You can pull these numbers directly from the VAERS data found on CDC website:
 For comparison purposes, I tried to get an idea of the number of vaccinations over the past 10 years. From the CDC website, the closest I could easily find was the period from 2006-2016, where there were a total of 3,153,876,236 total vaccinations distributed in the US (https://www.hrsa.gov/sites/default/files/hrsa/vaccine-compensation/monthly-website-stats-2-01-18.pdf). Over the most recent 10 years, that number should be even higher due to population growth. Over the last 5 months, there have been 309M COVID vaccinations given. Yet in those 5 months, the total number of deaths from vaccines eclipsed those of the past 10 years combined, despite the number of vaccinations being ~an order of magnitude less (or 10%) of the past 10 years! That’s pretty eye-opening. This is completely discounting the unknown long-term effects of these vaccines, which I think we’re likely to find are going to show other problems as well.
This is deaths only, I did not delve into all possible side effects, which I expect would be just as alarming, if not more so. There are some startling numbers to be found there, including nearly 600 VAERS reports of pregnancy deaths after the vaccines. Yes, it's still early to draw conclusions, but based on these numbers, you certainly can't state with any certainty that these vaccines are safe, and you can't fault anyone who cares enough to open their eyes to question the effects of these vaccines, until that safety is proven long-term. That's just common sense.
Again, I can't recall such a public psy-op campaign since the Iraq war. If you dared to question that Iraq was involved in 911 or that they had weapons of mass destruction, you were not a "patriot". In fact, just the opposite was true, and it was every American's duty to educate themselves and question the misinformation that was being put out there. There were plenty of reasons then to question, and there are plenty of reasons now. And instead of decrying those who dare to question and mindlessly follow the crowd, we should respect and be thankful we have people who are strong enough individualists to seek out and demand the truth, whatever that may turn out to be. Honestly, think back to that situation and others like it- did you just follow the crowd or were you able to think for yourself? Are you doing the same now? That's a rhetorical question for you to answer honestly to yourself, but it's self-evident that most have to answer that question that they followed the crowd. |