In any given month, the active duty military is approximately 1.34 million members. Military personnel retire or leave the service and others replace these personnel every month. As a ballpark estimate, I’d guess that at least 1.75 million Americans served in the active duty of the military in the first 3 years of the pandemic.
In any given month, the active duty military is approximately 1.34 million members. Military personnel retire or leave the service and others replace these personnel every month. As a ballpark estimate, I’d guess that at least 1.75 million Americans served in the active duty of the military in the first 3 years of the pandemic.
The active duty military largely consists of healthy and young adults. From a cohort of 1.75 million, I don’t think 37 people would die from this disease even over three years.
One reason I suspect this is that I’ve also researched deaths from Covid among college and professional athletes in America.
Per my research, no college athlete has died from Covid in the past three years.
I previously estimated that more than 1 million young adults participated in college or professional sports in the past three years.
This would include male and female athletes at every college that has intercollegiate athletics (Division III, Division II, I-AA, Division I, NAIA, junior college and the professional sports).
If the same Covid death rate applied to active duty military as it does among college athletes, college sports would have had had at least 20 Covid deaths … but it had zero.
Both groups consist of young, healthy people and the total numbers of college athletes is not that different than the total number of active duty military. It seems to me the college and pro athlete death numbers (zero) are more believable than the military’s numbers.
I'm 65, I've now had Covid three times (Feb. 20; Oct. 22; Oct. 23), and it hasn't killed me yet! I've had no jabs and I'm in generally good health, but I'm certainly not as fit as these 20-somethings currently serving!
So I'm sure you're right about the very low number of Covid deaths in the military.
If I remember correctly, the first military death occurred in late March 2020 (a reservist). As this article documents, the vast majority happened in 2021 and 2022 with more than half occurring in a few months in late 2021.
So almost all the Covid deaths happened after lockdowns, mitigation measures and the roll-out of the vaccines. Of course, I think the novel coronavirus began to spread in society (and in the military) in October and November 2019. A virus this contagious would have washed through naval vessels and cramped military barracks.
Question: Where are all the "Covid deaths" BEFORE March 2020? There are none. So why did a virus that didn't kill anyone when it was rampant (in the "cold and flu season of the winter of 2019-2020) suddenly start killing people after April 2020? And why did the majority of deaths allegedly occur more than 16 months after the real start of the pandemic?
To me at least, nothing in the official narrative adds up or makes sense.
In any given month, the active duty military is approximately 1.34 million members. Military personnel retire or leave the service and others replace these personnel every month. As a ballpark estimate, I’d guess that at least 1.75 million Americans served in the active duty of the military in the first 3 years of the pandemic.
The active duty military largely consists of healthy and young adults. From a cohort of 1.75 million, I don’t think 37 people would die from this disease even over three years.
One reason I suspect this is that I’ve also researched deaths from Covid among college and professional athletes in America.
Per my research, no college athlete has died from Covid in the past three years.
I previously estimated that more than 1 million young adults participated in college or professional sports in the past three years.
This would include male and female athletes at every college that has intercollegiate athletics (Division III, Division II, I-AA, Division I, NAIA, junior college and the professional sports).
If the same Covid death rate applied to active duty military as it does among college athletes, college sports would have had had at least 20 Covid deaths … but it had zero.
Both groups consist of young, healthy people and the total numbers of college athletes is not that different than the total number of active duty military. It seems to me the college and pro athlete death numbers (zero) are more believable than the military’s numbers.
I'm 65, I've now had Covid three times (Feb. 20; Oct. 22; Oct. 23), and it hasn't killed me yet! I've had no jabs and I'm in generally good health, but I'm certainly not as fit as these 20-somethings currently serving!
So I'm sure you're right about the very low number of Covid deaths in the military.
If I remember correctly, the first military death occurred in late March 2020 (a reservist). As this article documents, the vast majority happened in 2021 and 2022 with more than half occurring in a few months in late 2021.
So almost all the Covid deaths happened after lockdowns, mitigation measures and the roll-out of the vaccines. Of course, I think the novel coronavirus began to spread in society (and in the military) in October and November 2019. A virus this contagious would have washed through naval vessels and cramped military barracks.
Question: Where are all the "Covid deaths" BEFORE March 2020? There are none. So why did a virus that didn't kill anyone when it was rampant (in the "cold and flu season of the winter of 2019-2020) suddenly start killing people after April 2020? And why did the majority of deaths allegedly occur more than 16 months after the real start of the pandemic?
To me at least, nothing in the official narrative adds up or makes sense.