Infowars | December 15, 2023

By Jamie White

“We’re left with the question, what happened in the American workplace in 2021 that led to this unprecedented rate of death?” asks Dr. Pierre Kory.

A critical care physician joined “The Ingraham Angle” Thursday to discuss why insurance actuaries are showing a “staggering” 158,000 more deaths among people in 2023 compared to 2019.

“In the first nine months of this year, 158,000 more Americans died unexpectedly than in all of 2019. That’s more than the casualties in every war since Vietnam. All of them combined,” host Laura Ingraham began.

“Now actuarial reports that young people are being disproportionately affected here. Mortality was 26% higher among insured 35 to 44 year olds and 19% for 25 to 34 year olds,” she said, adding that overall COVID deaths have dropped 84% since 2021.

Dr. Pierre Kory, Chief Medical Officer of the Frontline COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, suggested the experimental COVID-19 vaccine has something to do with the excess deaths among young people.

“The timing is really inarguable,” he said. “Why are the healthiest elements of society — these are young, employed folks with life insurance — suddenly started dying at rates we’ve never seen before in 2021? And it continues.”

“We’re left with the question, what happened in the American workplace in 2021 that led to this unprecedented rate of death?”

“We’ve never seen dying at this rate,” he added.

Kory suggested the COVID vaccine is contributing to the spike in death rates since he’s seen far more patients with “long vax” than “long Covid.”

“I specialize in COVID care. Not only acute, but I specialize in Long Covid and Long Vax,” he said. “Long Vax is the chronic illness that’s triggered by the vaccine. It’s way more common than Long Covid. And I have thousands of patients that are decimated. Their health is disturbed.”

Kory called for “answers” from the government he claimed routinely “ignore and dismiss” the alarming findings.

“Sounds like a coverup,” Ingraham replied.

Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Robert Califf recently lamented the “catastrophic” decline in U.S. life expectancy.

Insurance actuaries also predict the trend will continue through 2030, especially among young people.

From The Science Times:

Industry analysts and actuaries predict that excess deaths will continue among people with life insurance through 2030 and will be highest at younger ages. This prediction contradicts normal mortality expectations for a vigorous population with life insurance. The worst is even expected from poorly insured Americans who are afflicted by disabilities.

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