It's so sad how many parks are just empty, or there's just one kid there with a parent, no siblings, and just nobody to play with. Whenever I have the good fortune of seeing my grandson find friends to play with, I cherish the laugher, the screaming play, the movement.
Humanity lost it's focus on what mattered more than anything else. And here we are.
Nov 16, 2023·edited Nov 16, 2023Liked by Amy Sukwan
the neighbors behind me have a pandemic baby… probably not representative of what’s happening but gives me hope… looking out the window doing dishes can see the little girl having a tea party and mom swinging on swingset with baby… gives me a peaceful sense of normalcy in an upside down world.
There's been few baabies born in our area in Phuket one baby boy perhaps now seven months old and a baby girl in the same age range a few doors further down. I've noted perhaps because it is a Muslim area that I see a lot of families with young children but see almost none while travelling. It gives me hope as well. Children are the future...
It gets worse before it gets better. And it may not get better in our lifetime. And it would have happened even without covidcon. Covidcon is just speeding up the process.
Yes. It is collapsing. And as it collapses, an ever larger percentage of the existing population is becoming disabled. Back in 2020, before they rolled out the warp speed death jabs, over 60% of the adult population in America was suffering chronic and deadly health conditions, all of which are clear indicators of an early grave. For example, 48% of American adults (over 18) were suffering some form of heart disease, 18% with arthritis, 11% diabetes, etc., and all Americans were facing a 50% lifetime risk of cancer. All of the trajectories were already horrifying in 2020, and the evidence showed clearly that vaccine exposures (the old ones) were directly responsible for well over 90% of these health injuries.
It remains to be seen just how deadly the warp speed jabs will turn out to be. Most of the victims don't die right away. Could be the majority of them will be gone 5 or 6 years after the jabs. Very few are willing to take the boosters, (sounds to be between 1-3% compliance rate) but this is an indication that most of the jabbed had a negative experience, which means they suffered an injury.
All we can really do is protect our health as best we can, and where we can, point the jab-injured to things we know can help. And beyond this, we must locate a way to imagine ourselves in a better future, feel our way into it. I don't know what you're facing in the coming years if you stay where you are. There are still many somewhat safe enclaves of relative safety here in America, (CA not being one of them;-)
I have pondered about how I could benefit from taking a trip down South so I could then return without "papers" and get in on all of the goodies available to illegal aliens, but not to Americans;-)
Nov 16, 2023·edited Nov 16, 2023Liked by Amy Sukwan
When "normies" are told that birth rates are falling, they tend to react positively… and that is when one understands just how effective the global psy-op running since the 70s has been. Most people are convinced that having babies is a problem, for whatever reason.
This was recently illustrated in a thread on our favourite forum, Asean Now. Thai people are making less babies as part of the country's "development", and that is "a good thing" according to them… Given Thailand has recently been infiltrated by globalist stakeholders, one can only anticipate the next step: migrants from poorer neighbouring countries will be "necessary to compensate for the ageing workforce"… combined with antinationalist propaganda, the few Thai babies still coming into this world can be turned into useful leftist idiots wearing "refugees welcome" t-shirts within a couple of decades.
Beyond the Covid-19 jab virtue signalling I have long cringed at the super happy depopulationists on expat forums. It's universally seen as a good thing with no downsides. From past experience I attributed this higher than usual percentage of baby haters as being due to residul imperialism and objectification of women in Thailand, along with a fair number of former or current sexpats who in their personal lives might have tried to dodge some bullets on a few Thai maybe babies of their own. That's just my female perspective.
On that note as a strange addendum I might have a second or third cousin over here somewhere: my Uncle Bruce was my uncle before he married my Aunt Sharon, who was his first cousin. I remember one of the last times we talked before we had our falling out he told me that he had spent two years in Thailand, which raised more questions than answers for me about his never mentioned except to his VA therapist Vietnam war experience. He also mentioned that he had a son. If I ever see a random Thai name that comes out of the family DNA testing I might try to look that guy up!
