Whats changed for me is how now, when I see or hear about people who have started big families, now I am comforted by it, (especially if they are non vaxxers). In previous decades I generally looked down on big families, having absorbed the 'overpop' narrative. I see the ruse now, though I ended up not having any kids myself.
I knew my parents wanted to have more children and grew up in the shadow of our little sister's death, in a small family with many relatives who remained childless. So I was fascinated by large families growing up and how they managed things. It seemed it followed boom and bust cycles which were contrary to family planning at every turn: one family would get pregnant too young, or have too many to take care of, another family would do everything "right" and wouldn't be able to conceive at all. I ultimately accepted that a higher power should be in charge...and that every child should be viewed as a blessing from God
Agreed. I know in my parents minds, they wanted all their kids to be college educated before any families were started. By the time I finally finished college and resettled in another state, I was already near 27 years old. At least my brothers (2) had kids (a total of 5) but really that is barely a replacement number. For 50+ years and in so many ways, (inflation being primary after the depop ideals) we were veered off course from being procreative. The scale of it is so....big. Power to the babies.
I've been married to the same woman for 38 years and we had eleven children together, all homeschooled (not for religious reasons, we just believed in freedom.) Walking through stores with six or seven children in tow always elicited various responses, from praise to outright disgust. People said the most vicious things, but also the nicest things. We now have 21 grandchildren and we're just getting started, as our youngest child is 11. I wouldn't trade my large family for anything in the world. Oh, and no one is vaxxed. 😁
There have been terrible wars, persecutions, genocides, floods, famines, earthquakes, all throughout history. You are the descendent of those that survived all this and more. You are strong; hold your head high Joanie, you'll make it through. 😁
I have a friend who just had her 4th. All at home births, zero vaxed of any kind, and all are homeschooled. She raises all their vegetables and cans everything. They raise chickens for both eggs and eating. She’s well educated and very kind. Kindness is rare nowadays. Homeopathic medicine is for her family all the way.
Recently I was telling my neighbor about her kids, i told her that these kids have come straight out of 1950’s. They have a super calmness about them with an uncanny intellect lending to mature reasoning abilities. I Can’t explain it well, but I can FEEL it , it’s just something odd that I believe has left the brain of today’s youth. Maybe most kids today have brain distracted technology syndrome. Their Nervous systems are on extreme overload so they can’t attain the calmness to reach critical thinking or even know what a critical thought would be!
Sounds like a wonderful family, I'd love to meet them. I'm not saying any of this to brag, only to point out the possibilities if you allow your kids to follow their own inclinations and set good choices in front of them. We have a son with a classical piano degree, one with a degree in American sign language, one with a heavy equipment operator's license, a son preparing for his national master title in chess, a daughter that has a teaching degree and teaches middle school, and a daughter and son that each have their own business, seamstress and painting. And I'm a highschool dropout! You find friends and tutors and books and mentors along the way that take them farther than you could ever imagine.
For many years, whenever i have heard someone say a variation of, "It is not responsible to bring children into this messed up world," I say, "if you know that, you should be one of those having kids, and bring them up in the way they should go. If you want babies, have a bunch of babies. They will probably make the world a better place."
I just turned 50. As it is apparently something I should not do, as TPTB seem to be instituting eugenics to save the planet, I have half a mind to find a 30 year old herbalist and make a bunch of babies.
Thank you. Though, I would have to get the other half of my mind on board. Also, a real job, or build a successful business. And, fertile, single 30 year old herbalists interested in 50year olds do not exactly grow on trees.
"If the Pharoah commands you to kill your newborn son or shoot your neighbor or pump your patient full of a deadly protocol or to permanently sterilize them, why do we listen and follow those orders?"
---------
In a statement yesterday, Casten said “The only thing we know about her death is that it was peaceful. And the only lesson we can take from that is to savor the moments you have with your loved ones.”
That’s the ONLY lesson?
-----------
“I can’t believe any suggestion that health care providers systematically began to practice euthanasia or homicide in the early pandemic. Or that the policies were formed with a primary intent to cause excess death in care homes. I just can’t do it. And won’t, because if I do, then the world is lost to me.”
