“You belong to the League of Nations?’
‘I belong to the world, Madame,’ said Poirot dramatically.”
― From " Murder on the Orient Express ", by Agatha Christie, 1934
January 3, 2020 - Brooklyn Continued to Record Historic Decline in Violent Crime in 2019
January 15, 2020 - Los Angeles crime rate dropped to lowest number in decades last year
January 15, 2020 - Global warming to increase violent crime in the United States
January 21, 2020 - SF’s 2019 Homicide Rate Was Lowest in Nearly 60 Years
Just 90 murders occurred in Brooklyn, New York in 2019, the lowest number in the city’s history.
The folks in charge are desperately doing what they can to pump up the number:
“The District Attorney said that 99 murders were recorded in Brooklyn in 2019, compared with 98 in 2018. It is worth noting, however, that nine of the murders in the 2019 count were reclassified as homicides from incidents that took place in previous years, compared with only two reclassified cases in 2018 . Therefore, 90 murders actually occurred over the past year – the lowest number in Brooklyn history .”
Murders in El Salvador dropped almost 30% last year. Violent crime is dropping regardless of national boundary.
That’s because the incidence of violence is directly connected to the relative health of the energetic or Etheric environment.
The great positive changes that I’ve been documenting in these articles have been underway in earnest since 2012 or so, which is when the collective mass of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work reached a number that tipped the energetic environment back to the positive. Their collective influence has tipped the Ether back to its ages-long state of health and vitality. And the positive changes I’m documenting are increasing in speed and magnitude.
I got three more TB’s into secure locations in Brooklyn yesterday.
A story below from Hoboken, N.J. from just a couple weeks ago is headlined " Double digit drops ". Can you see how it’s completely general ? The reader has no idea what the story is about. It’s not searchable.
That’s an example of a strict, repetitive technique within the international news blackout that’s in place on the subject. They’re under orders to keep you from knowing that violent crimes in Hoboken dropped 34.2%, dropped by just over a third, in just one year.
Can you see how, in El Salvador, the number was 30%, and in Hoboken, the number was 34.2%? In Science, those are what are referred to as " mapping data points ".
While we’re on the subject of crime…
“according to 1995 statistics from the Uniform Crime Reports, in U.S. metropolitan areas, homicide claims 11 victims per 100,000 inhabitants and more than 25 per 100,000 in some of the largest cities. In small cities and in rural counties, homicide claims only 5 victims per 100,000, and fewer than 2 per 100,000 in our most rural states (Federal Bureau of Investigation). This pattern also occurs for robbery and assault; they are much more common in large urban areas than elsewhere . Like violent crime, property crime is lowest in rural areas (Barkan). Further, this urban-rural difference has been found in Canada, England, Australia, and the Netherlands (Shover). These statistics present criminologists with the challenge of explaining why crime levels are much higher in urban than rural areas.”
The author has provided the numbers for crime in various areas, but hedged by omitting the percentage increases between them. So I had to do the math. The homicide rate is 400% higher in the largest cities vs. small cities and rural counties, and 1,500% higher than the most rural areas.
Most people know or guess that there’s a lot more crime in the city than there is in the country. But the order of magnitude wasn’t clear to me until I did the math. And that’s why the propagandist hedged by making me do the math.
So, why is there more crime in cities?
January 1996 - Why Is There More Crime in Cities ?
Crime rates are much higher in big cities than in either small cities or rural areas, and this situation has been relatively pervasive for several centuries . This paper attempts to explain this connection by using victimization data, evidence from the NLSY on criminal behavior and the Uniform Crime Reports. Higher pecuniary benefits for crime in large cities can explain approximately 27% of the effect for overall crime, though obviously much less of the urban- crime connection for non-pecuniary crimes such as rape or assault. Lower arrest probabilities, and lower probability of recognition, are a feature of urban life, but these factors seem to explain at most 20% of the urban crime effect. The remaining 45-60% of the effect can be related to observable characteristics of individuals and cities . The characteristics that seem most important are those that reflect tastes, social influences and family structure. Ultimately, we can say that the urban crime premium is associated with these characteristics, but we are left trying to explain why these characteristics are connected with urban living."