Because of the state of our world is all the more reason for those who can have children to have them. This world will only improve with healthy, empathetic and critical thinking offspring. "They" want us to feel hopeless and defeated so we stop having children. That's the goal, to reduce the global population through a multi pronged approach.
Don't let them succeed. This world needs the change and those who are awake to this have a duty to bring forth the next generation in alignment with the vision of a better world.
Populations tend to bounce back quickly after wars. For example, after World War 1 we lost so many British men that there was a sex imbalance and in the 1920s there were two million 'surplus' women who couldn't find husbands.
But somehow things got evened out again, and by the end of WW2 we had the baby boom.
There's often baby booms after wars and after famines and extreme social strife. This is counterintuitive but those who are closer to death tend to embrace life: they don't assume that every child they have is going to live to be 100, for example, so if God blesses them with another one that is fine. The infertility gap is the elephant in the room though: there's been a systemic assault on human bodies that has been ongoing for a very long time. Combined with systemic economic inequality a lot of the young rae just trying to get ahead and by the time they are settled in it may be too late to have children. I see it in other animals from chickens to cats too: they aren't reproducing as I remember my cats doing when I was growing up, where 2-3 litters might be born in a year of 3-7 kittens each, for example. Is that specific to this area? I think eventually the Earth adapts...but we'd haave to stop assaulting it first...
It's a fascinating analysis of death trends in the UK. Until 1960 life expectancy increases, but then it stops, and this coincides with various 'health' interventions such as the flu jab for elderly, statins and the introduction of the Liverpool Care Pathway. Joel thinks older people have been systematically and deliberately poisoned. Probably to save the state having to pay out pension money.
Thanks for that one I'll check it out. I think a lot of things were done covertly to hide corporate malfeasance. There was a huge kick starting in the 1990s about pet overpopulation and increasing shaming of pet owners who didn't spay/neuter and vaccinate their animals. Growing up there used to be Free Kittens signs on street corners yet I haven't seen such a thing in 20 years. You might think that all moved to Facebook marketplace but it hasn't: you can't even advertise the sale or adoption of live animals in Thailand on there and in America I scoured Craigslist for months looking for any old dog for my daughter in Las Vegas, a city of 2.2 million people. But what if mass poisoning of the air, land and water was occuring at the same time which might be affecting the fertility rate of our furry friends? Well you wouldn't know that if you're pre emptively neutering and spaying them before any puppies or kittens can be born. I've heard anecdotally of dog breeders with purebreds which they are having trouble getting to conceive or having any surviving pups: one friend in Thailand over the course of three years had one Pomeranian puppy that survived to adulthood, while clear on the other side of the world in Ohio a neighbor tried and failed for years to successfully breed their Siberian Huskies, also eventually producing one surviving puppy which lived to adulthood. I'm sure breeders have techniques to overcome some of this damage but it seems odd to me as nature used to take its course without assistance...
Now that you come to mention it.....I have an unspayed labradoodle. I haven't tried to breed her, but I have noticed that she comes into season very very rarely. In fact I can't remember the last time.
Also my work colleague had a pedigree dog that gave birth recently and all the puppies died shortly after they were born.
We never found Sprout, sadly. We had many people who sent me photographs of lost cats who looked like him but they never were him. That leaves me with exactly one cat here in Phuket, Feisty. She's never been spayed and is over three years old and recently had her first ever litter of exactly two kittens. She's come back since we came back and her milk is going out but because the two kittens are already 7 weeks old I suspect they might have been adopted by children in the neighborhood. They don't seem to reproduce like they used to...
Few babies born, fewer still playing outside ever, are they all on social media?
It's so sad how many parks are just empty, or there's just one kid there with a parent, no siblings, and just nobody to play with. Whenever I have the good fortune of seeing my grandson find friends to play with, I cherish the laugher, the screaming play, the movement.