This idea of a young, healthy person with ostensibly their entire lives in front of them "dying peacefully" infuriates me. There is no moral compass or standard that can be applied anymore at that point. Incinerating thousands or more in mass graves as they scream for their lives can be defined as dying peacefully. A murderer straight up shooting someone in the head at random can be defined as dying peacefully: at least they didn't suffer or struggle or cost the health care system too much to try to save. Did they have a right to pursue their future and perhaps continue their genetic line without intrusion? I'd say that they did. Anybody who uses the term "Died Peacefully" for their own child's death at the behest of supra national interests is, in my opinion, an enabler to murderers...
Your story about the spot in Nebraska haunting you reminded me of something.
Up until the age of about 10, I had this recurring dream where I was in front of a big closed gate, with a great sense of danger behind me, as if something or someone was after me, but the gate prevented me from going any further. I can't say how many times I had this dream, but it was at least 5 or 6 times, the exact same dream. The sense of danger and urgency was great and would always make me wake up. Although it has been over 30 years since I last had it, I still remember it vividly and I am sure I would instantly recognize that gate if I saw it (if it does exist). This is not a memory from this life, of that I am sure, which is why I have always kind of believed in reincarnation.
I too had deep penetrating disturbing reoccurring dreams about 40 years ago. (Still vivid today! ) reincarnation has always been simmering on my back burner brain of possibilities. I had my past lives read in 1985. It was a university educational psych class by the professor-weird!! Right? Fascinating enlightening details!
I should write another substack regarding the three houses. When I was in my late teens and early 20s I kept dream journals and had a series of three dreams each about three different houses. The first one I named the haunted house: It was dark blue with a colonial style and a white ornate keyhole covering for what was the attic. It had a large wooden front porch and a small red barn behind it. I never went inside the house in my dreams of it I believed the house was very haunted and had a sense of foreboding on seeing it. In real life I looked for the house on my road trips. I always imagined I'd find the house in some small town off a state route, perhaps in Ohio, or Iowa, or somewhere East Coast. I thought maybe it was in North Carolina or Maryland or Massachussetts.
The second home was quite different. It was a one story red brick house with a low pitched asphalt roof that appeared to be caving in. It was unkempt and vines sprouted through loose floorboards on the front stoop. In my dreams an old man stayed there who was longing for his wife. In real life I thought that it looked like countless unkept and soon to be demolished houses around the Detroit area and I looked for it in driving around those places.
The third house in my dreams was the only one in which I entered. It was a yellow wooden farmhouse set against a field of grain, with railroad tracks running behind it. It was neither sterile yet haunted nor falling apart. A children's tricycle was on the front porch and the family: a man, his wife and three children, invited me inside and offered me a guest bedroom to stay in upstairs. There was a patchwork quilt on the small bed and I could see the railroad tracks from the window. It felt like Nebraska, or Iowa, or Kansas.
I have found the first two houses in real life but have not found the third. Their physical locations in both cases near shocked me. They were completely incongruent with the building styles, vegetation and climate of the area. The haunted blue colonial house was discovered in 2020 in Las Vegas while I wad delivering food. The one with the old man longing for his wife was found in 2021 in Phuket, Thailand, with a long backstory there...
Stephen J. Shaw's documentary Childless World unpacks the ongoing population decline (and all this is public data, so it's impossible that the weffies aren't aware of it)
here's hoping you and the girls can revisit that nebraska site - your psychic powers got you to thailand so i'll bet you recognize the spot even if it's remodeled.
I haave watched parts of Shaw's documentary thanks for linking me further up on it. I wasn't aware of the odds on first childbirth after 30 but I did see the excellent analysis on the emerging balance between the increasing lifetime childless and those who end up having the same amount or even more babies than before. Even there I don't think it is as simple. Birth control and working until a woman is "established" in her late 30's takes its toll of course, and many of both genders hide their difficulties conceiving in a shame of sorts. Some is, to quote Brandon Flowers, "Only the Young Can Break Away." What I don't see is great efforts to bridge the divide between parenst and non parents or to generally view the children as our future by wider society...
AI: Limiting population growth ethically requires a comprehensive and sensitive approach that respects individual rights, promotes social equity, and considers environmental sustainability. Here are some ethical strategies that can be implemented to address population growth:
Comprehensive Education: Ensure widespread access to education, particularly for girls and women. Educated women tend to have fewer children and make more informed decisions about family planning.
