John McClane: You know what you get for being a hero? Nothin’. You get shot at. You get a little pat on the back, blah, blah, blah, attaboy. You get divorced. Your wife can’t remember your last name. Your kids don’t want to talk to you. You get to eat a lot of meals by yourself. Trust me, kid, nobody wants to be that guy.
Matt Farrell: Then why are you doing this?
John McClane: Because there’s no body else to do it right now, that’s why. Believe me, if there were somebody else to do it, I’d let them do it, but there’s not. So we’re doing it.
Matt Farrell: Ah. That’s what makes you that guy.
From the film “Live Free or Die Hard”, written by Mark Bomback, 2007
(Bruce Willis, as John McClane, in “Live Free or Die Hard”, 2007
THE DATA
From 1970 to 2022, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by 54%, from 15 per 1,000 marriages to 6.9, the lowest divorce rate in history.
From 1970 to 2022, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by an annual average of 1%.
From 1970 to 2019, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by .7%, from 15 per 1,000 marriages to 14.9, the lowest divorce rate in history.
Ifstudies.org’s Wendy Wang omitted the percentage, and described it only-generally as “the lowest rate that we have seen in 50 years”, where “seen” walks it back a step from Americans actually experiencing it.
Wendy didn’t offer any suggestion as to what had caused divorces in the United States to decrease to their lowest level in history in 2019.
That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.
From 1970 to 2019, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by an annual average of .01%.
From 1980 to 2022, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by 70%, from an all-time high 22.6 per 1,000 marriages to an all-time low 6.9 per 1,000 marriages.
From 1980 to 2022, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by an annual average of 1.7%.
From 1980 to 2008, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by 12.4%, from an all-time high 22.6 per 1,000 marriages to 19.8 per 100,000.
From 1980 to 2008, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by an annual average of .4%.
In 1980, the divorce rate in the United States was an all-time high 22.6 per 1,000 marriages.
From 2019 to 2022, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by 53.7%, from 14.9 per 1,000 marriages, the lowest in history, to 6.9, the lowest in history.
From 2019 to 2022, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by an annual average of 17.9%.
From 2019 to 2022, the 17.9% average annual decrease in the divorce rate in the United States was 178,899% greater than its .01% average annual decrease from 1970 to 2019.
From 2021 to 2022, the 28.8% decrease in the divorce rate in the United States was 287,900 greater than its .01% average annual decrease from 1970 to 2019.
There’s been a revolution, although nobody is consciously aware of it, except for myself and a few hundred readers on an obscure internet forum.
These subjects will remain ignored for just a short time longer.
The great positive societal change is increasing hyper-exponentially, going forward in time.
That’s because the health of the ether is inexorably increasing, and moral and mental health vary directly with that of the subject’s etheric environment.
From 2021 to 2022, the 28.8% decrease in the divorce rate in the United States was 2,780% greater than its 1% long term average annual decrease from 1970 to 2022.
From 2021 to 2022, the 28.8% decrease in the divorce rate in the United States was 1,594% greater than its 1.7% long-term average annual decrease in from 1980 to 2022.
From 2021 to 2022, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by 28.8%, from 9.7 per 1,000 marriages to 6.9.
Census.gov’s Chanell Washington offered no suggestion as to what might have caused the sudden, exponential decrease in divorce in the United States from 2021 to 2022.
That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.
THE ARTICLES
NOVEMBER 2020
On November 10, 2020, ifstudies.org said “The U.S. Divorce Rate Has Hit a 50-Year Low”.
Where author Wendy Wang said “a 50-year low” because it is general.
Wendy used a hedging generality because, as a propagandist, she knows that seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, and her technique goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” awareness of the specific scope of the decrease in divorce rates which she is attempting to obfuscate.
She bravely did what little she could to hedge by saying “hit a 50-year low” to falsely imply that divorce rates has hit bottom in 2020, and would soon be increasing again.
Lastly, Wendy walked the lowest divorce rate in history back to merely “low”.
You have to read the article to learn:
“Divorce in America has been falling fast in recent years, and it just hit a record low in 2019. For every 1,000 marriages in the last year, only 14.9 ended in divorce, according to the newly released American Community Survey data from the Census Bureau. This is the lowest rate we have seen in 50 years. It is even slightly lower than 1970, when 15 marriages ended in divorce per 1,000 marriages.”
