I've read the online discussions/"news" regarding death rate in the U.S. in 2020 vs 2019, so I decided to get the numbers myself, here they are:
Year Total Deaths in U.S.
2020 2,913,144
2019 2,854,838
2018 2,831,836
2017 2,813,503
2016 2,744,248
2015 2,712,630
There are slight differences in the totals in a given year, depending on who did the counting; CDC vs census?, but what stands out is the gradual increase in number of deaths each year, which should be expected as the population of the U.S. grows, but most significant is that the increase from 2019 to 2020 is only minimally above the year to year increase prior to covid. I've heard some people try to explain away this minimal increase by saying, "but fewer people were killed in traffic accidents since people weren't driving as much!". I just checked the traffic death numbers and they were higher in 2020 than in 2019! The more I look into the scamdemic, the madder I get! Sometimes I wish I was just an ignorant leftist drone :) (ignorance is bliss, right? :) )
Finding any actual meaningful data from the past year has been notoriously difficult. I was trying to find case fatality rates for COVID based on age group, to prove a point to someone, but all the CDC would show me was relative comparisons in fatality between age groups (i.e: 18-30 year olds are 2x more likely to die than 0-17 --made up statistic btw, but that's the format they were presenting it in). Which means the statistics they HAVE in their databases are presented in such a way that it makes it very difficult for the average Joe to draw conclusions.