So you agree. Comparing a one-off event to one that is repeated 100s of times a year is inappropriate.
The most glaring being the motor vehicle fatality rate or is it all a conspiracy & the media are hiding over 1,400 deaths a day?
Wouldn't that data be available almost instantly thanks to Medicare & the Fed Govt's big data?
Very simple to see proportion of total medicare numbers on issue used each year, by age etc. That would require a definition of 'regular' to be made unfortunately.
From the graph originally posted, that I responded to, showed 'fatalities per million'.
So 1 per 2 million = 0.5 per million.
The risk of dying from going outside once and being killed by a lightening strike is many decimal places lower probability. The figure in the graph is the risk from going outside repeatedly over a full year.