Dr John Campbell: No improvement in 150 years

23 days ago
255

Dec 7, 2025
Excess Deaths in the United Kingdom: Midazolam and Euthanasia in the COVID-19 Pandemic

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/377266988_Excess_Deaths_in_the_United_Kingdom_Midazolam_and_Euthanasia_in_the_COVID-19_Pandemic

Despite advances in modern information technology, the accuracy of data collection has not advanced in the United Kingdom for over 150 years,

because the same problems of erroneous data entry found then are still found now in the COVID pandemic,

not only in the UK but all over the world.

We have independently discovered the same UK data problem and solution for assessing COVID-19 vaccination as Alfred Russel Wallace had 150 years ago in investigating the consequences of Vaccination Acts starting in 1840 on smallpox:

The Alfred Russel Wallace as used by Wilson Sy

“Having thus cleared away the mass of doubtful or erroneous statistics,

depending on comparisons of the vaccinated and unvaccinated in limited areas or selected groups of patients,

we turn to the only really important evidence, those ‘masses of national experience’...”

https://archive.org/details/b21356336...

Alfred Russel Wallace, 1880s–1890s

1840 Vaccination Act

Provided free smallpox vaccination to the poor

Banned variolation

Vaccination compulsory in 1853, 1867

Why his interest?

C 1885

The Leicester Anti-Vaccination demonstrations (1885)

Growing public resistance to compulsory vaccination

Wallace’s increasing involvement in social reform and statistical arguments

Statistical critique of vaccination

Government data on:

Smallpox mortality trends before and after compulsory vaccination

Case mortality rates

Vaccination vs. sanitation effects

Mortality trends before and after each Act, 1853 and 1867

“Forty-Five Years of Registration Statistics, Proving Vaccination to Be Both Useless and Dangerous” (1885)

“Vaccination a Delusion; Its Penal Enforcement a Crime” (1898)

Contributions to the Royal Commission on Vaccination (1890–1896)

Wallace argued:

Declining smallpox mortality was due to improved sanitation, not vaccination

Official statistics were misinterpreted or biased

Compulsory vaccination was unjust

Re-vaccination did not reliably prevent outbreaks

These views were strongly disputed, then and now.

Wallace had a strong distrust of medical authority

He and believed in:

Statistical reasoning

Social reform

Opposition to coercive government measures

The primacy of environmental and sanitary conditions in health

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ikd3HdJn_64

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