Bulletin N° 1087
Subject : An Alert from CEIMSA.
February
1, 2023
Grenoble
Dear
Colleagues and Friends of CEIMSA,
Please
see this powerful 5-part documentary:
“Never
Again Is Now Global” Parts 1 - 5
https://live.childrenshealthdefense.org/chd-tv/events/never-again-is-now-global/
and
For
more information visit CEIMSA Bulletin N°1086:
CEIMSA UPDATE. « J’accuse » à l’americaine
- an American interpretation of the crime of the century, to be
continued….
http://www.ceimsa.org/archives/bull-1086.htm
+
‘Cause Unknown’: Former BlackRock Manager Details ‘Epidemic of Sudden Deaths’ in New Book
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/cause-unknown-book-edward-dowd-sudden-deaths-cola/
by Dr. Joseph Mercola
In “Cause Unknown: The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021 and 2022,” former BlackRock fund manager Edward Dowd details insurance industry data showing that in 2021, group life policyholders ages 25 through 64 — a far healthier subset of the general population than people outside that age group — suddenly experienced 40% excess mortality, compared to 32% in the general population.
Story at a glance:
- In his new book, “Cause Unknown: The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021 and 2022,” former BlackRock fund manager Edward Dowd details data showing the COVID-19 shots are a crime against humanity.
- Insurance industry research in 2016 concluded that group life policyholders die at one-third the rate of the general U.S. population, so they’re the healthiest among us. Group life policyholders are those employed with Fortune 500 companies, who tend to be younger and well-educated.
- In 2020, the general U.S. population had higher excess mortality than group life holders, but in 2021, that flipped. Ages 25 through 64 of the group life policyholders suddenly experienced 40% excess mortality, compared to 32% in the general population. In short, a far healthier subset of the population suddenly died at a higher rate than the general population.
- American disability statistics are equally revealing. In the five years before COVID-19, the monthly disability rate was between 29 million and 30 million. After the COVID-19 jabs, the disability trend changed dramatically. As of September, there were 33.2 million disabled Americans — an extra 3.2 million to 4.2 million — a three-standard deviation rate of change since May 2021.
- Since May 2021, the overall U.S. population has experienced an 11% increase in disabilities, while the employed — which is about 98 million out of a total population of about 320 million — experienced 26% increased rate of disability. So, something was introduced into the workforce that caused working-age people to die.
Video interview, with transcript . . . . (con’d)
Sincerely,
Francis McCollum Feeley
___
Professeur honoraire
de l'Université Grenoble-Alpes
Ancien Directeur des
Researches
Université de Paris-Nanterre
Director of The Center for the Advanced Study
of American Institutions and Social Movements
(CEIMSA-in-Exile)
The University of California-San Diego
http://www.ceimsa.org