The associate professor at Indiana's School of Public Health-Bloomington questioned whether the 26% decrease in marijauna use among 10th graders there from 1996 to 2022 would last, and called it a "blip on the radar"

"We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst.”

From “The Abolition of Man”, by C.S. Lewis, 1943

Moral and mental health vary directly with that of the subject’s etheric environment.

That’s why the use of drugs, alcohol and tobacco are all decreasing exponentially regardless of culture or geography.

I’ve included data supporting my assertion below, along with an analysis of the horizontal propaganda rebutting the phenomenon.

THE DATA

From 1991 to 2022, alcohol use among 12th graders in Indiana decreased by 66%, from an all-time high 59.7% to an all-time low 19.9%.

That’s an average annual decrease of 2.1% per year over each of those 31 years.

From 1996 to 2022, cigarette use among 11th graders in Indiana decreased by 93%, from an all-time high of 40.1% to an all-time low 2.8%.

From 1996 to 2022, marijuana use among 10th graders in Indiana decreased by 26%, from an all-time high 24.9% to an all-time low 8.4%. That’s an average annual decrease in marijuana use of 1% per year over each of those 26 years.

Ruth Gassman, a senior scientist at the IU School of Public Health-Bloomington and the executive director of the Indiana Prevention Resource Center said these hyper-exponential decreases had occurred because “The pandemic has disrupted adolescents’ daily lives and may have prevented youth from accessing substances.”

Wait, what? Even a mouth-breathing Coincidence theorist would have to admit that these huge positive changes were underway decades prior to the social engineering surrounding the barely-covert international release in 2020 of a Chinese bat virus with four amino acids added for improved transmissibility to humans.

Which social engineering did not, to my knowledge, in any way curtail the availability of illicit drugs. And that’s not even mentioning alcohol and cigarettes!

Ruth’s farcical, bullshit plausible-deniability excuse is made even more outrageous given the fact that she’s a senior scientist, albeit at a second-class University. But she’s brazenly put it forward has because she knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

Here’s Ruth Gassman’s picture:

[image]

(Ruth Gassman, senior scientist at the IU School of Public Health-Bloomington and the executive director of the Indiana Prevention Resource Center, who said that hyper-exponential decreases in drug, alcohol and tobacco use in Indiana over decades was because “The pandemic has disrupted adolescents’ daily lives and may have prevented youth from accessing substances.”

I have included her photograph so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.

She and her just-as-smug co-conspirators are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. They 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 until the students start taking it to these people?

I don’t believe it will be long, now. When Confidence games collapse, they do so in a rush, like a house of cards.

From 2018 to 2022, vaping by 12th graders in Indiana decreased by 48% , from 28.6% to 14.8%.

From 2020 to 2022, vaping among Indiana 12th graders decreased by 36%, from 23% to 14.8%.

The 18% average annual decrease in vaping among Indiana 12th graders from 2020 to 2022 was 50% greater than the 12% long term average documented among that population from 2018 to 2022.

The great positive change is increasing hyper-exponentially, going forward in time.

From 2020 to 2022, alcohol consumption by 12th graders in Indiana decreased by 30% , from 28.5% to 19.9%.

The 15% average annual decrease in alcohol consumption by 12thgraders in Indiana from 2020 to 2022 was 614% greater than the 2.1% long-term average annual decrease in their alcohol consumption from 1991 to 2022.

The great positive change is increasing hyper-exponentially, going forward in time.

From January to August 2022, drug use among 10th graders in the United States decreased by 10%, year-over-year.

The 10% decrease in drug use among 10th graders in the United States from January to August 2022 was 900% greater, or ten times greater than the 1% average annual decrease in marijuana use among 10th graders in Indiana from 1996 to 2022.

The great positive change is increasing hyper-exponentially, going forward in time.

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 may variants is “unclear”. That’s why Jon Agley, an associate professor at the School of Public Health-Bloomington and deputy director of research at Prevention Insights said of these decades-long decreases in Indiana “it’s unclear whether these trends will continue. It will be important to learn whether these are long-term shifts or more of a ‘blip’ on the radar.

Here’s Jon Agley’s picture:

[image]

(John Agley, associate professor at the School of Public Health-Bloomington and deputy director of research at Prevention Insights, who said it was “unclear” if the 26% decrease in marijuana use among 10th graders in Indiana in the two-pus decades from 1996 to 2022 would continue, an inferred that it was merely a “blip on the radar”.)

I have included his photograph so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.

He and his co-conspirators are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. They 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 until the students start taking it to these people?

I don’t believe it will be very long, now.

When the school of fish, the flock of birds turns, they do so apparently as one.

THE ARTICLES

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 many variants is “surprised”.

That’s why an apn.com article from August 2022, apn.com said “9 Surprising Stats About Substance Use in 2022”.

Can you see how the headline is written so generally that you cannot get any idea what, specifically, they’re talking about? That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

As a propagandist, the uncredited author from “All Points North” knows that, since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, their smarmy hedging generality “surprising trends” goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” awareness of the scope and speed of the exponential decrease in drug use I’m documenting here.

For those late to the party, anytime an author is uncredited, it is proof that said author is an Intelligence operative.

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 many variants is “remarkable”.

