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Now that the majority of Americans believe COVID-19 "vaccines" caused mass deaths (Rasmussen survey), the vaccine cartel has pivoted.
No longer able to deny harms, they resort to a new defense: the fraudulent claim that COVID shots "saved millions of lives." This talking point is designed to override evidence and silence accountability. But it collapses under scrutiny. A new peer-reviewed paper, A Step-by-Step Evaluation of the Claim that COVID-19 Vaccines Saved Millions of Lives, shows in detail why this claim is scientifically baseless and manufactured through deception:
Step 1 — The Modeling Scam
The heart of the "millions saved" claim lies in computer models, not observed evidence. The Senate hearing even cited a Commonwealth Fund blog post (Dec 2022) claiming 3.2 million U.S. deaths averted. But that wasn't the only one.
The paper reviews several highly publicized studies:
Watson et al. (2022, Lancet Infectious Diseases): projected 14–20 million lives saved worldwide in the first year — based on assumptions of high infection-blocking and mortality risk without vaccination.
Meslé et al. (2021, Eurosurveillance): estimated 470,000 lives saved in Europe, ignoring both natural immunity and early treatment options.
Commonwealth Fund (2022 blog & updates): claimed massive U.S. deaths averted, with little methodological transparency.
Across all of them, the problems were the same:
Assumptions stacked on assumptions (fixed infection fatality rates, no waning, vaccines stop spread).
Counterfactual fantasy: "what would have happened without vaccines" projected with inflated baselines.
Harms excluded: no deaths or adverse events from vaccination were ever considered.
The authors conclude: these "millions saved" numbers are political constructs — simulations engineered to create the illusion of benefit.