That's funny. The definitive data about deaths in 2020 will only be available in 2022, yet, he somehow knows them in advance.
Here is some real data (coming from CDC, nor a random retard on Twitter):
Due to lag time in reporting, official data on 2020 deaths will likely not be released until early 2022. However, preliminary weekly data can provide estimates of how the pandemic affected deaths in the US this year.
So far, more than 290,000 Americans have died of COVID-19. According to preliminary weekly data from the Centers for Disease Control and Protection (CDC), 2,926,129 people have died from all causes between January 1 and November 28 of this year. While this data is preliminary and is incomplete for the last eight weeks, it provides for useful context.
According to the same estimates, 2,852,590 people died in 2019, meaning at least 73,000 more people have died so far in 2020 than 2019, despite missing or incomplete data for October through December. If deaths continue at the weekly average of approximately 60,000 per week, at least 240,000 more people would die in 2020, resulting in more than 3.1 million deaths. If the population grew at the same rate in 2020 as in 2019 (0.5%), this would result in a death rate of 9.4 deaths per 1,000, making it the highest death rate in decades.
For context, the most recent estimates from the Census Bureau, which are from 2017, projected that there would be 2.75 million deaths in 2020, accounting for an aging population. The Census Bureau did not expect the nation to reach 3.1 million deaths until 2029 or 2030.
Deaths in 2020 are above average for almost every age group compared to 2015-2019, according to preliminary data from the CDC. Deaths are around average levels for people 25 and younger, which is the age group least affected by COVID-19 deaths. Total deaths in this age group were actually slightly below average during lockdowns at the start of the pandemic. This may be because travel was down, perhaps reducing the leading cause of death for this age group — accidents.
However, deaths have been 20-50% above average levels for most age groups. Deaths among people 25-44 have been particularly above normal, since deaths among people this young are generally low.
I'm not saying that usafacts is wrong, but it was created by a jew. They have proven themselves to be untrustworthy.
I don't care who created it, i don't even care about "usafacts", what i care is that they are reporting CDC data, not simply quoting some random anon from Twitter...
But you won't know how or why they manipulated the data slightly. Just enough to fit their narrative and just small enough you won't notice. You rely on them for facts is like saying you rely on the mainstream media for news.
You're right about the totals being delayed.
I made the mistake of bringing up the stats and wound up arguing someone claiming that deaths increased 20%. So, I found the CDC raw data.
Had 5 years of flu and pneumonia deaths and covid deaths for 2020. The thing is, it was actually on a rate to be about 5% loser than average until November.
So, I analyzed the data a little bit and what do you know, at November in the raw data the numbers no longer add to the totals but 20% above totals. The normie could not explain the discrepancy either.
(post is archived)