Well, some died. 832,000 as of today
Others opted for early retirement. Last figure I saw was 1.8 million.
And just so America doesn’t feel lonely, most western countries are having similar worker problems. It isn’t just us.
5. Average age of “Covid death” is greater than the average life expectancy. The average age of a “Covid death” in the UK is 82.5 years. In Italy it’s 86. Germany, 83. Switzerland, 86. Canada, 86. The US, 78, Australia, 82.
In almost all cases the median age of a “Covid death” is higher than the national life expectancy.
As such, for most of the world, the “pandemic” has had little-to-no impact on life expectancy. Contrast this with the Spanish flu, which saw a 28% drop in life expectancy in the US in just over a year
https://off-guardian.org/2021/09/22/30-facts-you-need-to-know-your-covid-cribsheet/
Almost 3 million die a year. And Boomers are getting up there.
Sometime ago, that is recently, a life insurance company talked about a 40% rise in the number of payouts to working age people. I guess included in that number were quite a few excess deaths not due to coronavirus.
This another source on this topic from substack:
“In 29 countries in Europe, excess mortality in the last four months for people age 15-44 is running at nearly double what it was in 2020. For age 45-65 it is more than 50% higher, and age 65-74 some 40% higher. This is despite (or because of?) vaccination rates of at least 70% across Europe. In the USA, all-cause excess mortality is about 50% higher (so far) than 2020, but for people age 25-44 and 45-64 it is about 85% higher; for people under 25 excess mortality is nearly double last year.”
Charles Eisenstein
If this is true what did people die from?