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Insurance companies

I thought about, but I don’t think ever did, a post pointing out that INSURANCE COMPANIES would do well to support Vitamin D sufficiency, the Zelenko Protocols, Ivermectin/HCQ, and sane policies concerning COVID.

It’s impossible for me to know if they have bought into this–here is another pun I haven’t seen–this Faucian Bargain–but logically healthcare providers want less people in the hospital, and less people needing doctors for any reason.  Their profit is the difference between what they take in, and what they pay out.  If the latter balloons, then they have to raise premiums, which affects things, and in the meantime take a haircut on profits.

It seems likely they have been pushing the jabs, but their internal data keepers have to have been running the numbers on all this.  And I suspect the numbers are not good.

But who is affected even more directly than health insurance companies is LIFE insurance companies.  They have had pretty steady mortality rates for many years.  With a few odd years here and there, their actuaries have them within a couple tenths of a percent of predictions every year.

Until Anthony Fauci.  Not COVID.  Until Anthony Fauci, and the wholesale destruction of American mental and physical health through a thousand small cuts.

And God only know where our kids will be in ten years after all this monstrous horror is over (one hopes and prays).

Read this.  This guy is just stating data, and if insurance companies know anything it is data.

https://www.thecentersquare.com/indiana/indiana-life-insurance-ceo-says-deaths-are-up-40-among-people-ages-18-64/article_71473b12-6b1e-11ec-8641-5b2c06725e2c.html

The head of Indianapolis-based insurance company OneAmerica said the death rate is up a stunning 40% from pre-pandemic levels among working-age people.

“We are seeing, right now, the highest death rates we have seen in the history of this business – not just at OneAmerica,” the company’s CEO Scott Davison said during an online news conference this week. “The data is consistent across every player in that business.”

OneAmerica is a $100 billion insurance company that has had its headquarters in Indianapolis since 1877. The company has approximately 2,400 employees and sells life insurance, including group life insurance to employers in the state.

Davison said the increase in deaths represents “huge, huge numbers,” and that’s it’s not elderly people who are dying, but “primarily working-age people 18 to 64” who are the employees of companies that have group life insurance plans through OneAmerica.

“And what we saw just in third quarter, we’re seeing it continue into fourth quarter, is that death rates are up 40% over what they were pre-pandemic,” he said.

“Just to give you an idea of how bad that is, a three-sigma or a one-in-200-year catastrophe would be 10% increase over pre-pandemic,” he said. “So 40% is just unheard of.”

More:

“The number of hospitalizations in the state is now higher than before the COVID-19 vaccine was introduced a year ago, and in fact is higher than it’s been in the past five years, Dr. Lindsay Weaver, Indiana’s chief medical officer, said at a news conference with Gov. Eric Holcomb on Wednesday.

Just 8.9% of ICU beds are available at hospitals in the state, a low for the year, and lower than at any time during the pandemic. But the majority of ICU beds are not taken up by COVID-19 patients – just 37% are, while 54% of the ICU beds are being occupied by people with other illnesses or conditions.

The state’s online dashboard shows that the moving average of daily deaths from COVID-19 is less than half of what it was a year ago. At the pandemic’s peak a year ago, 125 people died on one day – on Dec. 29, 2020. In the last three months, the highest number of deaths in one day was 58, on Dec. 13.”.