Where ifstudies.org’s Wendy Wang said “falling fast” because it is general. She used alliteration to distract the Punch and Judy crowd from her sleight-of-hand.
Wendy said “falling” because it’s softer than “dropping” or “decreasing”, but mostly as a thinly-veiled reference to the fallen Lord Lucifer.
(The fall of Lucifer, from “Paradise Lost”, by John Milton, 1667)
She said “the lowest rate that we have seen in 50 years” to walk it back a step from Americans actually experiencing it.
Wendy said “the lowest rate” and “slightly lower” because they are general, and go a long way toward “compartmentalizing” awareness of the specific scope of the decrease in divorce rates which she is attempting to obfuscate.
So, I had to do the math.
From 1970 to 2019, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by .7%, from 15 per 1,000 marriages to 14.9, the lowest divorce rate in history.
Ifstudies.org’s Wendy Wang omitted the percentage, and described it only-generally as “the lowest rate that we have seen in 50 years”, where “seen” walks it back a step from Americans actually experiencing it.
In November 2020, ifstudies.org’s Wendy Wang didn’t offer any suggestion as to what had caused divorces in the United States to decrease to their lowest level in history in 2019.
That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.
Here’s Wendy Wang’s picture:
(ifstudies.org’s Wendy Wang, who didn’t offer any suggestion as to why divorce rates in the United States decreased to the lowest level in history in 2019. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.)
I have included Wendy Wang’s picture so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist Freemason in a position of marginal influence looks like.
They are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. They comprise roughly twenty percent of the populace, and are hiding in plain sight in every city, town and village on Earth.
It’s how the few have controlled the many all the way back to Babylon, and before.
But they say that the hardest part of solving a problem is recognizing that you have one.
Don Croft used to say “Parasites fear exposure above all else”.
JULY 2023
On July 13, 2023, census.gov questioned “Is Your State in Step with National Marriage and Divorce Trends?”
Where author Chanell Washington said “divorce trends” because it is general.
Chanell used a hedging generality because, as a propagandist, she knows that seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, and her technique goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” awareness of the specific scope of the decrease in divorce rates which she is attempting to obfuscate.
She said “in step with trends” to imply that the great positive societal change was merely the whim of fashion, versus a deeper, society-wide change for the better.
Chanell said “your state” to prop up the Coincidence theorist’s thin hope that divorce wasn’t decreasing in every last state in the Union in 2023.
The article goes on to say "the 2021 divorce rate dropped to 6.9 in the last year from 9.7 divorces per 1,000 women in 2011.
Did you notice how the Census Bureau’s Chanell Washington provided the statistics, but carefully omitted the percentage?
She omitted the percentage because she’s trying to blunt the reader’s gaining insight into the specific magnitude decrease in the divorce rate which she is attempting to obfuscate.
So, I had to do the math.
From 2021 to 2022, the divorce rate in the United States decreased by 28.8%, from 9.7 per 1,000 women to 6.9.
Census.gov’s Chanell Washington did not offer any suggestion as to what had caused U.S. divorce rates to suddenly decrease by the largest margin in history to the lowest level in history from 2021 to 2022.
That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.
Here’s Chanell Washington’s picture, where she is slightly off-center to the left to focus attention on her left eye:
(Census.gov’s Chanell Washington, who did not offer any suggestion as to what had caused U.S. divorce rates to suddenly decrease by the largest margin in history to the lowest level in history from 2021 to 2022.)
The image features her left eye because, to generational Satanist Freemasons like Channell, the left eye is the “eye of Will” or the “eye of Horus”.
But don’t take my word for it:
‘The right eye is the Eye of Ra and the left is the Eye of Horus’.”
From “Freemasonry - Religion And Belief - The 3rd Temple”
Facebook: “Welcome to the Left-Hand-Path-Network, where Satanism is not about worship, but it’s study.”
I have included Channell Washington’s picture so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist Freemason in a position of marginal influence looks like.
She figured that the rubes would never notice the coded visual imagery.
They are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. They comprise roughly twenty percent of the populace, and are hiding in plain sight in every city, town and village on Earth.
It’s how the few have controlled the many all the way back to Babylon, and before.
But they say that the hardest part of solving a problem is recognizing that you have one.
Don Croft used to say “Parasites fear exposure above all else”.
Jeff Miller, Honolulu, HI, March 15, 2024
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