I have been discussing this with people, and think this is a relevant place to discuss it further. What I think will happen is that insurance companies will suddenly come out with a statement of having “enough policies on the books that we are suspending new applications for a year until we get our policy numbers back down”. This will be their way of getting ahead of the fact that claims are going to skyrocket from vaccine deaths without outright saying it. Once vaccine deaths become common knowledge, then they will start issuing new policies only for unvaccinated. You already have to give a blood and urine sample to buy life insurance, so they will test to see if you were vaccinated so you can’t lie.
I believe they will have to try to fight claims from vaccinated deaths because they could be such a financial burden it could put them out of business. I know people like to hate on insurance companies, but at their root they do provide a critical service - allowing people to pool risk. I think the waiver people sign to get vaccinated will be used by life insurance companies to avoid paying those claims.
Thanks - everything you said seems accurate.
With that being said, do you have an opinion on how “vaccine” deaths will effect the insurance business (assuming you believe it is/is going to kill people)?
I see it being an add on like a co-morbidity to whatever the underlying cause of death is. The myocarditis issues popping up are the ones that are on my radar because of the increased risk of heart attacks.
Example: when you look at a diabetic in terms of underwriting, you look at blood sugar & A1C to see how well it is controlled, but you also look at ancillary factors; build, family history, medications, blood pressure etc. The more negatives, the more likely a chance for an adverse event and you rate accordingly. If they can show the direct correlation of vaccine and Myocarditis for example, then it would come into play, but just on its own, no. At least with what we currently know.
Ultimately, think of it from the perspective that carriers don't by claims.