Death Discrepancies, Again
THE in-your-face, unabated, pervasive repetition of dubious Covid death figures motivates me to show you some more amazing statistical anomalies. According to the Center for Disease Control, the Covid death toll for the United States was 3,307 as of April 4 and the death toll for all of the lying city of New York was 1,712. Now look at the figures provided by The New York Times, as of April 6: 10,936 for the entire country and 4,786 for New York City. That's almost a threefold difference on the national level and more than twice as high for the lying city of New York, discrepancies too great to be attributed to the extra two days. The Times says the death rate as of today is 14,613, which is close to five times the death rate of the CDC as of four days ago. The New York Times' figures come from the "New York Times database of cases and deaths, based on data from state and local health agencies, hospitals and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; U.S. Census Bureau." Does this mean the Times contacts all 50 state agencies and tens of thousands of local agencies and hospitals? It is safe to assume no, it does not. It would take weeks to do any such thing reliably and a staff much larger than that of the newspaper. And anyway, why should we trust the Times's calculations on an issue so critical? Its slick graphics, with…