New York Times Admits Multiple Coronavirus Deaths Under Biden ‘Despite Vaccines’

That New York Times provided horrific statistics the day before Thanksgiving, admitting that more people in the United States have died from the Chinese coronavirus this year, under President Joe Biden’s leadership, than last year, despite the widespread availability of vaccines.

That Times quoted The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Tuesday reported 386,233 coronavirus-related deaths in the United States by 2021. In all of 2020, the United States recorded 385,343 deaths. The former numbers are only expected to increase as there is still over a month left of the year.

Quotes “experts”, the Times attributed the increased deaths this year to a “confluence of factors”, focusing primarily on what it described as “significantly lower than necessary vaccination rates, but also the easing of daily measures such as masks and social distancing, and the increase in highly contagious Delta variant. “

Per den Times:

In essence, public health experts said, many Americans are behaving as if Covid-19 is now a manageable, endemic disease rather than a crisis – a transition that will happen eventually, but which has not happened yet.

Yet many also refuse to be vaccinated in the number required to make this transition to what researchers call “endemism,” which would mean that the virus would still circulate at a lower level with periodic increases and decreases, but not increases in the devastating cycles that have marked the pandemic. Only 59 percent of Americans are fully vaccinated, the lowest number of any group of 7 nations.

But placing the blame on “lower than necessary vaccination rates” seems to defy logic, as the vaccine has been widely available for most of the year.

The same cannot be said for 2020, when the world had just begun to discover what the virus was and where it came from. While the Trump administration moved to boost vaccine production through Operation Warp Speed, vaccines were not widely available to the entire eligible population until this year. Still, the rollout has shown that vaccinated individuals can still spread and infect the virus.

AUSTIN, TEXAS - AUGUST 07: EMS medics transport a man with possible Covid-19 symptoms to the hospital on August 7, 2020 in Austin, Texas. Nationwide, African American society remains disproportionately affected by the coronavirus pandemic. The Austin-Travis County EMS has seen the number of new admissions fall, even as Covid-19 deaths continue. (Photo by John Moore / Getty Images)

EMS medics transport a man with possible Covid-19 symptoms to the hospital in Austin, Texas. (John Moore / Getty Images)

That Times also attributed the increased deaths to “relaxation of daily precautions” – one of the main incentives officials shouted at Americans during the rollout of vaccines, many promising that vaccines would pave the way for Americans to return to a state of pre-pandemic normality . However, it turned out to be false as many localities and blue states reintroduced restrictions, including mask mandates, regardless of vaccination status.

Aside from that, Florida alone challenges the claim that lax mitigation measures are attributable to the spread and increased deaths. Sunshine State, whose governor Ron DeSantis (R) came under a barrage of constant control throughout the pandemic to prioritize personal freedom and refuse to keep the state incarcerated, still has the lowest case of coronavirus per capita. inhabitant of the country.

It has never had a nationwide mask mandate in place, even at the height of the pandemic.

That Times’ own coronavirus tracker, last up to date Wednesday shows Florida, which reports a daily average of 1,397 cases, or seven per. 100,000 – the lowest rate per. inhabitant of the country. Florida’s latest figures reflect a five percent drop in cases over the past 14 days.

States that reintroduced mandates, such as Illinois, are not doing so well, one reports daily average of 4,599 cases or 36 per. inhabitant. That equates to a 73 percent increase over the same period.

Other blue states, including Michigan, New York and Pennsylvania, are seeing similar trends.

Last year, during the second presidential debate, then-candidate Biden blamed President Trump for the coronavirus-related deaths in the United States.

“220,000 Americans Dead,” said Biden. “If you do not hear anything else I say tonight, then hear this – anyone responsible for so many deaths should not remain as President of the United States of America.”


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