Nobody is arguing that the hospitals Aren't getting paid more when they declare a death to be related to COVID-19. This is all we need to know - the incentive is there. People respond to incentives. If you pay more for X, you will get more X.
Your second point actually isn't how things work in healthcare markets, but your first is
wrong. Hospitals do or did in some cases get financial help for handling covid
cases. They got nothing specific for
deaths, a point already made by two links.
As for the evidence, I have seen a number of articles about numbers having to be revised as a result of hospitals getting caught. Keep in mind that the amount of evidence we will get to read about depends on people's (nonexistent) incentives to find and report those instances of hospitals misclassifying deaths.
Something you "have seen a number of" isn't evidence. If you have articles like that, post them, along with some reasonable rebuttal of the overwhelming chorus of "actually we're undercounting COVID deaths and here's how" articles I've posted, and maybe I'll think about this idea again? Otherwise I think it's a closed book, there is no overreporting of COVID deaths, and there are likely large numbers we have not caught.
You seem to have very selectively parsed the factcheck page and found ways to come to more or less the opposite of the conclusion it's trying to lead you to, and then you're conveniently ignoring five articles explaining why and how we're undercounting COVID deaths, and a great Atlantic article that's putting some hard and scary estimates on the number of deaths we're about to experience in the wave of illness which is happening now.
Sorry Bill, but either you're not arguing in good faith, or we're fundamentally failing to communicate -- in any case, I wish you well with your tinnitus, I hope you stay safe during this, and I am not interested in discussing it with you any further. If you would like to see this as a victory of some sort, by all means -- to me, it's that I have both been talking at a wall and providing very good fact and evidence based reasons for the picture I am trying to paint on that wall, but just being rebutted with extremely selective reading, tangents, etc.
I think C19 is a real thing, it's happening, it's not a vast global conspiracy, the US response has been poor and not very science based so we're about to experience a bunch of setbacks that will both kill people and be back for the economy; I am worried about the health of my parents and immediate family and vulnerable people in my network.
I need to be not worried any more about trying to understand disagreements with people who are anti-mask, or want to play games with numbers, or think there's some healthcare conspiracy to overstate the seriousness of this. None of that stuff holds water, it can be (and has been) easily and trivially rebutted by widely available data, and when people hold those views but refuse to engage with that data then I just need to move on with life.
Certainly, I have a lot to keep me busy, given that we're likely to be in some kind of hellish childcare-and-economy world for a while, I should probably be out buying more beans and coloring books.