From 2024 to 2025, the 6.9% decrease in alcohol consumption in the United States was 1,625% greater, or more than seventeen times greater than its .4% average annual decrease from its all-time high in 1976 to 2024

“To Alcohol! The cause of… and solution to… all of life’s problems.”

Homer Simpson, from “Homer vs. the Eighteenth Amendment”, Season Eight, Episode 18, from “The Simpsons”, by Matt Groening, March 16, 1997

Homer vs. the Eighteenth Amendment
(Homer Simpson standing on a pile of beer kegs, raising a glass of beer in toast)

Alcohol consumption and marijuana consumption are both decreasing exponentially regardless of culture or geography, because the health of the ether is inexorably improving, and moral and mental health vary directly with the health of the ether.

There’s an international news blackout in place on the subject.

I have compiled numerous other articles documenting exponenential increases in moral and mental health vis-a-vis decreasing homicides, decreasing consumption of junk food, decreasing consumption of soda, and many others.

These improvements in moral and mental health will necessarily mean the casting off of the barely-closeted, parasitic tribe of generational Satanist Freemasons who have ruled humanity all the way back to Babylon, and before. They are all related through the maternal bloodline, and are members of the distinct and separate species of human which we know as Homo neanderthalensis.

The only question that remains is how long that process will take.

We have the pleasure of knowing that, when Confidence games collapse, they do so in a rush, like a house of cards.

From 1939 to 2025, alcohol consumption in the United States decreased by 6.9%, from 58% to 54%, the fewest in history.

From 1939 to 2025, alcohol consumption in the United States decreased by an annual average of .09%.

From 1939 to 2024, alcohol consumption in the United States remained unchanged at 58%.

In 1939, 58% of Americans drank alcohol, per Gallup.

In 1955, 55% of Americans drank alcohol, per Gallup, at that time the fewest since Gallup began keeping records in 1939.

From 1976 to 2025, alcohol consumption in the United States decreased by 23.9%, from 71%, the greatest in history, to 54%, the fewest in history.

From 1976 to 2024, alcohol consumption in the United States decreased by an annual average of .4%.

From 1976 to 2024, alcohol consumption in the United States decreased by 18.3%, from 71%, the greatest in history, to 58%.

In 1976, 71% of Americans drank alcohol, per Gallup, the greatest in history.

In 1981, 70% of Americans drank alcohol, per Gallup.

From 2001 to 2025, alcohol consumption among Americans aged 18 to 34 decreased by 30.5%, or by nearly one third, from 72% to 50%.

From 2001 to 2023, alcohol consumption among Americans aged 18 to 34 decreased by an annual average of .8%.

From 2001 to 2023, alcohol consumption among Americans aged 18 to 34 decreased by 18%, from 72% to 59%.

From 2001 to 2003, 72% of Americans aged 18 to 34 drank alcohol, per Gallup.

From 2011 to 2013, 64% of Americans aged 18 to 34 drank alcohol, per Gallup.

From 2019 to 2025, the cost of an ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan decreased by an annual average of 14.7%.

From 2019 to 2025, the cost of an ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan decreased by 88.4%, from $516.21 to $60.

In December 2019, the year legal marijuana sales began in Michgian, an ounce of legal marijuana cost $516.21, per senate.michigan.gov.

From 2020 to 2024, the price of one ounce of legal marijuana in Maine decreased by 54.1%, or by more than half, from $449 to $206.

That’s because prices decrease either when supply increases, demand decreases, or both.

The populace is giving up the consumption of marijuana.

From 2020 to 2024, the price of one ounce of legal marijuana in Massachusetts decreased by 63.2%, or by almost two thirds, from $394 to $145.

That’s because prices decrease either when supply increases, demand decreases, or both.

The populace is giving up the consumption of marijuana.

From 2020 to 2024, the price of one ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan decreased by an annual average of 20%

From 2020 to 2024, the price of one ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan decreased by 79.9%, or by more than three fourths, from $419 to $84.

That’s because prices decrease either when supply increases, demand decreases, or both.

The populace is giving up the consumption of marijuana.

In 2020, one ounce of legal Marijuana in Massachusetts cost $394.

In 2020, one ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan cost $419.

In 2020, the price of one ounce of legal marijuana in Maine was $449.

In 2021, 62% of Americans aged 18 to 34 drank alcohol, per Gallup.

From 2022 to 2024, alcohol consumption in the United States decreased by an annual average of 6.7%.

From 2022 to 2024, alcohol consumption in the United States decreased by 13.4%, from 67% to 58%.

In 2022, 67% of Americans drank alcohol, per Gallup.

From 2023 to 2025, alcohol consumption among Americans aged 18 to 34 decreased by 15.2%, from 59% to 50%.

From 2023 to 2025, the 15.2% decrease in alcohol consumption among Americans aged 18 to 34 was 1,799% greater, or basically nineteen times greater than its .8% average annual decrease from 2001 to 2023.

Alcohol consumption is decreasing exponentially, because the health of the ether is inexorably improving, and moral and mental health vary directly with the health of the ether.

In 2023, 59% of Americans aged 18 to 34 drank alcohol, per Gallup.

In 2023, 62% of Americans drank alcohol, per Gallup.

From 2024 to 2025, alcohol consumption in the United States decreased by 6.9%, from 58% to 54%, the fewest since 1939, when Gallup first began keeping records.

