Why they ignored direct measures of case rates and case fatality rates is a mystery to me.
After 2 years of work, the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic issued its final report.
They cited two articles, both of which referenced statistical modeling instead of direct measurements to make their claims:
Two Years of U.S. COVID-19 Vaccines Have Prevented Millions of Hospitalizations and Deaths
The problem of course is that the models can't explain the data that was actually observed.
To save lives, a vaccine must do at least one thing really well:
But the evidence that anyone can easily collect shows neither was true.
You can't reduce the risk of infection of a respiratory virus through injection. This has never been done.
In fact, it was shown in the two Cleveland Clinic studies that more vaccines lead to more infections and it can easily be verified by polling your friends like I did.
Funny how nobody on their side wants to do the same poll, isn't it?