BBC stymied over excess deaths, rules out COVID vaccine

The BBC is sounding the alarm over a concerning spike in excess deaths in the UK, speculating several possible causes while ruling out the COVID-19 injections. 

In an article titled, “Excess deaths in 2022 among worst in 50 years,” the BBC says more than 650,000 deaths were registered in the UK in 2022, a 9% jump from 2019 and one of the largest excess death levels outside the pandemic in 50 years. 

This, says the BBC, “raises questions about why more people are still dying than normal.” 

The globalist news outlet then lists COVID-19 as one possible cause but not “the main explanation for this excess.” 

The BBC also says that excess deaths really began rising in June 2022, taking a toll on hospitals and creating a “crisis in healthcare”. Notably, June 2022 is when the UK stopped publishing excess death data by vaccination status.

“At the start of 2022, death rates were looking like they'd returned to pre-pandemic levels,” says the article. “It wasn't until June that excess deaths really started to rise - just as the number of people waiting for hours on trolleys in English hospitals hit levels normally seen in winter.” Waiting times have hit between five and twelve hours, increasing the risk of death, says the BBC. 

The excess deaths have reportedly led to longer waiting times for urgent care and longer emergency response times, so that the ambulance response time for heart attacks and strokes in November averaged 48 minutes – 30 minutes above target. 

Then the site reports that heart problems and strokes are on the rise, most probably because people didn’t come in for screenings during the pandemic. 

“A number of studies have found people are more likely to have heart problems and strokes in the weeks and months after catching Covid, and some of these may not end up being linked to the virus when the death is registered. 

“As well as the impact on the heart of the virus itself, some of this may be contributed to by the fact many people didn't come in for screenings and non-urgent treatment during the peak of the pandemic, storing up trouble for the future.” 

But this jump in excess death was most definitely not caused by the COVID-19 shots, because there is no data supporting that, claims the BBC. The assertion comes despite scientific evidence that a rise in cardiac events is correlated to the COVID vaccines. 

The news corporation also repeated the government trope that while the mRNA vaccine can cause myocarditis and pericarditis, those cases are “extremely rare”. 

“One type of Covid vaccine has been linked to a small rise in cases of heart inflammation and scarring (pericarditis and myocarditis). But this particular vaccine side-effect was mainly seen in boys and young men, while the excess deaths are highest in older men - aged 50 or more. 

“And these cases are too rare - and mostly not fatal - to account for the excess in deaths.” 

However, the BBC had no problem diagnosing 24-year-old NFL player Damar Hamlin, who last week collapsed on the field from a sudden cardiac arrest, with a condition called commotio cordis which affects up to 20 people a year. 

Lastly, the BBC says that until June 2022, the unvaccinated were dying more than the vaccinated, which proves the vaccine is not the culprit.