The Kaiser Family Foundation, July 24, 2020: “Adults 65 and older account for 16% of the US population but 80% of COVID-19 deaths in the US.”
AARP, April 1, 2021: “95 percent of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. have occurred among people who were 50 or older.”
Memo to financial investigators: Calculate how much money government and private insurers are saving, because they don’t have to keep paying for the long-term care of all the old people who are dying premature deaths in nursing homes. The money number will be staggering.
As of May 22, 2020, Forbes reported that, “…in the 43 states that currently report such figures, an astounding 42% of all COVID-19 deaths have taken place in nursing homes and assisted living facilities.”
Washington Post, May 18, 2020: “The World Health Organization said half of Europe’s covid-19 deaths occurred in such facilities.”
Headline of same Post article: “Canada’s nursing home crisis: 81 percent of coronavirus deaths [in the country] are in long-term care facilities.”
The Guardian, April 13, 2020: “About half of all Covid-19 deaths appear to be happening in care homes in some European countries…Snapshot data from varying official sources shows that in Italy, Spain, France, Ireland and Belgium between 42% and 57% of deaths from the virus have been happening in homes, according to the report by academics based at the London School of Economics (LSE).”
To an astounding extent, COVID-19 was a nursing home assault. Mass murder by cruelty. The elderly in nursing homes were primary targets. Getting them to die earlier is the tactic, in order to pump up the fake covid mortality numbers and save billions in unfunded liabilities.
===================
This report was May 28, 2020:
"The data shows that more than 80 long-term-care facilities in Massachusetts had recorded at least 20 coronavirus-related deaths.
The Leavitt Family Jewish Home in Longmeadow held the highest coronavirus-related death toll with 66, followed by Mary Immaculate Nursing/Restorative Center in Lawrence with 64 and the Courtyard Nursing Care Center in Medford with 60.
Out of the 6,547 deaths reported in Massachusetts as of Wednesday, 4,041 were residents of long-term care facilities, state data shows."
Wow Allen, that is a great comment! Thank you for all that pertinent information. It ties in perfectly where my post left off. I have no doubt that the killing off if pensioners was deliberate for the reasons you lay out.
And even with what I found and you added to, it is just the tip of the iceberg.
The EU faces a critical, looming pension and social spending crisis driven by an aging population, with unfunded public pension liabilities often exceeding national debt levels.
This "demographic capture" threatens to overwhelm fiscal capacity as the working-age population shrinks, potentially doubling public debt by 2040 and requiring severe reforms or benefit cuts.
The United States faces a massive, long-term fiscal challenge with roughly $80trillion to $120 trillion in unfunded, promised obligations over the next 75 years. Driven primarily by Medicare and Social Security, these liabilities represent costs that exceed projected revenue. Additionally, state and local governments face a $1.3 trillion to $1.65 trillion shortfall in public pension funds.
How to make an immediate and large-scale impact on these unfunded liabilities while setting in motion numerous other long desired objectives? They would never do that would they? Some people are afraid to face these realities.
All of this was easily accomplished- incentives, coercion and mandatory protocols.
Another little stat. Around 10% of the total healthcare costs in the US are spent in the last six months of a person's life. 40% of those costs occur during the final month of life.
Speaks volumes about what has transpired and one of the reasons why.
Rather that gov accepting responsibility for mismanagement of funds paid by those who eventually get old , they murdered them . Along with injecting the population with slow relief poison ?
This is brutally clear and clearly brutal. Your focus is sharp and direct, and this case may be your most concise and impactful example to date - really well done, thanks.
i would note that the tables you used show active members: working and contributing into those funds. the loss of active contributors would show lower contributions.
pension funds would pay out ONLY a death benefit to survivors/beneficiaries. as far as medical they only pay a percentage of contracted insurance plan. long term facility care is not paid for by the pension fund only the monthly plan cost.
so a key to this is in the employee contracts and changes made during those years in how much more percentage of plans active but disabled and retirees and the government would now assume & pay going forward.
also where are those top line investments? which would be hard to find.
but what industries investments produced such high returns...because the separate member contributions would not account for it.
Thank you Anne for those great points. It is true that a lot more can be understood by looking at any changes that may have been done to the benefits. I have not dug into that yet. The types of investment would be instructive, as you say. I can tell you that some pensions did not see as amazing returns as this one in Massachusetts. The explanation is that the type of investment was less responsive to the market conditions at the time. For instance, Colorado, another Ghost Bomb location, did not do near as well. I believe they only saw a 12 to 16 percent return - but that is still pretty good.
i realized you are revealing your research method and findings in the 2 articles i read. i also realized I dont know your focus, purpose & goal. i noticed most comments related to deaths in longterm facilities & the age groups which are unrelated to your info shown.
ty for your reply. i am a drive by, saw comment and came by. i appreciate your work. the more research from different angles is awesome! thank you for following yours!
Absolutely! TY for the statement!! your writing portrayed that quite well actually. well done. your angle of approach is unique, i havent seen it before.
I don't follow your logic concerning investment gains versus plandemic deaths among elderly. Investment gains are purely a function of stock market behavior, which has beeen mostly up since 2009. So stocks go up and pension fund stock holdings rise in market value.
