related strokes and heart attacks are in the spotlight”: Haley Jones is 32 and struggling with cardiac problems that developed after she came down with COVID-19 last December. "My heart rate was going up as high as 200. I was very short of breath. I couldn't walk and talk at the same time," said the…
, a little good Canadian province that is used to doing Big Brother’s bidding with fervor (including sacrificing their bodily autonomy) has found itself on the fast track to extinction. Their question is “why us”? The answer is “because”.
Now that we have some mortality data for 2023, the stark picture is getting starker:
Note how the mortality data from 2018 is somewhat higher than 2020? 2020 being the year we all lived dangerously without any protection of Covid-19 “vaccinations”, of course. Who would have thought?
Yet, somewhere in the middle of 2021, after full “vaccination” protection kicked in, there is a mortality divergence emerging that keeps growing in 2022, reaching obscene levels by the fall of 2022, only to be beaten by what is shaping up to be the killer year of 2023. Keep safe, folks!
https://anamihalceamdphd.substack.com/p/karen-kingston-and-dr-ana-mihalcea-b7d?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=956088&post_id=125762686&isFreemail=true&utm_medium=email
Figured you might find this interesting. Just checked in with StatCan to see if they have up-to-date mortality statistics and saw they added a mortality dashboard:
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/71-607-x/71-607-x2021028-eng.htm
Check out the bottom chart. You can see what is most likely a pull-forward effect Jan 2021 when jabs were first being rolled out. Then after the larger push which peaked June-July 2021, we have been consistently above the 95% confidence level in mortality. 2023 seems to be incomplete after the first week or so... looks like most provinces have stopped reporting this to the StatCan database.