DECREASING DIVORCE RATES/INCREASING MARRIAGE RATES
Great positive changes are underway at every level of our reality. They began in earnest in 2012, and have been increasing in speed and magnitude. I began writing this series of articles, entitled "Positive Changes That Are Occurring", in July of 2013.
These historically-unprecedented positive changes are being driven by many hundreds of thousands, if not millions of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices based on the work of Wilhelm Reich and Karl Hans Welz.
Since Don Croft first fabricated tactical Orgonite in 2000, its widespread, ongoing and ever-increasing distribution has been unknitting and transforming the ancient Death energy matrix built and expanded by our dark masters, well, all the way back to Babylon, and before. And, as a result, the Ether is returning to its natural state of health and vitality.
One of those changes is that divorce rates are decreasing exponentially, regardless of culture or geography.
That’s because moral and mental health vary directly with that of the subject’s etheric environment.
The divorce rate in the U.S. decreased 26.5% from 1980 to 2015. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of .75% over those 35 years.
The divorce rate in the U.K. decreased 34% from 2003 to 2017. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of 2.42% over those 14 years.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased 55% from an all-time high of 17.1 per thousand in 1982 to 7.7 per thousand in 2018. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of 1.2% over those 36 years.
The divorce rate in Australia decreased 27% from 1980 to 2016. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of .75% over those 36 years.
The divorce rate in the U.S. decreased 4.9% in 2015. Time Magazine called it “a small decrease”.
The divorce rate in Australia decreased by 5% in 2015. Abs.gov.au described the 5% decrease as “slight”.
The divorce rate in the U.K. decreased 9.1% from in 2015.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased 5% in 2015.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased by 8% from 2012 to 2014.
The divorce rate in the U.S. decreased for three straight years from 2012 to 2015, to the lowest level in history.
The divorce rate in Australia decreased by 13.6% from 2012 to 2016.
The 4.9% decrease in the divorce rate in the U.S. in 2015 was over six times that of the average annual rate of decrease seen from 1980 to 2015.
The 5% decrease in the divorce rate in Australia in 2015 was over six times that of the .75% average annual rate of decrease seen from 1980 to 2016.
The average annual rate of decrease in divorce in Australia from 1997 to 2016 was close to six times that seen from 1980 to 2016. The greatest decrease was seen in 2015.
The 9.1% decrease in the divorce rate in the U.K. in 2015 was close to four times that of the average annual rate seen from 2003 to 2017.
The average annual rate of decrease in the divorce rate in New Zealand from 2012 to 2014 was over six times that of the average annual rate seen from 1982 to 2018.
The divorce rate in Australia decreased from 2.2 per thousand in 2012 to 1.9 per thousand in 2016. That’s a 13.6% decrease. That’s an average annual decrease of 3.4% over each of those four years.
The 3.4% average annual rate of decrease in the divorce rate Australia from 2012 to 2016 was over four times that of the average annual rate of decrease of .75% per year seen from 1980 to 2016.
United States
The marriage rate in the U.S. increased .9% in 2015, the highest number of marriages since 2009.
The divorce rate in the U.S. decreased 23.4% from 1980 to 2014. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of .69% over those 34 years.
The divorce rate in the U.S. decreased 26.5% from 1980 to 2015. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of .75% over those 35 years.
The divorce rate in the U.S. has been dropping every year since 2005.
The divorce rate in the U.S. dropped 18% from 2008 to 2016. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of 2.25% over those eight years.
The average annual rate of the decrease in the divorce rate in the U.S. from 2008 to 2016 was three times that seen from 1980 to 2015.
The divorce rate among enlisted male U.S. soldiers decreased 18% from 2009 to 2019. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of 1.8% over those ten years.
The divorce rate in the U.S. decreased for three straight years from 2012 to 2015, to the lowest level in history.
The divorce rate in the U.S. decreased 4.9% in 2015, to the lowest level in history. Time Magazine called it “a small decrease”.
The rate of decrease in the divorce rate in the U.S. in 2015 was over six times that of the average annual rate seen from 1980 to 2015.
