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Covid Part 3 – Global Statistics

Covid-19 Worldwide


The data for this section comes from worldometers.info so it’s a little different from what the CDC is saying.

Just like with the states, we show a variety of countries for the sake of comparison. This is just a sampling so feel free to look through the website to get a better feel.

Once again we see no strong correlation between population and deaths per million. We also see no correlation between population density and death rate, or wealth and death rate. And we again see no correlation between locking down and having a lower death rate.

As with the US numbers, this likely indicates the true cause of high death rates is in a country’s reaction to the virus and its methods (or lack thereof) of treatment. Interesting how the impoverished African countries had so many fewer deaths than we did. Perhaps we should copy their medical systems.

Here’s a small article on what happened in Taiwan, a country with super high population density right next to China and 0.3 deaths per million. You’ll never hear about it on the mainstream news.

Comparing C19 to Other Causes of Death

For starters, tuberculosis kills an average of 1.5 million people every year and our media doesn’t bat an eyelash. Totally curable.


So far the Covid-19 death toll is a little worse than an average flu, and not nearly as bad as the 1889-90 flu, 1918 flu, 1977 asian flu, or 1968 Hong Kong flu. Remember all the fear-mongering comparisons of C19 to the 1918 flu?

Ambient air pollution kills 4.2 million annually according to the WHO. Worldwide Covid death count is a little under 700,000 and flatlining.

No one is publicly concerned in the US by the yearly worldwide flu deaths, tuberculosis deaths, or air pollution deaths. I could go on with the worldwide chronic disease deaths also but you get the point. C19 is not a killer pandemic akin to the bubonic plague. Why are the global organizations lining up to remake the whole world as a result? See part 12.

Part 4 – Diagnosis