RESEARCH AND ANALYSIS of “medical emergencies” which are manufactured or exaggerated in, and in which institutionalised commercial monopolies and criminal enterprises operate—[particularly in the Western nations]—is a necessary affair. This matter has been spoken of by scholars throughout Islamic history, such as Imām al-Shāfiʿī (رحمه الله) in the late second century hijrah, all the way to the modern era, where scholars such as Shaykh al-Luḥaydān lamented Muslims going to disbelieving nations to learn medicine.
The “Covid-19 Pandemic” was the greatest medical and financial fraud in history, based upon pseudoscientific theories of disease. It involves the use of fraudulent diagnostics to rebrand known illnesses to new ones of any novel label, and to declare healthy people as “cases”, enabling tremendous social manipulation, control and fearmongering for the purposes of selling injections. A a sophisticated pandemic machinery has been engineered and constructed for this purpose since many decades ago.
In this respect, a recent paper demonstrates that all-cause mortality in the UK is higher for vaccinated people than unvaccinated people, described as an “alarming phenomenon” by the authors, who also caution against “promoting extensive vaccination campaigns” until valid explanations are provided for this phenomenon.
All-cause mortality according to COVID-19 vaccination status: An analysis of the UK office for National statistics public data
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11868741/#sec6
20 February 2025
The mass vaccination campaign against COVID-19 has been commonly considered the best response to the global COVID-19 pandemic crisis. However, assessment of its real-world effect can be performed by analysis of all-cause mortality by vaccination status. The UK is perhaps the only country which has made publicly available all-cause mortality data by vaccination status.
In this retrospective study we collected data from the UK ONS web-based platform. 5 This platform gathers total mortality data by vaccination status from April, 2021 until May, 2023. Data are publicly available under the Open Government license (https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/, accessed on 12 February 2024), and can therefore be freely analyzed and published provided that the source is properly acknowledged.
The increase over time in all-cause death SMRs in vaccinated people compared to unvaccinated, and their excess from the reference values for certain age groups, should be carefully considered to understand the underlying factors. Furthermore, since the initial values of the SMRs are much lower than 1, we assume the presence of significant biases in the ONS dataset, leading to understimate the risks for the vaccinated people, as it is implausible that COVID-19 vaccines protect against non-COVID-19 deaths. It would be desirable for other major countries to systematically collect all-cause mortality by vaccination status and, in the meantime, a pending indepth investigations, much greater caution should be exercised in promoting mass vaccination campaigns.
Conclusions
The English all-cause and non-COVID-19 mortality data by vaccination status, released by the UK ONS for the 26 months from April 2021 to May 2023, were analyzed by age group and vaccination status. Our findings show that all-cause deaths SMRs were increasing in any of the age groups considered. All-cause death SMRs, initially well below 1 for every age group, due to their increase, since a certain date exceeded the reference value of the unvaccinated people for the age groups 18-39, 80-89 and 90+. For the other age groups, it is possible to predict the date in which the SMR would reach the value 1, intersecting the unvaccinated level, provided that this trend is consistently maintained.
Non-COVID-19 SMR values show a very similar trend: initially they are much lower than 1, but it is not plausible such a vaccine protection from non-COVID-19 deaths. Therefore, this suggests significant biases in the ONS dataset, leading to an underestimation of the risks for the vaccinated. Regardless of the interpretative hypotheses, the fact that all-cause mortality SMRs in vaccinated increase over time compared to those of unvaccinated requires further, urgent investigation.
In any case, we hope that the ONS will resume the publication of the mortality data series by vaccination status, interrupted in May 2023, and that its example will be followed by other countries.
Moreover, the precautionary principle should suggest much greater caution in promoting extensive vaccination campaigns, pending the acquisition of valid explanations of the alarming phenomenon observed.