I’ve exposed Time Magazine’s duplicity using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
The Texas Divorce Lawyer Blog attributed the largest one year decrease in divorce in U.S. history to “the rise of online dating”.
2015 was the third straight year of decreasing divorce rates in the U.S.
In 2017, the divorce rate in Kansas decreased to the lowest level in the history of the state, 45% below the rate seen in 1966.
Kansas.com said “but lawyers thrive as more clients fighting”.
Divorce rates in the U.S. are decreasing exponentially, going forward in time. The greatest decrease was seen in 2015.
United Kingdom
The divorce rate in the U.K. decreased 34% from 2003 to 2017. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of 2.42% over those 14 years.
The divorce rate in the U.K. decreased 9.1% from 2014 to 2015.
The rate of decrease in the divorce rate in the U.K. in 2015 was close to four times that of the average annual rate seen seen from 2003 to 2017.
The divorce rate in the U.K. decreased 4.9% from 2016 to 2017.
Divorce rates in the U.K. are decreasing exponentially, going forward in time. The greatest decrease was seen in 2015.
Australia
The divorce rate in Australia decreased 27% from 1980 to 2016. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of .75% over those 36 years.
The divorce rate in Australia decreased by 81% from 1997 to 2016. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of 4.3% over those 19 years.
The average annual rate of decrease in divorce in Australia from 1997 to 2016 was close to six times that seen from 1980 to 2016. The greatest decrease was seen in 2015.
In 2016, the crude divorce rate in Australia was 1.9 divorces granted per 1,000 estimated resident population, decreasing “slightly” from 2015. Where a 5% increase was described as “slight”.
In 2015, the crude divorce rate in Australia was 2.0 divorces granted per 1,000 estimated resident population, remaining the same as in 2014.
The divorce rate in Australia decreased from 2.2 per thousand in 2012 to 1.9 per thousand in 2016. That’s a 13.6% decrease. That’s an average annual decrease of 3.4% over each of those four years.
The 3.4% average annual rate of decrease in the divorce rate Australia from 2012 to 2016 was over four times that of the average annual rate of decrease of .75% per year seen from 1980 to 2016.
The divorce rate in Australia decreased from 2 per thousand in 2015 to 1.9 per thousand in 2016. Abs.gov.au described the 5% decrease as “slight”.
In 2016, the crude divorce rate in Australia was 1.9 divorces granted per 1,000 estimated resident population, decreasing “slightly” from 2015. Where a 5% increase was described as “slight”.
The divorce rate in Australia decreased from 2.2 per thousand in 2012 to 2.1 per thousand in 2013. That’s a 4.6% decrease.
New Zealand
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 9 per thousand in 1980 to an all-time of 17.1 per thousand in 1982. That’s a 90% increase in the divorce rate, in two years.
The divorce rate in New Zealand almost doubled from 1980 to 1982. What gives?
“Cable really took off in the 1980s. Cable TV had been around for a long time. People in the mountains would use cable just to get TV reception. A company would put big antennas on mountain tops and then run cables down to the houses in the valleys so that people could watch TV. The same technology also worked in big cities where skyscrapers blocked reception.”
“In the late 1970s, and even simple video game consoles with games like "Pong" were available. Atari released the Atari 2600 in 1977, but sales were slow. In 1979, the 2600 started to gain momentum, and then in 1980 it exploded because of the game "Space Invaders" and falling prices. By 1982, Atari was selling 8 million units a year and video games were everywhere. "Pac-Man," released in 1980, was exploding at the same time.”
I can remember driving with a realtor in the early 1980s. He had the predecessor of the cell phone -- an in-car radio phone. The way this worked was simple. There was a big radio tower in the middle of the city. The car had a big radio in the trunk -- This was a huge 25 watt radio transmitter/receiver. Inside the car was a handset and a button panel that let you choose between one of four different channels. Yes, in the early 1980s, the entire city of Raleigh, NC was served by four radio telephone channels. That's how rare car radio phones were at that time. They were incredibly expensive.