When you’re dealing with propaganda, one of the only ways to consistently call it out is through its use of generality.
The author said “45-60% of the effect can be related to observable characteristics of individuals and cities.” “Those that reflect tastes, social influences and family structure .”
The author hasn’t said anything specific, at all. “Observable characteristics”…what sort?
“Those that reflect tastes, social influences and family structure” Which of those? No specific examples are provided.
And they’ve closed by saying they are " trying to explain why ." Than example of a repeating technique in the international news blackout that’s in place on the subject.
A technique in which the words " mystery ", " baffled " and " puzzled " are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those variants is " Trying to explain why "
It’s not because of the higher concentration of people in the cities. It’s because the etheric or Energetic environment is not laden with Death energy in the rural areas, as it is in the big cities.
And since we’ve learned that exponentially higher crime in cities “has been relatively pervasive for several centuries”, we can affirm that it’s mostly “low-tech” Death energy that’s making city life so much worse. Thus rotting garbage, sewerage, and graveyards, the last by far the most impactful. They’re Death energy “sinks”, or batteries within the network.
Some of them are immense in size:
[image]
(Calvary cemetery, Queens, New York)
Remember, the crime rate is exponentially higher in all big cities. Whatever is driving it has to be present in all of the cities, and has to have been present in all those cities since before “technology” came into being.
If it were “sheer number of people”, it would be impossible for us to see the quantum big city crime drops that we are currently. Because crime is dropping precipitously, while population’s is, if anything, increasing.
You can go with my theory, or pick one of the plausible-deniability excuses put forward by the controlled press to keep yourself off the hook of personal responsibility. They include " suddenly-benevolent gangs " in El Salvador, " dropping methamphetamine prices " in Wichita, Kansas or " reform-driven programs that enhance fairness and equity in the criminal justice system " where I live in Brooklyn, New York - among an unholy host of others.
People in the country live longer , too.
An article from the U.K. that I’ve appended below tells us “That is because living away from busy roads reduces the risk of damage to the lungs and heart from fine particles and gases emitted by traffic .”
Can you see how many words he had to use to tell the lie? It’s the “cuttlefish squirting out ink” spoken of by Orwell.
If car exhaust drastically drives up mortality in such a way, how can that not be number one on the action-list of the " reduce our carbon footprint" crowd? Why isn’t it on any electric car commercials?
It doesn’t drive up mortality. It’s a plausible-deniability excuse, put forward as a straw for you to grasp, so you can avoid personal responsibility in the matter.
Roy Harrison, professor of environmental health at the University of Birmingham, says it is " significantly healthier" to live in the countryside.
Can you see how " significantly " is general? As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda.
Roy says “He research shows that air pollution is responsible for an average loss of life expectancy of six months across the UK and most of that is driven by urban populations.”
He’s again hedged with another generality.
People live significantly longer in the country because the concentration of Death energy there is lower.
I’ll be expanding upon this final item in upcoming research:
February 24, 2017 - Studies have shown that the risk for serious mental illness is generally higher in cities compared to rural areas.
I’m going to go gift me some graveyards today.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, February 18, 2020
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January 6, 2017 - U.K. - Is it healthier to live in the countryside ?
Longer life
According to David Newby, British Heart Foundation professor of cardiology at the University of Edinburgh, when it comes to air pollution, “being in the country is better for you”.
That is because living away from busy roads reduces the risk of damage to the lungs and heart from fine particles and gases emitted by traffic .
While buses, high-rise buildings and stop-go traffic are known to increase the risk of exposure to pollution, Prof Newby says you do not have to move far to reduce the health risk.
The closer you are to a major road the worse it is, but moving to the middle of Hyde Park could be sufficient," he said.
Roy Harrison, professor of environmental health at the University of Birmingham, says it is " significantly healthier" to live in the countryside.
He says research shows that air pollution is responsible for an average loss of life expectancy of six months across the UK and most of that is driven by urban populations.
“More remote rural areas have half the concentration of pollution of urban areas.”
And a government report, which found that health outcomes are more favourable in rural areas than urban areas, seems to back up these findings.