Humanity lost it's focus on what mattered more than anything else. And here we are.
the neighbors behind me have a pandemic baby… probably not representative of what’s happening but gives me hope… looking out the window doing dishes can see the little girl having a tea party and mom swinging on swingset with baby… gives me a peaceful sense of normalcy in an upside down world.
There's been few baabies born in our area in Phuket one baby boy perhaps now seven months old and a baby girl in the same age range a few doors further down. I've noted perhaps because it is a Muslim area that I see a lot of families with young children but see almost none while travelling. It gives me hope as well. Children are the future...
It gets worse before it gets better. And it may not get better in our lifetime. And it would have happened even without covidcon. Covidcon is just speeding up the process.
https://secularheretic.substack.com/p/the-looming-population-crash
Yes. It is collapsing. And as it collapses, an ever larger percentage of the existing population is becoming disabled. Back in 2020, before they rolled out the warp speed death jabs, over 60% of the adult population in America was suffering chronic and deadly health conditions, all of which are clear indicators of an early grave. For example, 48% of American adults (over 18) were suffering some form of heart disease, 18% with arthritis, 11% diabetes, etc., and all Americans were facing a 50% lifetime risk of cancer. All of the trajectories were already horrifying in 2020, and the evidence showed clearly that vaccine exposures (the old ones) were directly responsible for well over 90% of these health injuries.
It remains to be seen just how deadly the warp speed jabs will turn out to be. Most of the victims don't die right away. Could be the majority of them will be gone 5 or 6 years after the jabs. Very few are willing to take the boosters, (sounds to be between 1-3% compliance rate) but this is an indication that most of the jabbed had a negative experience, which means they suffered an injury.
All we can really do is protect our health as best we can, and where we can, point the jab-injured to things we know can help. And beyond this, we must locate a way to imagine ourselves in a better future, feel our way into it. I don't know what you're facing in the coming years if you stay where you are. There are still many somewhat safe enclaves of relative safety here in America, (CA not being one of them;-)
I have pondered about how I could benefit from taking a trip down South so I could then return without "papers" and get in on all of the goodies available to illegal aliens, but not to Americans;-)
When "normies" are told that birth rates are falling, they tend to react positively… and that is when one understands just how effective the global psy-op running since the 70s has been. Most people are convinced that having babies is a problem, for whatever reason.
This was recently illustrated in a thread on our favourite forum, Asean Now. Thai people are making less babies as part of the country's "development", and that is "a good thing" according to them… Given Thailand has recently been infiltrated by globalist stakeholders, one can only anticipate the next step: migrants from poorer neighbouring countries will be "necessary to compensate for the ageing workforce"… combined with antinationalist propaganda, the few Thai babies still coming into this world can be turned into useful leftist idiots wearing "refugees welcome" t-shirts within a couple of decades.
A nightmare in the making.
Beyond the Covid-19 jab virtue signalling I have long cringed at the super happy depopulationists on expat forums. It's universally seen as a good thing with no downsides. From past experience I attributed this higher than usual percentage of baby haters as being due to residul imperialism and objectification of women in Thailand, along with a fair number of former or current sexpats who in their personal lives might have tried to dodge some bullets on a few Thai maybe babies of their own. That's just my female perspective.
On that note as a strange addendum I might have a second or third cousin over here somewhere: my Uncle Bruce was my uncle before he married my Aunt Sharon, who was his first cousin. I remember one of the last times we talked before we had our falling out he told me that he had spent two years in Thailand, which raised more questions than answers for me about his never mentioned except to his VA therapist Vietnam war experience. He also mentioned that he had a son. If I ever see a random Thai name that comes out of the family DNA testing I might try to look that guy up!
Your explanation on the expats makes total sense!
Everything is contaminated. The future is bleak.