“The Apple I came out in 1976, and the Apple II appeared in 1977. It had a 6502 processor running at 1 MHz. The 6502 was an 8-bit microprocessor chip, and in the Apple II it had a maximum RAM space of 48 kilobytes. (In contrast, today's least expensive Apple, the Mac mini, has a processor that runs at 1.5GHz with a 60-gigabyte hard drive and 512 megabytes of RAM.)
Then in 1982 came the IBM PC. It is hard for us today to realize how big a deal this was, but you have to understand the reputation IBM had at the time. IBM made big, mainframe computers for major corporations. By introducing the PC, IBM gave personal computers real credibility. Since the PC came from IBM, it had a strong reputation behind it.
The IBM PC, although pathetic by today's standards, was very powerful for its time. It had a 16-bit 8088 processor running at 4.77 MHZ. This was a blazing clock speed for the time, almost five times faster than the Apple II or IIe. That, combined with the fact that it could handle 16-bit calculations, combined with the ability to add on the 8087 math co-processor, along with a maximum memory space of 640 kilobytes, made the PC a very powerful machine.”
The divorce rate in New Zealand almost doubled from 1980 to 1982 because of the rapid increase in the purportedly-harmless non-ionizing radiation from what we collectively refer to as “technology”. Moral and mental health vary directly with the subject’s etheric environment.
Each IBM PC, each video game, each brand-new cell phone tower a Death energy flame thrower. Each microwave transmitter pumping what Wilhelm Reich called “Dead Orgone Radiation” into the ether.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 9 per thousand in 1980 to 11.9 in 1981. That’s a 32% increase. Divorce in New Zealand suddenly increased by nearly a third from 1980 to 1981.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 11.9 per thousand in 1981 to the all time high of 17.1 per thousand in 1982. That’s a 30% increase. Two straight years of 30-plus percent increases in the divorce rate.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased 55% from an all-time high of 17.1 per thousand in 1982 to 7.7 per thousand in 2018. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of 1.2% over those 36 years.
The last time divorce in New Zealand was below 2018’s total was 1977, with 7.4 per thousand.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased 25.1% from 17.1 per thousand in 1982 to 12.8 per thousand in 2004. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of over 1.14% over those 22 years.
The average annual decrease from 1982 to 2018 is larger than that seen from 1982 to 2004. The positive change is increasing, going forward in time. That’s because the widespread, ongoing and ever-increasing distribution of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices is unknitting and transforming the Death energy network built and expanded by our about-to-be-former Dark masters, well, all the way back to Babylon, and before. And the ether is returning to its ages-long state of life and vitality.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from an all-time high of 17.0 per thousand in 1982 13.3 per thousand in 1983
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 13.3 per thousand in 1983 to 12.5 per thousand in 1984. That’s a 6% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 12.5 per thousand in 1984 to 11.7 per thousand in 1985. That’s a 6.8% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 11.7 per thousand in 1985 to 11.9 in 1986. That’s a 1.7% increase.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 11.9 per thousand in 1986 to 11.8 per thousand in 1987. That’s a .86% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand remained steady at 11.8 per thousand from 1987 to 1988.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 11.8 per thousand in 1988 to 11.7 in 1989. That’s a .84% decrease. 1989’s rate was the same seen in 1985.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 11.7 per thousand in 1989 to 12.3 in 1990. That’s a 9% increase, the largest one year increase seen since 1980 and 1981. After a few years of stasis against the generally increasing vibrational rate, the purportedly-harmless non-ionizing radiation from what we euphemistically refer to as “technology” is once again gaining traction.
I’m guessing that what we euphemistically know as “technology” was developed to blunt, slow or stop an inexorable increase in the vibrational level of what we know as the Earth, an increase that everyone knew would peak in 2012, going far back into history. Remember, the Mayan “long count” ended in 2012, after which it was believed we’d return to a new Golden Age.
