A Mostly Peaceful Depopulation
Infertility and Sterilization is the Main Tool, but Wars, Migration and Economic Collapse Help. What Does Google Trends Have to Say?
At a rest stop in Utah in 2015
Yesterday morning I woke up thinking about a spot in Nebraska again. I don’t know why this specific location has come back to me perhaps two dozen times over the years, but I sometimes think when I die it will be there on my life review or perhaps will be my meeting place with spirits as I transition. In the summer of 2015 I drove from Las Vegas to Ohio with my two daughters and my husband Oh. One perfect summer day we pulled off of Interstate 80 in the middle of nowhere as a sign advertised a rest area off of the highway.
The rest area was closed and undergoing renovations. But my butt hurt from driving so long and I wanted to stretch my legs. We drove on a small service road and parked on the shoulder under a bridge with a small river. My older daughter, then 8, took my two year old and led her on the rocks to the edge of the water. The two girls faced away from me holding hands.
We only stayed at that spot for 10 or 15 minutes. I considered getting the cooler out and setting up a picnic, but there was no reason to do so. I was not on a compelling schedule and there was no reason to stay there and linger. There was no reason to hurry away and drive further either. Time seemed to stretch out into infinity. Ironically it is a spot which I can never go back to again.
My daughters are no longer two and eight years old, and my first husband Oh is dead. Even if I were to look for this same spot off of Interstate-80 the rest area has almost certainly been renovated and the service road next to the river has probably undergone changes. It’s possible that I might not even recognize it, as I never had gone to that spot before or since then.
My younger girl reached an odd milestone on that road trip. We had been potty training her and the two year old was doing well with it, but I bought a pack of diapers for her for the road trip because I worried she would have trouble holding it in with long stops in between potty breaks. She never needed them and proudly followed her big sister’s lead. It was the last pack of diapers I ever bought.
I suppose I bring it up because being a parent, for me, is the most challenging and fulfilling thing you can do as a human. It cements the passage of time in people like no other experience on Earth. For a few short weeks or months, which feel like they will last forever in the middle of them, all of your focus is on teething remedies or potty training. And then one day with no celebration or fanfare you buy your last pack of diapers and some number sit unused. You find a dusty teething ring under the couch that was long ago outgrown. Perhaps you find a walker or high chair in the garage 10 years later. The passage of time is stamped so clearly through these milestones. In that moment they consume all of your thoughts. And then they are gone forever. They grow up so quick.
There’s been some recent attention paid again to the Kissenger Report and the goal of capping the human population at 8 billion before it begins to trail off. Although it is bound up in nice sounding euphemisms regarding sustainable development and expanding access, it’s murder by any other name. They don’t want people making babies, so they set up incetive programs to sterilize as many people as they could. Population control has been a desire of the elites at least since the King of Egypt (believed to be Ramses II), ordered the killing of all newborn Isrealite baby boys in the Old Testament book of Exodus. The grisly task was usually carried about by the fathers of the boys. Baby Moses, of course, was placed in a bassinet on the river so as not to endure that fate.
It wasn’t being done for the benefit of the people . It always sounds like an enticing idea for those in power to maintain their power.
As a Midwestern Doctor writes regarding it:
In short, a year ago, bringing up the idea that the vaccines could cause an unprecedented decrease in the population was immensely controversial and understandably, even in this movement, very few people wanted to touch it. However, now that so much evidence of this problem has emerged, many now are (e.g., Arkmedic wrote one of the best pieces I’ve seen on the link between the vaccines and miscarriages).
There are clear signs of sustained drops in births in many developed countries. I decided to look at Google Trends data to see if I could make sense of it. US births data for 2022 came out in early June. It showed a less than 1% decrease in births in 2022 from 2021, which had shown a slight increase from 2020’s all time low birth rate numbers. In parsing the data there were drops in births for all but Hispanic women, leading me to believe that larger decreases were offset by pregnant migrants crossing the Southern US border.
Brian Wilkins had an interesting chart which indicated the numbers of children in the ages 0-4 is in America is falling in almost every state. That had me pondering the entire period from pregnancy through birth and young childhood development. Some search terms are not going to be used by would be parents. For example I doubt any woman is going to use the search terms pregnancy test, as a home pregnancy test is easy to find in almost any general store. Beyond that a woman who is already pregnant and knows it has no need for a pregnancy test. It is women who are trying to conceive and having difficulty doing so who are going to be buying more pregnancy tests, but they wouldn’t generally be searching online for them.
Google trends notes that it changed the algorithym it used to count results on January 1, 2022. This makes me a bit suspicious. If anything though the five year trend on the search term Infertility turned so positive that I had trouble believing it:
I find it difficult to believe that the term was almost never searched for prior to 2022 but has been enjoying very high and sustained interest since early 2022. But the trend towards searching for information related to infertility seems clear. A lot of would be parents would want to know about it if they were having difficulty conceiving. The related search term Causes of Infertility has also been on an upward trend with spikes in that term occuring during March of 2021 and then in early 2022 and onwards.
Clomiphene is a drug used to induce ovulation in women who are trying to conceive. The five year worldwide trend shows a clear upward slope:
Lamaze, which teaches about going into labor and childbirth, wouldn’t be looked into until later stages of pregnancy. Searches for this term are steadily down:
Fertility Clinic searches are up, with a spike to all time high interest in early 2022:
It doesn’t seem to be leading to a spike in babies. Searches for Teething Remedies have steadily fallen:
Most search terms indicated problems having babies. Google searches for running strollers and potty seats are down. Searches related to miscarriage symptoms are up. You get the general idea. Things have been affecting fertility for a very long time but it seems to have tipped over into some critical mass.
Of course they’ve been trying to sell people on the idea that population declines are a good thing for the planet. War has of course been used for this objective in times of old before chemical means of sterilization became favored. Here’s a chart showing two ways to lose population: slowly through low birth rates, then suddenly through war. This is the population of Ukraine through January of 2023.
I guarantee that the Ukrainian population has dropped further as 2023 has continued. I’m becoming concerned that there aren’t enough people left to take care of the bodies of the dead.
Hopefully most Ukrainians are not dead, of course, but have rather fled to other countries. I did a google trends search and basically EVERY developed country with the words Visa behind it was at or near all time high search trends. This includes Poland Visa, Hungary Visa, USA Visa and Thailand Visa. Russia Visa was the one laggard: there was a spike in searches right after the war with Ukraine commenced in February of 2022, but since then it has been below the pre pandemic 5 year trend line. There’s a lot of interest in visas in Africa as there are erupting conflicts in Sudan, Nigeria and other places.It’s the last continent left with high birthrates and a supposedly growing population. It seems they’re hellbent on destabilizing the entire planet.
I don’t know where the bottom on birth trends are , but I am optimistic that perhaps this period of difficulty will spawn a new era of appreciation for life, cooperation and self reliance. 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? How did it become so ingrained to act against our own self interest at the behest of a very very few?
Have you ever had somewhere that haunts you? The spot in Nebraska does for me. Perhaps it’s a reminder that our time on Earth is short. Make the most of it.
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.
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.