We're probably getting close to a substantial drop in stock averages prices now. If so, then I will now make a radical prediction: Pension funds will report a drop in the market value of their stocks and other investments. (That prediction and $5 will buy you coffee at most restaurants).
Thanks for the interesting reports on death spikes in various states.
We are in agreement about this. Everything you just explained about the relationship between pension fund investments and the behavior of the overall stock market is very true. I am not claiming that these six state pensions received any unique treatment in that respect. If I have the time, I would like to look at all state pensions and just report the numbers. I am sure every one will have a good gain in 2021. (Except Colorado, for some reason.) If I were able to do that complete list, then maybe a comparison of how great the returns were state to state could be informative. The reason these six were singled out is because they are unique in the strange spring 2020 death surge & they were some of the very worst solvent pensions as of 2019. To be clear, the spring 2020 death surge is CDC all cause death for all age groups, not just the elderly, but surely they were the majority.
If I seemed to suggest I know 100% what happened, I apologize for that. I mostly hoped here to report numbers and let the reader connect what dots they may.
Sending hot jab batches to the most problematic areas is easy enough, given the centralized control of the military. Which reinforces the truth that they knew every little detail about spike design outcomes. Very early on, there was a person claiming to have worked in a biotech company producing the jab, that said there were enhancements made to different batches. The story was deemed credible by those with experience in the working of those assembly lines.
I totally believe that is possible aj. If I were testing out a new weapon, I would want to know the various ways it could be implemented. Try out different 'explosive' characteristics, so to speak. Hey, roll out the false flag in some strategic spots on the map ... what the heck, why not?
The Kaiser Family Foundation, July 24, 2020: “Adults 65 and older account for 16% of the US population but 80% of COVID-19 deaths in the US.”
AARP, April 1, 2021: “95 percent of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. have occurred among people who were 50 or older.”
Memo to financial investigators: Calculate how much money government and private insurers are saving, because they don’t have to keep paying for the long-term care of all the old people who are dying premature deaths in nursing homes. The money number will be staggering.
As of May 22, 2020, Forbes reported that, “…in the 43 states that currently report such figures, an astounding 42% of all COVID-19 deaths have taken place in nursing homes and assisted living facilities.”
Washington Post, May 18, 2020: “The World Health Organization said half of Europe’s covid-19 deaths occurred in such facilities.”
Headline of same Post article: “Canada’s nursing home crisis: 81 percent of coronavirus deaths [in the country] are in long-term care facilities.”
The Guardian, April 13, 2020: “About half of all Covid-19 deaths appear to be happening in care homes in some European countries…Snapshot data from varying official sources shows that in Italy, Spain, France, Ireland and Belgium between 42% and 57% of deaths from the virus have been happening in homes, according to the report by academics based at the London School of Economics (LSE).”
To an astounding extent, COVID-19 was a nursing home assault. Mass murder by cruelty. The elderly in nursing homes were primary targets. Getting them to die earlier is the tactic, in order to pump up the fake covid mortality numbers and save billions in unfunded liabilities.
===================
This report was May 28, 2020:
"The data shows that more than 80 long-term-care facilities in Massachusetts had recorded at least 20 coronavirus-related deaths.
The Leavitt Family Jewish Home in Longmeadow held the highest coronavirus-related death toll with 66, followed by Mary Immaculate Nursing/Restorative Center in Lawrence with 64 and the Courtyard Nursing Care Center in Medford with 60.
Out of the 6,547 deaths reported in Massachusetts as of Wednesday, 4,041 were residents of long-term care facilities, state data shows."
https://www.nbcboston.com/news/coronavirus/startling-data-released-on-coronavirus-cases-at-massachusetts-nursing-homes/2132468/
Wow Allen, that is a great comment! Thank you for all that pertinent information. It ties in perfectly where my post left off. I have no doubt that the killing off if pensioners was deliberate for the reasons you lay out.
And even with what I found and you added to, it is just the tip of the iceberg.
The EU faces a critical, looming pension and social spending crisis driven by an aging population, with unfunded public pension liabilities often exceeding national debt levels.
This "demographic capture" threatens to overwhelm fiscal capacity as the working-age population shrinks, potentially doubling public debt by 2040 and requiring severe reforms or benefit cuts.
The United States faces a massive, long-term fiscal challenge with roughly $80trillion to $120 trillion in unfunded, promised obligations over the next 75 years. Driven primarily by Medicare and Social Security, these liabilities represent costs that exceed projected revenue. Additionally, state and local governments face a $1.3 trillion to $1.65 trillion shortfall in public pension funds.
How to make an immediate and large-scale impact on these unfunded liabilities while setting in motion numerous other long desired objectives? They would never do that would they? Some people are afraid to face these realities.
All of this was easily accomplished- incentives, coercion and mandatory protocols.
Watch the 17:15-18:15 minute mark:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8aE2HF0jwJo&ab_channel=OxbowAdvisors
Article:
https://www.bruegel.org/first-glance/real-obstacle-eu-capital-market-integration-unreformed-pension-systems
Article:
https://www.truthinaccounting.org/news/detail/the-burden-of-unfunded-pension-liabilities-a-national-crisis-in-state-finances
!!!