Please recall, “technology” doesn’t just include microwave cable TV transmissions, cell phone traffic, and radar. It’s also high tension power lines, phone cables, electrical lines of all stripes…anything powered by electricity. It even includes graveyards, masonry buildings, roads, and a host of other mechanisms, but it’s the powered element of the Death energy network that we’re focusing on here. You have to get to airborne transmission of non-Ionizing radiation to really poison the ether, and the minds of those inhabiting it.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 12.3 per thousand in 1990 to 12 per thousand in 1991. That’s a 2.4% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased 22.4% from 12 per thousand in 1991 to 7.7 per thousand in 2018. That’s an average annual rate of decrease of .83% over those 27 years.
Stuff.co.nz said “The age of Kiwis getting married has been steadily rising since 1991 and could be the secret to a longer-lasting marriage.”
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 12 per thousand in 1991 to 11.9 per thousand in 1992. That’s a .84% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand remained steady at 11.9 per thousand from 1992 through 1994.
After increasing almost 10% from 1989 to 1990, divorce rates in New Zealand remained stable or decreased from 1991 to 1994.The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 11.9 per thousand in 1994 to 12.3 per thousand in 1995. That’s a 3.4% increase.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 12.3 per thousand in 1995 to 12.7 per thousand in 1996. That’s a 3.1% increase.
The game is swinging back and forth, between the malefic influence of non-Ionizing radiation and the generally-increasing vibrational rate of the wider environment.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 12.7 per thousand in 1996 to 12.3 per thousand in 1997. That’s a 3.1% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 12.3 per thousand in 1997 to 12.6 in 1998. That’s a 2.4% increase.
1998 is the year my friend, Eric and I stood on his back porch in our home town of Emmaus, PA and saw a sunset that led us to conclude that a new age was dawning. 1998 was the year spray planes first appeared over my office in Allentown, PA. 1998 was the year that the literal forest of what is purported merely to be “communications infrastructure” was thrown up suddenly in every city, town and village on Earth.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 12.6 per thousand in 1998 to 12.5 per thousand in 1999. That’s a .79% decrease.
The game is swinging back and forth, between the malefic influence of non-Ionizing radiation and the generally-increasing vibrational rate of the wider environment.
The folks in charge tried to use technology to blunt, slow or stop the great positive vibrational change, and that’s the struggle we’re witnessing here.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 12.5 per thousand in 1999 to 12.2 per thousand in 2000. That’s a 2.5% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 12.2 per thousand in 2000 to 12.1 per thousand in 2001. That’s a .81% decrease.
The positive change is slowing, as the tower-based Death energy tech comes online.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 12.1 per thousand in 2001 to 12.7 per thousand in 2002. That’s a 4.7% increase, larger than the 3.1% increase seen from 1995 to 1996.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 12.7 per thousand in 2002 to 12.8 per thousand in 2003. That’s a .78% increase.
We’ve seen a five-plus percent increase from 2001 to 2003, as the “wireless communications” infrastructure works its woe.
The divorce rate in New Zealand remained steady at 12.8 per thousand from 2004 to 2005.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 12.8 per thousand in 2005 to 11.9 per thousand in 2006. That’s an eye-popping 7.6% decrease, the largest yet seen in the data set.
The rate of 12.8 per thousand in 2005 was basically the sick peak, if you put aside the literally insane 17.1 per thousand divorce rate seen in New Zealand in 1982. 1981 saw 11.1 per thousand. The rate in 1996 was 11.7 per thousand.
2005 was the high water mark (pun intended) of the Death energy-bases storm steering and augmentation system, when Hurricane Katrina was pumped up and steered around like a bumper car, straight into New Orleans.
Don Croft fabricated the first simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices in 2000. I personally started gifting in 2003. By 2005, Orgonite had already broken the back of the malefic system.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 11.9 per thousand in 2006 to 11.3 per thousand in 2007. That’s another mighty 5% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand remained steady at 11.3 per thousand from 2007 to 2008.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 11.3 per thousand in 2008 to 10.1 per thousand in 2009. That’s an 11.8% decrease. Wow. The decrease in the divorce rate in New Zealand is increasing exponentially, going forward in time.