Because of the state of our world is all the more reason for those who can have children to have them. This world will only improve with healthy, empathetic and critical thinking offspring. "They" want us to feel hopeless and defeated so we stop having children. That's the goal, to reduce the global population through a multi pronged approach.
Don't let them succeed. This world needs the change and those who are awake to this have a duty to bring forth the next generation in alignment with the vision of a better world.
17 March 2000 "NEW REPORT ON REPLACEMENT MIGRATION ISSUED BY UN POPULATION DIVISION"
https://archive.is/bDI5t
Right on target, it seems...looks like their plan is working.....
Populations tend to bounce back quickly after wars. For example, after World War 1 we lost so many British men that there was a sex imbalance and in the 1920s there were two million 'surplus' women who couldn't find husbands.
But somehow things got evened out again, and by the end of WW2 we had the baby boom.
Widespread infertility is another matter, though.
There's often baby booms after wars and after famines and extreme social strife. This is counterintuitive but those who are closer to death tend to embrace life: they don't assume that every child they have is going to live to be 100, for example, so if God blesses them with another one that is fine. The infertility gap is the elephant in the room though: there's been a systemic assault on human bodies that has been ongoing for a very long time. Combined with systemic economic inequality a lot of the young rae just trying to get ahead and by the time they are settled in it may be too late to have children. I see it in other animals from chickens to cats too: they aren't reproducing as I remember my cats doing when I was growing up, where 2-3 litters might be born in a year of 3-7 kittens each, for example. Is that specific to this area? I think eventually the Earth adapts...but we'd haave to stop assaulting it first...
Your animals not reproducing is very ominous.
Did you see this? https://metatron.substack.com/p/death
It's a fascinating analysis of death trends in the UK. Until 1960 life expectancy increases, but then it stops, and this coincides with various 'health' interventions such as the flu jab for elderly, statins and the introduction of the Liverpool Care Pathway. Joel thinks older people have been systematically and deliberately poisoned. Probably to save the state having to pay out pension money.
Thanks for that one I'll check it out. I think a lot of things were done covertly to hide corporate malfeasance. There was a huge kick starting in the 1990s about pet overpopulation and increasing shaming of pet owners who didn't spay/neuter and vaccinate their animals. Growing up there used to be Free Kittens signs on street corners yet I haven't seen such a thing in 20 years. You might think that all moved to Facebook marketplace but it hasn't: you can't even advertise the sale or adoption of live animals in Thailand on there and in America I scoured Craigslist for months looking for any old dog for my daughter in Las Vegas, a city of 2.2 million people. But what if mass poisoning of the air, land and water was occuring at the same time which might be affecting the fertility rate of our furry friends? Well you wouldn't know that if you're pre emptively neutering and spaying them before any puppies or kittens can be born. I've heard anecdotally of dog breeders with purebreds which they are having trouble getting to conceive or having any surviving pups: one friend in Thailand over the course of three years had one Pomeranian puppy that survived to adulthood, while clear on the other side of the world in Ohio a neighbor tried and failed for years to successfully breed their Siberian Huskies, also eventually producing one surviving puppy which lived to adulthood. I'm sure breeders have techniques to overcome some of this damage but it seems odd to me as nature used to take its course without assistance...
Now that you come to mention it.....I have an unspayed labradoodle. I haven't tried to breed her, but I have noticed that she comes into season very very rarely. In fact I can't remember the last time.
Also my work colleague had a pedigree dog that gave birth recently and all the puppies died shortly after they were born.
Anecdotal....but interesting.
We never found Sprout, sadly. We had many people who sent me photographs of lost cats who looked like him but they never were him. That leaves me with exactly one cat here in Phuket, Feisty. She's never been spayed and is over three years old and recently had her first ever litter of exactly two kittens. She's come back since we came back and her milk is going out but because the two kittens are already 7 weeks old I suspect they might have been adopted by children in the neighborhood. They don't seem to reproduce like they used to...