When a Substack article popped up on my phone at the end of February, I recognised the content immediately as the study the article was based on had been brought to my attention a year previously.
The 2024 study was explosive news to me at the time as it provided good evidence that the benzodiazepine sedative midazolam was undeniably linked to excess deaths in the UK at the start of the covid ‘pandemic’.
As a journalist who’s been investigating this very issue for almost five years, I was naturally interested. The article, which appeared on Substack written by the Freedom Podcast, was saying that 55,000 people had died due to midazolam use in 2020. I’d worked with medical researchers back in 2020/2021 who’d calculated the figure to be 40,000 at the very least so seeing 55,000 didn’t surprise me in the slightest. From 2020 to the present day, I’ve spent hundreds of hours talking to people whose loved ones had their deaths hastened via NICE guideline NG163. In 2024, a study emerged that appeared to back up their claims.
Authored by Dr. Wilson Sy, this study found a strong correlation between midazolam use and excess deaths in 2020 and suggested it was highly likely that the UK’s excess deaths were tied to midazolam use and NOT to a virus.
Titled “Excess Deaths in the United Kingdom: Midazolam and Euthanasia in the COVID-19 Pandemic,” it examines UK data during the ‘pandemic’. It argues that excess deaths, especially in April 2020, were not mainly due to the SARS-CoV-2 virus but linked to excessive midazolam use and suggests possible systemic involuntary euthanasia within the NHS.
The evidence leans towards a high correlation (over 90%) between midazolam use and excess deaths across England in 2020. This correlation persisted post-vaccination in 2021, with no significant link to covid jabs, raising questions about the role midazolam played in these deaths.
Dr. Sy points out that, unlike Australia, where excess deaths were more tied to covid ‘vaccinations’, the UK’s excess deaths situation seems more linked to midazolam.
The official story is that, in 2020, the UK recorded approximately 705,636 total deaths, with around 74,917 attributed to covid. This is based on official statistics. Excess deaths, estimated at 50,000 to 60,000 above historical averages, were largely – according to the mainstream narrative – linked to the pandemic’s impact. Sy’s study tells a different story.
Midazolam is most commonly used for sedation in intensive care units (ICUs), for severe epilepsy and in palliative (end of life) care to manage extreme agitation or restlessness. In April 2020, then health secretary Matt Hancock ordered a huge supply of the drug from a factory in France. Around the same time, NICE guideline NG163 (a protocol intended for use as a treatment for covid and which was slammed by a panel of doctors and professors) was introduced and implemented. Shortly after this, the huge spike in care home and hospital deaths occurred.
From where I was standing, in the midst of distraught families whose loved ones had died suddenly and unexpectedly, it was clear that something sinister was happening. Families had discovered their relatives – most in care homes or hospitals – had been given deathly cocktails of midazolam and morphine and had died as a result. These victims weren’t terminally ill, weren’t suffering from a killer virus and many were not elderly. I decided to investigate. The result of those initial investigations was my first film ‘A Good Death?’ produced with Ickonic and premiered in December 2020.
But back to Dr. Wilson Sy’s study… The doctor, Director of Investment Analytics Research in Australia, conducted this study to analyze macro-data from the United Kingdom, focusing on excess deaths in 2020 and their potential causes. Published on February 15, 2024, and accessible via ResearchGate, the study involved the analysis of all-cause and excess mortality, sourced from the Office for National Statistics (ONS). During this analysis, Sy identified significant anomalies and inconsistencies with existing explanations attributing deaths to COVID-19. The study posits that the widespread and persistent use of midazolam suggests a possible policy of systemic involuntary euthanasia.
This finding incontrovertibly shifts the narrative from viral impact to medical intervention, challenging official accounts that attribute deaths to the virus itself. The study also notes uniform and simultaneous spikes in excess deaths across regions, inconsistent with natural contagion patterns, further supporting its involuntary euthanasia hypothesis.
These claims have been met with controversy, with official bodies like the UK’s Department of Health and Social Care denying any policy of involuntary euthanasia. Fact-checking organizations, such as Full Fact, argue there is no evidence of midazolam being used to kill patients, attributing increased prescriptions to the natural demand during a severe pandemic phase for palliative care. They note that midazolam’s use increased by over 100% in April 2020, but state that this was expected given the crisis. They also confirm that euthanasia – voluntary or involuntary/non-voluntary remains illegal in the UK. Despite the inevitable criticisms of the study, I can confirm that Sy’s findings tied in precisely with my own ‘on the ground’ research.
In summary, the study’s data showed:
– Excess deaths spread uniformly and simultaneously across all English regions, inconsistent with natural contagion.
– NHS and Nightingale hospitals were mostly empty, confirming the absence of a pandemic.
– The UK Government, Amnesty International, and the Care Quality Commission acknowledged systemic dysfunctions, including widespread use of “Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation” (DNACPR) notices, which also contributed to excess deaths.
Public and media reactions, as seen in articles like The Remnant Newspaper, have amplified the study’s claims, suggesting thousands of elderly were involuntarily euthanised to inflate covid death statistics.
In conclusion, Dr. Sy’s study presents a provocative analysis, suggesting midazolam use was indeed a major factor in UK excess deaths during the pandemic, potentially indicating the systemic involuntary euthanasia of up to 60,000 individuals.
I’ve spoken to nowhere near that number of families but shocked and bereaved relatives still approach me daily, each with a heartbreakingly horrific story to tell. From my own investigations, it would appear that the involuntary euthanasia was definitely being carried out in 2020 and Dr. Sy’s study now supports that.
Source: https://thepeoplesvoice.tv/study-proves-that-over-55000-were-killed-with-midazolam-in-2020/
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