Pre-existing condition or not, covid at an absolute minimum was a nail in the coffin. As for the common cold? People with diabetes, high BP, etc get the common cold year after year and live long lives. Not so much with covid. There is no equivalence between covid-19 and the common cold. Also, through June of 2019 there were 1.4 million deaths in the United states. Through June of 2020 there were 2.4 million deaths. Many more people have died this year vs last year. I don't think we've had a huge uptick in plane crashes, car crashes, aids, cancer, etc.
The average age of a person dying with COVID is 84.8 with 2-3 separate comorbidities.
That's not
either 84.8
or 2-3 separate comorbidities. It's both.
So yes - people with diabetes are surviving COVID all the time.
I should point out - I'm really reaching here to compare COVID to a cold, but COVID is such a complete joke to me, that I don't feel the comparison is
that inappropriate. Comparing it to the normal seasonal influenza would be a better comparison...both are potentially deadly, but neither will generally kill young and healthy people. All examples of young people dying of COVID have been cherry-picked.
Regarding excess deaths, according to the CDC, there were only 215,000 more deaths in the previous 12 months ending June of 2020 in the USA, compared to June of 2019 [3,038,000 in June/2020 versus 2,823,000 in June/2019].
That increase works out to 0.0655% of the total American population, or an increase of 10.76% compared to the previous year's deaths [using the 12-month ending number].
Ok - so 11% more people are dying. How many funerals have you been in, in your life?
I'm 38, and I have been to five. I couldn't go to the funeral of my father's parents because they live out of province, and I can think of two people whose funerals I could have gone to, but had reasons not to [one was also out of province].
Let's just say at MOST, I should have been to 10 funerals in my life. An 11% increase in deaths would mean that I should have gone to 11.
Put another way - we're not going to notice an 11% increase in deaths. That's 215,000 additional deaths out of 328,200,000 people in the USA. That's 1 in 1,527. Most of us don't even personally know 1,527 people. I would think the average person might personally know something like 300 people.
Now...I should point out that it's rather cold for me to say that no one would notice an 11% increase in deaths. I don't want to come across as uncaring, but it's not like fighting COVID has come at no cost - in Canada, we're spending $1 BILLION daily to fight COVID. That money could be used to give 10,000 Canadians lifesaving procedures that cost $100,000 each. That money could build four state-of-the-art hospitals costing $250 MILLION per hospital.
Instead, what's happening? The 2,604 global billionaires have increased their net wealth by $1 TRILLION in the second greatest recession in history since The Great Depression. And to me - that's depressing.
You do have me convinced that Covid-19 exists though. At this point, I only barely have enough actual data to establish that.
I would think that in a "global pandemic" people might...you know...notice there is one, or something [JMO].
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/provisional-tables.htm