"As far as deaths are concerned we seem to be in a similar position as we were in February - at the start of the first wave. Death numbers rose dramatically in March, and it is probable that deaths will rise significantly in November. If this happens then will you accept the figures?"
It's like banging my head against a stone wall 59, but I'll try again. Death numbers rose in March, and then when social distancing began they were falling inside a month. They continued to fall as we approached summer, as all RIs do. They are rising again now, as all RIs do in autumn, so of course they will increase in November, and in December as well, they always do and will do so this year again, have you never heard of a winter bed crisis in the NHS, there are very few winters when there isn't one ?
So trying to compare death figures from March heading into summer, with death figures from October heading into winter, is going to lead to some very scary conclusions indeed, but if you compare the figures from October this year to previous October's, you find there's nothing exceptional about them currently. This much should be obvious to anyone of even average intelligence, and I rate you well above that 59, so why you have a brain freeze on this particular subject I have no idea.
Or perhaps this is why,
"Deaths due to covid are beginning to rise, from well under 100 a day a few weeks ago to around 300 a day now (similar numbers to a major plane crash every day)."
I assume you're not making your numbers up, but if not it does seem you have a very dodgy source, these are the government's own figures for recent Covid deaths in England in October.
20th 165
21st 181
22nd 171
23rd 162
24th 158
25th 186
26th 197
28th 174
Nothing untoward there, in fact I'd have expected them to be rising much faster at this time of year, and for sure they will go up quicker next month, as they always do, lockdown or no lockdown.