Accessible Family Planning Services: Provide affordable and accessible family planning services, including contraception and reproductive health care. Ensuring access to a range of options empowers individuals and couples to make informed choices about family size.
Empowerment of Women: Promote gender equality and women's empowerment in all aspects of life. When women have control over their reproductive choices, they can make decisions that align with their personal and family goals.
Public Awareness Campaigns: Raise awareness about the benefits of small and planned families, environmental impacts, and the importance of responsible parenthood.
Social Security and Healthcare: Strengthen social security systems and healthcare infrastructure to support aging populations. This can alleviate the perception that having more children is necessary for economic security in old age.
Economic Incentives: Implement policies that incentivize small families, such as tax breaks or other benefits for families with fewer children.
Support for Vulnerable Populations: Address socio-economic inequalities to support vulnerable populations and ensure that individuals and families have the resources they need to thrive.
Environmental Conservation: Encourage sustainable practices and responsible use of natural resources to address concerns related to overpopulation and environmental impact.
Collaboration between Governments and NGOs: Foster collaboration between governments, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and international agencies to implement effective family planning programs and policies.
Voluntary Approach: Emphasize that all population control measures must be voluntary and respect individual autonomy and reproductive rights.
It is essential to approach the issue of population growth with sensitivity and cultural awareness, recognizing that different communities may have unique perspectives and needs. Ethical population management involves respecting human rights, promoting social justice, and ensuring the well-being of current and future generations in harmony with the environment. It should be a collective effort that involves the cooperation of governments, communities, NGOs, and individuals working together to create a sustainable and equitable future.
"How did it become so ingrained to act against our own self interest at the behest of a very very few?"
Excellent question, Amy. A lot to unpack and the hour is late. But that question is haunting, and despite searching high & low for years now, no answer has been satisfying.
One does get the impression of a CACO facility.
I am picturing the meme about the grey wolf, eying an easy meal near a camp. What is the worst that could happen, thinks the wolf? Transition to a paired image, a little chihuahua with a knitted beanie in terrible colours. Possibly with other insults.
Surely our innate self-preservation instincts are going to kick in any day now? Wholesale?
Keeping us in the starting blocks isn't helping us. It is helping them. It is preventing the kick.
A new appreciation for life would be fantastic. I think much of this is connected. Just as much of modern society is layers of mal-adapted behaviours.
I think the interconnected nature of reality is most of what has been hidden. Yes it does feel like trained dogs, especially on social media. All of the correct responses were sophisticated in increasingly Pavlovian ways. In groups and out groups form to a point where your guy can be a mass murderer and you'll defend him because he isn't their guy. It is always about the many against the very very few
Yes, and the tried & true tactic of dividing the opposition.
Heard from Occupy Wall Street recently?
No, Banksters were threatened. And they deployed their playbook to segment the opposition into a rainbow of colours that was no threat to their interests. But ironically is an additional threat to our cultures. When they are mutilating children you just know it isn't about what they say it is.
Whats changed for me is how now, when I see or hear about people who have started big families, now I am comforted by it, (especially if they are non vaxxers). In previous decades I generally looked down on big families, having absorbed the 'overpop' narrative. I see the ruse now, though I ended up not having any kids myself.
I knew my parents wanted to have more children and grew up in the shadow of our little sister's death, in a small family with many relatives who remained childless. So I was fascinated by large families growing up and how they managed things. It seemed it followed boom and bust cycles which were contrary to family planning at every turn: one family would get pregnant too young, or have too many to take care of, another family would do everything "right" and wouldn't be able to conceive at all. I ultimately accepted that a higher power should be in charge...and that every child should be viewed as a blessing from God
Agreed. I know in my parents minds, they wanted all their kids to be college educated before any families were started. By the time I finally finished college and resettled in another state, I was already near 27 years old. At least my brothers (2) had kids (a total of 5) but really that is barely a replacement number. For 50+ years and in so many ways, (inflation being primary after the depop ideals) we were veered off course from being procreative. The scale of it is so....big. Power to the babies.