Another little stat. Around 10% of the total healthcare costs in the US are spent in the last six months of a person's life. 40% of those costs occur during the final month of life.
Speaks volumes about what has transpired and one of the reasons why.
Have I understood this correctly Allan.
Rather that gov accepting responsibility for mismanagement of funds paid by those who eventually get old , they murdered them . Along with injecting the population with slow relief poison ?
You have.
Good .
I’m practicing “ the understatement “.
Until I can feel…my feet on solid ground. Step by step.
Once there I will simply be , myself ie kinda raw and brash -but honest and in integrity.
That should read “ slow release “ !
This is brutally clear and clearly brutal. Your focus is sharp and direct, and this case may be your most concise and impactful example to date - really well done, thanks.
Thank you David. That is truly nice to hear. I know you see all the angles in this topic. Well, I guess I have a new mini project here.
Stay tuned.
i would note that the tables you used show active members: working and contributing into those funds. the loss of active contributors would show lower contributions.
pension funds would pay out ONLY a death benefit to survivors/beneficiaries. as far as medical they only pay a percentage of contracted insurance plan. long term facility care is not paid for by the pension fund only the monthly plan cost.
so a key to this is in the employee contracts and changes made during those years in how much more percentage of plans active but disabled and retirees and the government would now assume & pay going forward.
also where are those top line investments? which would be hard to find.
but what industries investments produced such high returns...because the separate member contributions would not account for it.
Thank you Anne for those great points. It is true that a lot more can be understood by looking at any changes that may have been done to the benefits. I have not dug into that yet. The types of investment would be instructive, as you say. I can tell you that some pensions did not see as amazing returns as this one in Massachusetts. The explanation is that the type of investment was less responsive to the market conditions at the time. For instance, Colorado, another Ghost Bomb location, did not do near as well. I believe they only saw a 12 to 16 percent return - but that is still pretty good.
i realized you are revealing your research method and findings in the 2 articles i read. i also realized I dont know your focus, purpose & goal. i noticed most comments related to deaths in longterm facilities & the age groups which are unrelated to your info shown.
ty for your reply. i am a drive by, saw comment and came by. i appreciate your work. the more research from different angles is awesome! thank you for following yours!
Focus, purpose and goal.
Find officially published numbers that can be analyzed for signals of harm caused by the coerced "covid" vaccinations.
The whole financial element is a tangent from that.
Absolutely! TY for the statement!! your writing portrayed that quite well actually. well done. your angle of approach is unique, i havent seen it before.
I don't follow your logic concerning investment gains versus plandemic deaths among elderly. Investment gains are purely a function of stock market behavior, which has beeen mostly up since 2009. So stocks go up and pension fund stock holdings rise in market value.
We're probably getting close to a substantial drop in stock averages prices now. If so, then I will now make a radical prediction: Pension funds will report a drop in the market value of their stocks and other investments. (That prediction and $5 will buy you coffee at most restaurants).
Thanks for the interesting reports on death spikes in various states.
Well Rider, not sure if you are out there getting my replies or not.
But I have to thank you for your comment again. It caused me to think about what I had written in this post a little deeper.
I give you, anonymously, much credit for the follow up post:
https://open.substack.com/pub/csofand/p/the-sunday-night-preemptive-strike?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=1ldnqe
Not sure if you have read that or not, but I would like to know your thoughts.
Thank you Rider.
We are in agreement about this. Everything you just explained about the relationship between pension fund investments and the behavior of the overall stock market is very true. I am not claiming that these six state pensions received any unique treatment in that respect. If I have the time, I would like to look at all state pensions and just report the numbers. I am sure every one will have a good gain in 2021. (Except Colorado, for some reason.) If I were able to do that complete list, then maybe a comparison of how great the returns were state to state could be informative. The reason these six were singled out is because they are unique in the strange spring 2020 death surge & they were some of the very worst solvent pensions as of 2019. To be clear, the spring 2020 death surge is CDC all cause death for all age groups, not just the elderly, but surely they were the majority.
If I seemed to suggest I know 100% what happened, I apologize for that. I mostly hoped here to report numbers and let the reader connect what dots they may.
Thank you.
HA! Sadly, as we age we become MORE of a target! 🎯 Methinks often now, "What evil will happen NEXT?" 😲
Sending hot jab batches to the most problematic areas is easy enough, given the centralized control of the military. Which reinforces the truth that they knew every little detail about spike design outcomes. Very early on, there was a person claiming to have worked in a biotech company producing the jab, that said there were enhancements made to different batches. The story was deemed credible by those with experience in the working of those assembly lines.
I totally believe that is possible aj. If I were testing out a new weapon, I would want to know the various ways it could be implemented. Try out different 'explosive' characteristics, so to speak. Hey, roll out the false flag in some strategic spots on the map ... what the heck, why not?
Thank you P.S.I.
I would like to see what results your tracking produced. Are they similar to my findings?
Yes, the safeguards for the pensioners, and all of us, do not seem to be working!