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A new study claims that COVID vaccines didn’t save as many lives as we were originally told.
But here’s the problem: the number of “lives saved” has always been based on mathematical models — not hard data. These models guess how many people might have died without vaccines, and then credit the vaccine for the difference. That’s a shaky foundation to begin with.
And when you factor in the CDC’s admitted overreporting of COVID deaths, those baselines become even more unreliable. So if we can’t trust the original death counts, how can we trust any claim built on top of them?
Even so, the recent JAMA study uses these math models to claim that most lives saved by the Covid vaccine were in elderly people. Even by these flawed models, very few young people were “saved” by the Covid vaccine. And yet they were still pressured to get vaccinated, despite the now well-documented risk of adverse effects in low-risk age groups.