Tuesday, 17 February 2026

GERMANY S POPULARION IS ALSO COLLAPSING DID COVID KILL A MILLION GERMANS UP TO 2022?

 New data from Germany s statistics office shows there were more than a million fewer people iving in Germany in 2022 than predicted.

https://retail-news.de/zensus-demografie-deutschland-ausblick/

Only 81.9 million people were recorded as living in Germany in 2022 compared to the 83.2 million people expected.

Around the time when covid ventilation protocols and the covid vaccination campaign were implemented from end 2020 to 2022, Germany s Excess death data also shows a staggering rise similar to other countres which administered covid jabs.

New data suggests the population of Germany will shink by 10% by 2070.




https://www.rnd.de/wirtschaft/bevoelkerungsprognose-fuer-deutschland-bis-2070-rueckgang-um-10-prozent-erwartet-DKGRS6LOLFAODGOCBCCCQUEM2Q.html

A study on Excess Mortality in Germany found an unprecedented increase  from autumn 2021 especially in younger people.

Our presented methodology reveals patterns of statistically significant excess all-cause and under-mortality across distinct age cohorts in Germany from 2000 through 2024. Notably, from autumn 2021 onward, adults aged 35-49 – representing the majority of school-aged children’s parents – have experienced persistent and recurrent EAM. This signal is historically unprecedented in that particular age group and concealed in whole-population aggregates due to relatively low absolute mortality.

These findings call for urgent and transparent scientific investigation. In light of the temporal proximity between these mortality anomalies and the nationwide rollout of SARS-CoV-2 mRNA injections – particularly during periods of ongoing viral transmission – possible immunological or iatrogenic contributions must be examined. The consistency, magnitude, and demographic specificity of the observed mortality patterns warrant further investigation as statistical noise or incidental variation seem unlikely. Rather, they demand careful scrutiny from health authorities and policymakers. Future research should prioritise granular, cohort-resolved analyses over aggregate national statistics to detect, understand and explain such associations.

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0334884

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