(" of six months " is general. It doesn’t tell us anything. " More favorable" and " significantly healthier" are also both general. - ed)
January 3, 2020 - Brooklyn Continued to Record Historic Decline in Violent Crime in 2019
Murders Remained Below 100 for the Second Straight Year and Shooting Incidents Went Down by Almost 7%, Bucking Citywide Trends
Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez today announced that 2019 ended as a historically safe year in Brooklyn, with murders remaining below 100 for the second year in a row, ticking up by one to 99 homicides after the record-breaking low that was recorded in 2018. Shootings across the borough declined by 6.8% in contrast with a nearly 3% increase citywide. As part of the District Attorney’s Justice 2020 plan to ensure equal justice while maintaining public safety, the Brooklyn DA’s Office continued to put in place r eform-driven programs that enhance fairness and equity in the criminal justice system .
District Attorney Gonzalez said, “In the past year, we continued to prove that criminal justice reforms do not jeopardize public safety – but rather enhance it. Thanks to the NYPD and to my hard-working prosecutors, violent crime keeps going down in Brooklyn. We again led the way in implementing initiatives ahead of the City and State, including declining to ask for bail in most misdemeanors and offering more ways to resolve low-level offenses without a court appearance – which lowered the jail population significantly, kept individuals with their families and did not lead to an increase in crime. I am committed to making headway in my Justice 2020 action plan to keep Brooklyn safe and strengthen community trust by ensuring fairness and equal justice for all.”
The District Attorney said that 99 murders were recorded in Brooklyn in 2019, compared with 98 in 2018. It is worth noting, however, that nine of the murders in the 2019 count were reclassified as homicides from incidents that took place in previous years, compared with only two reclassified cases in 2018. Therefore, 90 murders actually occurred over the past year – the lowest number in Brooklyn history. Of the 99 murders in the official count, 63 were due to shootings and 36 were by other means. Citywide, murders were up 7.8% for the year.
January 15, 2020 - Global warming to increase violent crime in the United States
January 15, 2020 - Los Angeles crime rate dropped to lowest number in decades last year, Mayor Garcetti and LAPD Chief Moore say
“This was a very very good year,” according to Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti as he announces that 2019 saw the lowest number of crimes in Los Angeles in decades.
Los Angeles Police Department officials feel they continue to make improvements.
LAPD Chief Michel Moore said, “What we can never forget is that behind every stat there is a human life.”
The department released numbers from last year that show there were 253 homicides in Los Angeles in 2019, the lowest rate since 1962 and a 77 percent decrease since 1992.
Property crime decreased 7.4 percent from 2018 and violent crime decreased 5.5 percent.
(A 7.4% decrease in property crime and a 5.5% decrease in violent crime is described generally as " dropped ". - ed)
January 19, 2020 - San Francisco, CA - BART Police Report 18% Drop In Crime From This Time Last Year
January 20, 2020 - El Salvador - Are El Salvador’s Gangs Behind Historic Murder Drop ?
El Salvador has seen a sustained drop in homicides throughout 2019
El Salvador ended 2019 with its lowest murder rate in years. But though the government has taken credit for the drop, there are signs that a conscious gang decision to lower violence, or even some kind of agreement between gangs and the state, may be driving down homicides.
The Central American nation, considered one of the world’s most violent countries, finished the year with approximately 28.7 percent fewer homicides than in 2018, according to official data published in Univision.
January 21, 2020 - San Francisco, CA - SF’s 2019 Homicide Rate Was Lowest in Nearly 60 Years
January 24, 2020 - Double digit drops
Hoboken crime rate shows decreases across the board
Hoboken’s 2019 crime stats show violent crime was down 34 percent compared to 2018.
Hoboken’s violent and nonviolent crime rates decreased by double digits from 2018 to 2019, according to data released by the Hoboken Police Department this month.
Every year, police departments around the country submit data on their town’s crime statistics to state police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
According to information released by Hoboken Chief of Police Ken Ferrante for 2019, violent crimes, including homicides, rapes, and robberies dropped by 34.2 percent compared to the previous year .
February 15, 2020 - WICHITA, Kansas - A significant drop in methamphetamine prices led to a nearly a 20% decline in Wichita burglary last year, according to a police official.