The divorce rate in New Zealand remained steady at 10.1 per thousand from 2009 to 2010.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 10.1 per thousand in 2010 to 9.7 per thousand in 2011. That’s a 3.9% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increase from 9.7 per thousand in 2011 to 9.9 per thousand in 2012. That’s a dead-cat-bounce 2% increase.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 9.9 per thousand in 2012 to 9.3 per thousand in 2013. That’s a 6% decrease.
2013 is the year I started writing this series of articles, entitled “Positive Changes That Are Occurring”, on Don Croft’s old web forum, “Etheric Warriors”.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 9.3 per thousand in 2013 to 9.1 per thousand in 2014. That’s a 2.2% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased by 8% from 2012 to 2014.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 9.1 per thousand in 2014 to 9.3 per thousand in 2015. That’s a 2.2% increase.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 9.3 per thousand in 2015 to 8.7 per thousand in 2016. That’s a going-out-of-business 6.5% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decreased from 8.7 per thousand in 2016 to 8.4 per thousand in 2017. That’s a 3.6% decrease.
The divorce rate in New Zealand decrease from 8.4 per thousand in 2017 to 7.7 per thousand in 2018. That’s an 8.8% decrease, the largest in the data set.
The divorce rate in New Zealand increased from 7.7 per thousand in 2018 to 8.6 per thousand in 2019. That’s a huge 10.4% increase, driven by the implementation of 5G.
In February 2019, New Zealand’s Minister of Broadcasting, Communications and Digital Media announced that the 3.5 GHz band will be allocated for national 5G networks.
To level set, I’d note that, despite the large increase from 2018 to 2019, the divorce rate in New Zealand in 2019 was still below where it was in 1980, prior to the onset of that nation’s great technology-driven increase in divorce.
In September 2015, in the face of dropping divorce rates across all age groups, Business Insider said “Fewer millennial marriages are ending in divorce”.
Pinning it just on the Millennials is an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.
“FEWER Millennials” is general. The international news blackout that is in place on this subject forbids the use of any statistics in headlines that would provide insight into the magnitude of the trend I’m documenting here.
Since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, it goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” the phenomenon.
In November 2016, Time said “Divorce Rate in U.S. Drops to Nearly 40-Year Low”.
Where “drops” is general. The international news blackout that is in place on this subject forbids the use of any statistics in headlines that would provide insight into the magnitude of the trend I’m documenting here.
Since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, it goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” the phenomenon.
“Drops TO Nearly 40-Year Low” implies it has reached bottom, and won’t go any lower. “NEARLY 40-Year Low” is a hand-from-the-grave hedge back from “drops to 40-year low”.
The article continues: “The U.S. divorce rate dropped for the third year in a row, reaching its lowest point in nearly 40 years, according to data released Thursday. Marriage rates, on the other hand, increased last year.”
Wait, what? Dropping divorce rates and increasing marriage rates compliment one another, while “on the other hand” implies they contradict one another. I’m so confused and ensheepled!
Can you see how the headline carefully omitted “for the third year in a row”, instead, in journalistic parlance, “burying” that impactful statistic in the body text below?
Since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, it goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” the phenomenon.
Lastly, both “dropped” and “increased” are general hedges, put forward to blunt and defray against any specific insight into the magnitude of the historically unprecedented positive change.
The author is desperate to keep you from recognizing that moral and mental health vary directly with that of the ether.
The number of divorces in England and Wales “fell again” in 2017.
In 2017, the divorce rate in Texas and throughout the country “fell significantly after years of remaining stable.”
In 2017, the divorce rate in Kansas decreased to the lowest level in the history of the state, 45% below the rate seen in 1966.
Kansas.com said “but lawyers thrive as more clients fighting”.
In October 2017, the drop in divorce rates was attributed to “online dating”.
In 2018, the divorce rate in Australia was 1.9 per 1000 people, the lowest level since the introduction of the Family Law Act in 1976.
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