1a. First of all "lethal dose" is generally an average/ percentage. I am assuming the stat quoted by OP is referring to LD50... basically meaning 50% of a random sample of Americans who take 2mg of fentanyl will die.
b. George Floyd was 6'4" 223 lbs. I am going to go out on a limb and say that would not be considered average (physically) for a random sample group of Americans.
c. Based on what I have heard I would also say he was not exactly "average" in that he was a drug addict. Most people are not. As Modda pointed out his tolerance for fentanyl definitely could be at play here. At least more than it would for a regular feller such as me or you (assuming youre relatively "clean").
d. That being said, even IF George Floyd had been just an average American guy... that still does not necessarily prove it would kill him.... because he could be among the 50% of the sample group who it would not kill for whatever reason.
2. "Compensated opinion"?? That was data presented in a court of law and reported on by USA Today. Pretty sure it was not thrown out of court or was "fake news" ...but if it was, let me know.
3a. If 500 out of 60,000 = "statistically zero" it would seem covid vaccine deaths are almost less than zero.
3b. ~60,000 total people overdosed on fentanyl. ok... so how many of those people only had 2mg? How many had more than 11mg? How many people use 11mg or more every day in private and don't oversdose or get a dui? How many of those who did overdose thought they were taking a different drug (MDMA at a party for example) but it ended up having fentanyl in it that killed them?
4. Again... that was not an "opinion". If you are saying the data presented is false or that USA Today's reporting of it is false, cool. Tell me how & why and provide a source.
But my point was basically this:
If 500 people in 1 year got caught with equal to or more than 11mg in them while driving and they weren't dead, that proves that 11mg of fentanyl isn't necessarily a death sentence for everyone. (Although it probably would be for more than 50% of average people who do not regularly use drugs. )