From 2024 to 2025, the 6.9% decrease in alcohol consumption in the United States was 3% greater, or more than seventeen times greater than its 6.7% average annual decrease from 2022 to 2024.

Alcohol consumption is decreasing exponentially, because the health of the ether is inexorably improving, and moral and mental health vary directly with the health of the ether.

From 2024 to 2025, the 22.4% decrease in the price of one ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan was 12% greater than its 20% average annual decrease from 2020 to 2024.

Marijuana sales are decreasing exponentially, because the health of the ether is inexorably improving, and moral and mental health vary directly with the health of the ether.

From 2024 to 2025, the price of one ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan decreased by 22.4%, or by almost one fourth, from $84 to 65.21.

From 2024 to 2025, the 6.9% decrease in alcohol consumption in the United States was 1,625% greater, or more than seventeen times greater than its .4% average annual decrease from its all-time high in 1976 to 2024.

From 2024 to 2025, the 6.9% decrease in alcohol consumption in the United States was infinitely greater than its stasis from 1939 to 2024.

Both alcohol consumption and marijuana consumption are decreasing exponentially regardless of culture or geography, because the health of the ether is inexorably improving, and moral and mental health vary directly with the health of the ether.

In 2024, one ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan cost $84.

In 2025, one ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan cost $60.

In 2024, one ounce of legal marijuauna in Massachusetts cost $145.

In 2024, one ounce of legal marijuana in Maine cost $206.

In 2024, 58% of Americans drank alcohol, per Gallup.

On August 10, 2025, in a USA Today article on the subject, Joe Neller, a Michigan cannabis lobbyist, said “Recreational cannabis sales began in 2019 in Michigan. At the time, an ounce of cannabis in a Michigan dispensary cost more than $200, mirroring the street price for illegal weed at the time”.

When, in fact, per senate.michigan.gov, in December 2019, the year legal marijuana sales began in Michigan, an ounce of legal marijuana cost $516.21.

For those keeping score, Michigan cannabis lobbyist Joe Neller took the actual $516.21 price of an ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan in 2019 and fraudulently decreased it by 61% to a fabricated “more than $200”.

I have exposed the duplicity of Michigan cannabis lobbyist Joe Neller and USA Today’s Daniel De Vise by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

Here’s Joe Neller’s picture, in a Satanic-purple blazer.

Joe Neller
(Michigan cannabis lobbyist Joe Neller)

I have included Joe’s picture so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist Freemason of marginal influence looks like.

In 2025, 50% of Americans aged 18 to 34 drank alcohol, per Gallup.

In 2025, 54% of Americans drank alcohol, the least in the 90 years surveyed by Gallup, 1.8% less than the previous record.

In February 2025, the average price of one ounce of legal marijuana in Michigan was $65.21, per the Detroit Free Press.

On August 10, 2025, USA Today’s Daniel De Vise explained “Up in smoke: Here’s why the cannabis market is collapsing”.

Where “up in smoke” desperately conjures the false image that marijuana sales are decreasing exponentially because everbody smoked all the weed, man.

Daniel is referencing Cheech and Chong’s 1978 movie “Up in Smoke”.

Up in Smoke
(Tommy Chong and Cheech Marin, with Satanic-purple dash fur, from “Up in Smoke”, 1978)

Mr. De Vise used the general “the cannabis market is collapsing” to avoid stating a specific statistic which would provide the reader with a greater awareness of the scope of the sudden, epochal decrease in marijuana consumption.

That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.

Daniel’s excuse? “The market is flooded with duplicative dispensaries and excess weed. Supply far exceeds demand”.

It is pile of hedging generalities, and it is also a devious half-truth, in that he didn’t mention anything about exponentially-decreasing alcohol sales, nor about exponentially-decreasing soda and fast-food sales. To say nothing of also-exponentially-decreasing homicide rates.

That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.

He’s desperate to keep you from recognizing that moral and mental health vary directly with the health of the ether.

Here’s Daniel De Vise’s picture, in a Satanic-purple shirt, against a Satanic-green background, and where the image is constructed to focus attention on his left eye.

Daniel De Vise
(USA Today’s Daniel De Vise)

I have included Daniel’s picture so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist Freemason of marginal influence looks like.

On August 13, 2025, news.gallup.com’s Lydia Saad said “U.S. Drinking Rate at New Low as Alcohol Concerns Surge”.

When, in fact, from 2024 to 2025, the 6.9% decrease in alcohol consumption in the United States was 1,625% greater, or more than seventeen times greater than its .4% average annual decrease from its all-time high in 1976 to 2024.

Alcohol concerns in the United States are disappearing, versus “surging”, as falsely alleged.

I have exposed the duplicity of Lydia Saad and the Gallup organization by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

She’s desperate to keep you from recognizing that moral and mental health vary directly with the health of the ether.

Here’s Lydia Saad’s picture, in a Satanic-purple top, against a Satanic-green background, and where the image is constructed to focus attention on her left eye.

Lydia Saad
(Gallup’s Lydia Saad)

I have included Lydia’s picture so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist Freemason of marginal influence looks like.

Daniel and Lydia’s left eyes are emphasized in this way because, to followers of the Left-hand path, the left eye is the “eye of Will” or the “eye of Horus”.

‘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.”

They are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. Generational Satanists comprise between twenty and thirty 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”.

How long do you think that these people have left in power, now?

Please consider doing what you can to help speed the transition.

Jeff Miller, Pittsburgh, PA, October 6, 2025

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