That’s why the curiously-uncredited Intelligence operative from apn.com goes on to say “In remarkably good news, the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) reported that teen substance use has shown the largest single-year drop since it began surveying adolescent drug use in 1975.”

Where “shown the largest single-year drop” walks it back a step from teens actually experiencing it.

And where “the NIDA reported” It also gives the subconscious of the Coincidence theorist reader the green light to say “oh, that National Institute on Drug Abuse will report anything!” or “oh, but that was just one report!”.

The propagandist knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

The article goes on to say “Illicit drug use dropped 12% among 10th graders and 5% among eighth and 12th graders. This includes drops in marijuana, alcohol, and nicotine use – including vaping, which has been a concern for many parents over the last several years.”

From January to August 2022, drug use among 10th graders in the United States decreased by 10%, year-over-year.

From January to August 2022, drug use among 8th and 12th graders in the United States decreased by 5%.

The article goes on to say “Researchers hypothesize that the decline in teenage substance use is partly due to the COVID-19 pandemic reducing the availability of illicit substances for teens.”

In August 2022, news.iu.edu said “Substance use reaches 30-year low among Indiana youth, survey finds”.

Where the uncredited author tacked “survey finds” on the back end of the headline to give the subconscious of the Coincidence theorist reader the green light to say “oh, but they can make those surveys find anything!” or “oh, but that was just one survey!”

The propagandist knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

For those late to the party, anytime an author is uncredited, it is proof that said author is an Intelligence operative.

Said operative said “reaches 30-year low” to avoid saying “decreases to the lowest level in history”.

The article goes on to say “According to a recurring survey, the past two years have seen some of the largest decreases in substance use among Indiana youth in over 30 years.”

Where “some of the largest decreases” and “in over 30-years” are Mil-speak for “the largest decreases in history”.

The article goes on to say “Among substances with the lowest prevalence rates in 30 years were cigarettes, alcohol and marijuana. Alcohol use in the 30 days prior to taking the survey among 12th-graders, for instance, was 39.8 percentage points lower than in 1991, when it was 59.7% – the highest-ever reported for this survey. Cigarette use among 11th-graders was down 37.3 percentage points from a high of 40.1% in 1996, and marijuana use among 10th-graders was down 16.5 percentage points from a high of 24.9% in 1996.”

From 1991 to 2022, alcohol use among 12th graders in Indiana decreased by 66%, from an all-time high 59.7% to an all-time low 19.9%.

From 1996 to 2022, cigarette use among 11thgraders in Indiana decreased by 93%, from an all-time high of 40.1% to an all-time low 2.8%.

From 1996 to 2022, marijuana use among 10th graders in Indiana decreased by 26%, from an all-time high 24.9% to an all-time low 8.4%.

I had to click a link to a separate table, and then do the math to learn:

From 2018 to 2022, vaping by 12th graders in Indiana decreased by 48%, from 28.6% to 14.8%.

That’s an average annual decrease of 12% per year over each of those four years.

“We have never seen such substantial decreases since I began leading the survey, and we suspect these data reflect unexpected consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Ruth Gassman, a senior scientist at the IU School of Public Health-Bloomington and the executive director of the Indiana Prevention Resource Center, who leads the survey. “The pandemic has disrupted adolescents’ daily lives and may have prevented youth from accessing substances.”

Wait, what? Even a mouth-breathing Coincidence theorist would have to admit that January through August 2022 was well after the social engineering surrounding the barely-covert international release in 2020 of a Chinese bat virus with four amino acids added for improved transmissibility to humans.

Which did not, to my knowledge, in any way curtail the availability of illicit drugs. Not even to mention alcohol and cigarettes!

Ruth’s outrageous, farcical, bullshit plausible-deniability excuse has been put forward because she knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

The article goes on to say “Alcohol remained the most common substance used by Indiana youth, but the percentages of 12th-graders who reported drinking alcohol in the 30 days prior to taking the survey dropped from 28.5% in 2020 to 19.9% in 2022.”

From 2020 to 2022, alcohol consumption by 12th graders in Indiana decreased by 30%, from 28.5% to 19.9%.

Thats an average annual decrease in alcohol consumption of 15% per year over each of those two years.

The 15% average annual decrease in alcohol consumption by 12th graders in Indiana from 2020 to 2022 was 614% greater than the 2.1 long-term average annual decrease in their alcohol consumption from 1991 to 2022.

The great positive change is increasing hyper-exponentially, going forward in time.

The article goes on to say “Electronic vapor products were the second-most-used substance by Indiana teens. The percentages of 12th-graders who reported using vaping products during the past 30 days decreased from 23% in 2020 to 14.8% in 2022.”

From 2020 to 2022, vaping among Indiana 12th graders decreased by 36%, from 23% to 14.8%.

The 18% average annual decrease in vaping among Indiana 12th graders from 2020 to 2022 was 50% greater than the 12% long term average documented among that population from 2018 to 2022.

The great positive change is increasing hyper-exponentially, going forward in time.

The article goes on to say “These declines are positive news, but it’s unclear whether these trends will continue,” said Jon Agley, an associate professor at the School of Public Health-Bloomington and deputy director of research at Prevention Insights. “Since youth often use substances with peers and outside the home, it will be important to learn whether these are long-term shifts or more of a ‘blip’ on the radar.”

Jeff Miller, Libertyville, IL, October 6, 2022

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