I've been married to the same woman for 38 years and we had eleven children together, all homeschooled (not for religious reasons, we just believed in freedom.) Walking through stores with six or seven children in tow always elicited various responses, from praise to outright disgust. People said the most vicious things, but also the nicest things. We now have 21 grandchildren and we're just getting started, as our youngest child is 11. I wouldn't trade my large family for anything in the world. Oh, and no one is vaxxed. 😁
Props to you and your wife and many continued blessings!
Thanks Amy. Same to you!
Wow... 😃! Gives us all hope for a future
There have been terrible wars, persecutions, genocides, floods, famines, earthquakes, all throughout history. You are the descendent of those that survived all this and more. You are strong; hold your head high Joanie, you'll make it through. 😁
Thanks, Don!
It's especially hard, since my only child (who was homeschooled) is vaxxed and won't speak to me. So I appreciate your kind and supportive words 🥰
Yes, I remember you telling me that. She's in the media business isn't she? I'll say a prayer for you both if you're ok with that.
Yes, thank-you.
I have a friend who just had her 4th. All at home births, zero vaxed of any kind, and all are homeschooled. She raises all their vegetables and cans everything. They raise chickens for both eggs and eating. She’s well educated and very kind. Kindness is rare nowadays. Homeopathic medicine is for her family all the way.
Recently I was telling my neighbor about her kids, i told her that these kids have come straight out of 1950’s. They have a super calmness about them with an uncanny intellect lending to mature reasoning abilities. I Can’t explain it well, but I can FEEL it , it’s just something odd that I believe has left the brain of today’s youth. Maybe most kids today have brain distracted technology syndrome. Their Nervous systems are on extreme overload so they can’t attain the calmness to reach critical thinking or even know what a critical thought would be!
Sounds like a wonderful family, I'd love to meet them. I'm not saying any of this to brag, only to point out the possibilities if you allow your kids to follow their own inclinations and set good choices in front of them. We have a son with a classical piano degree, one with a degree in American sign language, one with a heavy equipment operator's license, a son preparing for his national master title in chess, a daughter that has a teaching degree and teaches middle school, and a daughter and son that each have their own business, seamstress and painting. And I'm a highschool dropout! You find friends and tutors and books and mentors along the way that take them farther than you could ever imagine.
For many years, whenever i have heard someone say a variation of, "It is not responsible to bring children into this messed up world," I say, "if you know that, you should be one of those having kids, and bring them up in the way they should go. If you want babies, have a bunch of babies. They will probably make the world a better place."
I just turned 50. As it is apparently something I should not do, as TPTB seem to be instituting eugenics to save the planet, I have half a mind to find a 30 year old herbalist and make a bunch of babies.
If you find a woman willing able and are so blessed, then God bless you...
Thank you. Though, I would have to get the other half of my mind on board. Also, a real job, or build a successful business. And, fertile, single 30 year old herbalists interested in 50year olds do not exactly grow on trees.
"If the Pharoah commands you to kill your newborn son or shoot your neighbor or pump your patient full of a deadly protocol or to permanently sterilize them, why do we listen and follow those orders?"
---------
In a statement yesterday, Casten said “The only thing we know about her death is that it was peaceful. And the only lesson we can take from that is to savor the moments you have with your loved ones.”
That’s the ONLY lesson?
-----------
“I can’t believe any suggestion that health care providers systematically began to practice euthanasia or homicide in the early pandemic. Or that the policies were formed with a primary intent to cause excess death in care homes. I just can’t do it. And won’t, because if I do, then the world is lost to me.”
This idea of a young, healthy person with ostensibly their entire lives in front of them "dying peacefully" infuriates me. There is no moral compass or standard that can be applied anymore at that point. Incinerating thousands or more in mass graves as they scream for their lives can be defined as dying peacefully. A murderer straight up shooting someone in the head at random can be defined as dying peacefully: at least they didn't suffer or struggle or cost the health care system too much to try to save. Did they have a right to pursue their future and perhaps continue their genetic line without intrusion? I'd say that they did. Anybody who uses the term "Died Peacefully" for their own child's death at the behest of supra national interests is, in my opinion, an enabler to murderers...
Your story about the spot in Nebraska haunting you reminded me of something.
