There is a reason the Biden regime is trying to attack Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and create an illusion of a disproportionate viral crisis in the state. With no state-declared emergency restrictions since last September, the fact that Florida is better than the national average fully exposes the lie of the blockade and masks that have some effect on the fixed natural progression of the virus.
Dr. Fauci suggests a new scientific principle: schools cannot reopen until Congress passes another “stimulus” bill. However, in Florida, schools have been open year-round and the state’s death toll for 2020 is the 16th lowest in the country, according to a new analysis. In addition, Sunshine State, considered God’s waiting room for the elderly, experienced the 11th per capita death rate for COVID for the elderly in 2020.
A new analysis conducted by RationalGround.com and obtained exclusively by TheBlaze collected CDC excess mortality data for 49 states (excluding North Carolina, which has incomplete data) and ranked states from lowest to highest increase of excess deaths from 2019 to 2020. as we have seen in study after study, there is an absolutely zero correlation between non-pharmaceutical interventions, such as the closure of companies and schools or mask mandates, and a lower rate of excess deaths.
According to the CDC’s table of excess deaths, there was a 16.9% national increase in all-cause mortality in 2020 compared to 2019. Given the rare way COVID deaths are accounted for, it will take quite some time. to determine how many these deaths are. due to COVID and how many are due to panic, anxiety, blockages and lack of attention, but what is clear is that there is no correlation between political measures taken by one state and fewer deaths by all the causes.
Florida, which is the third largest state, has the 16th lowest increase in deaths from all causes and all states that had fewer excess deaths than Florida are much smaller and are mostly states with a lower population density . California, on the other hand, was ranked No. 40.
What is most striking is that if you rank the number of deaths from COVID-19 among seniors by state per 100,000, Florida ranks 11th lowest in the country. Florida suffered 474 deaths from COVID per 100,000, while California suffered 573 per 100,000. Florida also overcame some smaller block states:
Remember, California did everything “right”. The state implemented the most severe and old blocking and mask mandates. Only 5% of schoolchildren have returned to school. In contrast, Florida has had no statewide restrictions for months and almost all children returned to school in September. In addition, Florida has become the premier destination for both people who move permanently and for vacations during the winter’s large winter spread of the virus. According to those who believe that the human contribution is what determines the trajectory of the virus, Florida, especially with its older population, should have been to the bottom, with a much higher mortality from causes.
Again, the media have literally no idea what is going on because only the bad guys are followed irresponsibly … https://t.co/ZErQOtxH66
– IM (@IM)1612889969.0
Yes, some of the lowest cause mortality states are blue states, such as Hawaii and Vermont. But so are red states, such as West Virginia and Alaska. In general, the states with the lowest population density and the most isolated had fewer deaths. Hawaii is the most isolated state of all. Florida, being the third most populous state, outnumbered the numbers from 4 to 12 with a lower percentage of excess deaths among seniors. In addition, with the country’s highest unemployment rate, Hawaii will face an excess of miserable deaths over the next few years.
Rational Ground analysis used CDC excess mortality data (predicted / weighted for 2019 and provisional for 2020) to classify states according to all-cause mortality increases and used COVID provisional deaths -19 CDC by sex, age and state to classify -Capita COVID-19 deaths by state for the elderly population. If anything, as California figures continue to be updated, they will get worse because most of their deaths occurred at the end of the year.
When school closures and closures began last March, totalitarians predicted the nightmare scenario of children killing their grandparents, despite existing evidence that children did not contribute much to community outreach. . Well, this chart created by Rational Ground contributor Kyle Lamb, who compares Florida to other states in terms of school reopening, is worth more than 1,000 words.
This graph uses the Burbio school opening tracker, which tabulates the percentage of public school students in all school districts in each state who have face-to-face instruction at their disposal. As you can see, nearly 100% of Florida students have access to face-to-face instruction, according to the governor’s order early last year. However, the state has fewer pediatric cases per 100,000 in total since the beginning of the pandemic than other states with very few children in school, including California, where only 5.4% of public school students they have access to face-to-face classes.
Let’s not forget that states like California and Illinois will suffer an excess of deaths over the next few years as a result of these illogical and inhumane decisions. The University of California published a study in JAMA that estimated a cumulative loss of 5.53 million years of life for this generation of children due to the loss of educational studies.
So literally, there is no benefit to closing schools, closing companies or wearing masks. Everything is pain and zero gain. California has nothing to show for its year-round closure, but more deaths per capita and 30% more unemployment than Florida, as well as all the long-term excess deaths induced by despair that we will tragically account for during the next years. As for Florida, it doesn’t need a stimulus to reopen schools; opening schools and society is the stimulus.
Editor’s note: The original title of this piece and a line indicated that Florida ranks 11th in excess of deaths among seniors. They have been corrected to the 11th death toll per capita in the elderly.