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[–]StillLessons 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (1 child)

No. I concede your point. Given that Kirsch is using a statistical tool (numerical analysis in graph form) to make his argument, it is only fair that those numbers have a statistical comparison from earlier times, which I cannot provide. You are right.

My personal experience tells me he is absolutely right, but to state so in a statistical way, as done in his post, I cannot defend.

Statistics regarding vaccine injury/death for the broader society, however, do exist in the VAERS database, which is monthly, going back to 1991. Those statistics tell exactly the same story being told here on a much broader scale.

[–]Markimus 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

If you look at these stats for example you see this year is the highest, but there's plenty that are within a few.

I think it's possible that the covid jab exacerbates heart issues in athletes because we've seen the stats on the increasing prevalence of myocarditis; specifically in young men who make up 100% of these athletes. When you factor in that all of them are on PEDs which also cause heart issues (look how many bodybuilders and shit die of heart attacks young) there's probably some effect but the difference isn't massive really. Also to note from this we can't really conclude that the vaccine has the same effect in the general population who aren't on various steroids and other performance enhancing drugs. We'd need other data, a sample of elite athletes who are doing many multiple times the amount of aerobic and anaerobic activity compared to the average person, at a higher intensity as well as being on a bunch of drugs doesn't really say much about the average person. It's similar to how studies that take a sample of beginner trainees in the gym doesn't really say anything about advanced and elite level athletes' training needs.