Up until the age of about 10, I had this recurring dream where I was in front of a big closed gate, with a great sense of danger behind me, as if something or someone was after me, but the gate prevented me from going any further. I can't say how many times I had this dream, but it was at least 5 or 6 times, the exact same dream. The sense of danger and urgency was great and would always make me wake up. Although it has been over 30 years since I last had it, I still remember it vividly and I am sure I would instantly recognize that gate if I saw it (if it does exist). This is not a memory from this life, of that I am sure, which is why I have always kind of believed in reincarnation.
I too had deep penetrating disturbing reoccurring dreams about 40 years ago. (Still vivid today! ) reincarnation has always been simmering on my back burner brain of possibilities. I had my past lives read in 1985. It was a university educational psych class by the professor-weird!! Right? Fascinating enlightening details!
I should write another substack regarding the three houses. When I was in my late teens and early 20s I kept dream journals and had a series of three dreams each about three different houses. The first one I named the haunted house: It was dark blue with a colonial style and a white ornate keyhole covering for what was the attic. It had a large wooden front porch and a small red barn behind it. I never went inside the house in my dreams of it I believed the house was very haunted and had a sense of foreboding on seeing it. In real life I looked for the house on my road trips. I always imagined I'd find the house in some small town off a state route, perhaps in Ohio, or Iowa, or somewhere East Coast. I thought maybe it was in North Carolina or Maryland or Massachussetts.
The second home was quite different. It was a one story red brick house with a low pitched asphalt roof that appeared to be caving in. It was unkempt and vines sprouted through loose floorboards on the front stoop. In my dreams an old man stayed there who was longing for his wife. In real life I thought that it looked like countless unkept and soon to be demolished houses around the Detroit area and I looked for it in driving around those places.
The third house in my dreams was the only one in which I entered. It was a yellow wooden farmhouse set against a field of grain, with railroad tracks running behind it. It was neither sterile yet haunted nor falling apart. A children's tricycle was on the front porch and the family: a man, his wife and three children, invited me inside and offered me a guest bedroom to stay in upstairs. There was a patchwork quilt on the small bed and I could see the railroad tracks from the window. It felt like Nebraska, or Iowa, or Kansas.
I have found the first two houses in real life but have not found the third. Their physical locations in both cases near shocked me. They were completely incongruent with the building styles, vegetation and climate of the area. The haunted blue colonial house was discovered in 2020 in Las Vegas while I wad delivering food. The one with the old man longing for his wife was found in 2021 in Phuket, Thailand, with a long backstory there...
Very interesting!
A dream journal is such a good idea, I wish I had had the discipline to do that…
That must have been a compelling experience!
Stephen J. Shaw's documentary Childless World unpacks the ongoing population decline (and all this is public data, so it's impossible that the weffies aren't aware of it)
https://rumble.com/v2okppk-birthgap-childless-world-by-stephen-j.-shaw-part-1.html
good short tara henley interview with the filmmaker https://tarahenley.substack.com/p/a-childless-world#details
a few takeaways;
if you haven't had a child by 30 your chances of having one are 50%
men are falling behind women in education – they don't discuss this, but it's autism
2/3 of people in college are women today, in thailand it's 55% female
s korea has lowest birth rate in the world (and highest excess mortality)
for those who don't get the shout out to MAA in the title, this is one of the essential documents of plandemic history https://margaretannaalice.substack.com/p/a-mostly-peaceful-depopulation
here's hoping you and the girls can revisit that nebraska site - your psychic powers got you to thailand so i'll bet you recognize the spot even if it's remodeled.
I haave watched parts of Shaw's documentary thanks for linking me further up on it. I wasn't aware of the odds on first childbirth after 30 but I did see the excellent analysis on the emerging balance between the increasing lifetime childless and those who end up having the same amount or even more babies than before. Even there I don't think it is as simple. Birth control and working until a woman is "established" in her late 30's takes its toll of course, and many of both genders hide their difficulties conceiving in a shame of sorts. Some is, to quote Brandon Flowers, "Only the Young Can Break Away." What I don't see is great efforts to bridge the divide between parenst and non parents or to generally view the children as our future by wider society...
AI: Limiting population growth ethically requires a comprehensive and sensitive approach that respects individual rights, promotes social equity, and considers environmental sustainability. Here are some ethical strategies that can be implemented to address population growth:
Comprehensive Education: Ensure widespread access to education, particularly for girls and women. Educated women tend to have fewer children and make more informed decisions about family planning.
Accessible Family Planning Services: Provide affordable and accessible family planning services, including contraception and reproductive health care. Ensuring access to a range of options empowers individuals and couples to make informed choices about family size.
Empowerment of Women: Promote gender equality and women's empowerment in all aspects of life. When women have control over their reproductive choices, they can make decisions that align with their personal and family goals.
Public Awareness Campaigns: Raise awareness about the benefits of small and planned families, environmental impacts, and the importance of responsible parenthood.
Social Security and Healthcare: Strengthen social security systems and healthcare infrastructure to support aging populations. This can alleviate the perception that having more children is necessary for economic security in old age.
Economic Incentives: Implement policies that incentivize small families, such as tax breaks or other benefits for families with fewer children.
Support for Vulnerable Populations: Address socio-economic inequalities to support vulnerable populations and ensure that individuals and families have the resources they need to thrive.
Environmental Conservation: Encourage sustainable practices and responsible use of natural resources to address concerns related to overpopulation and environmental impact.
Collaboration between Governments and NGOs: Foster collaboration between governments, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and international agencies to implement effective family planning programs and policies.
Voluntary Approach: Emphasize that all population control measures must be voluntary and respect individual autonomy and reproductive rights.
It is essential to approach the issue of population growth with sensitivity and cultural awareness, recognizing that different communities may have unique perspectives and needs. Ethical population management involves respecting human rights, promoting social justice, and ensuring the well-being of current and future generations in harmony with the environment. It should be a collective effort that involves the cooperation of governments, communities, NGOs, and individuals working together to create a sustainable and equitable future.
Thank you for compiling this information, sharing your stories and views Amy. 🙏❤
You're right, Google is not the best source for this type of information.
Edward Dowd has probably done more research in this regard than anyone else. His website - https://totalityofevidence.com/
His twitter - https://twitter.com/DowdEdward
His book - https://www.amazon.com/Cause-Epidemic-Sudden-Childrens-Defense/dp/1510776397
Here's a post I did a while back showing how we are on the verge of a massive population crash -
https://secularheretic.substack.com/p/the-looming-population-crash
Thnaks. The repercussions of said population crash will reverberate for decades. That's if we're lucky and it remains a mostly peaceful depopulation.
"How did it become so ingrained to act against our own self interest at the behest of a very very few?"
Excellent question, Amy. A lot to unpack and the hour is late. But that question is haunting, and despite searching high & low for years now, no answer has been satisfying.
One does get the impression of a CACO facility.
I am picturing the meme about the grey wolf, eying an easy meal near a camp. What is the worst that could happen, thinks the wolf? Transition to a paired image, a little chihuahua with a knitted beanie in terrible colours. Possibly with other insults.
Surely our innate self-preservation instincts are going to kick in any day now? Wholesale?
Keeping us in the starting blocks isn't helping us. It is helping them. It is preventing the kick.
A new appreciation for life would be fantastic. I think much of this is connected. Just as much of modern society is layers of mal-adapted behaviours.
Peace.
I think the interconnected nature of reality is most of what has been hidden. Yes it does feel like trained dogs, especially on social media. All of the correct responses were sophisticated in increasingly Pavlovian ways. In groups and out groups form to a point where your guy can be a mass murderer and you'll defend him because he isn't their guy. It is always about the many against the very very few
Yes, and the tried & true tactic of dividing the opposition.
Heard from Occupy Wall Street recently?
No, Banksters were threatened. And they deployed their playbook to segment the opposition into a rainbow of colours that was no threat to their interests. But ironically is an additional threat to our cultures. When they are mutilating children you just know it isn't about what they say it is.
Peace.
Beautifully thoughtful Stack! You have a lovely writing style.
The World IS over-populated!
With Billionaires, Lawyers, Bankers, and Politicians!!
Next time you are on I-80 stop here...still in the middle of nowhere!
https://olesbiggame.com/