No
doubt both depopulation and the aging of all our nations has sped up as
a result of COVID vaccinations being forced on 2/3 of the world’s
population.
Yes, forced. Illegally forced. By spewing lies at
everyone about the vaccines’ benefits and harms, which governments,
regulators and manufacturers knew were lies, by scaring the Bejesus out
of people by lying about the severity of COVID, by threatening and
sanctioning refusers, by exhorting the world to shun refusers, by
demanding vaccine passports to participate in normal activities like
shopping… the list goes on and on. The people who wrote, spread and
repeated these lies are culpable of crimes against humanity.
But
the COVID lies and the vaccine lies were only the beginning.
Governments also lied about borders, about immigration, about
unaccompanied children crossing borders, and most importantly about WHY
all these bizarre policies were being hoisted on most of the developed
and developing world. The NY Times has been front and center in
carrying the dirty water—and amplifying it—for each of these criminal
lies and the policies they buttressed.
Now the NYT is at it again.
I see many narratives that the NY Times may be trying to push with this piece:
ONE:
Lack of intent. We did not create the COVID virus nor the vaccines
with the intent to depopulate, because we actually need more young
people as workers. Therefore, such claims make no sense, and must be
dismissed in their entirety.
TWO:
In fact, we knew the population was decreasing. It has been obvious for
years. Why would we shoot our economies in the foot by depopulating?
Don’t blame us. [Ignores the fact that by crashing our economies, the
assets can be purchased on the cheap, while putting people and nations
into a debt trap that will close in on them later as interest rates
rise, or money gets tight, or using other schemes.]
THREE: The NYT provides the justification why pensions cannot be paid in full, and why retirement ages must increase.
FOUR:
If we were in fact trying to depopulate, we would have aimed for the
elderly. The fact that so many young people have myocarditis, sudden
deaths, and that there are 40% more deaths in working age groups should
be additional evidence that vaccine depopulation was accidental, not
intentional.
FIVE: To justify crazy
‘immigration’ policies [the border is open, just wade across] the NYT
reveals that with a younger group of workers entering the country, maybe
we can pay your pension after all. Fingers crossed. So shut up about
immigration if you want to retire.
SIX:
All those unaccompanied minors crossing the border? Shut up, they
will become our young workers in a few years, the ones that pay for your
pensions. Stop asking what happened to them.
SEVEN:
We could so easily fix this if it wasn’t for those right-wing populist
movements nipping at the heels of our totalitarian one world governance
project.
Excerpts follow.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/07/16/world/world-demographics.html
The
world’s demographics have already been transformed. Europe is
shrinking. China is shrinking, with India, a much younger country,
overtaking it this year as the world’s most populous nation.
But what we’ve seen so far is just the beginning.
The projections are reliable, and stark: By 2050, people age 65 and older will make up nearly 40 percent of the population in some parts of East Asia and Europe. That’s almost twice the share of older adults in Florida, America’s retirement capital. Extraordinary numbers of retirees will be dependent on a shrinking number of working-age people to support them.
In all of recorded history, no country has ever been as old as these nations are expected to get.
As a result, experts predict, things many wealthier countries take for granted — like pensions,
retirement ages and strict immigration policies — will need overhauls
to be sustainable. And today’s wealthier countries will almost
inevitably make up a smaller share of global G.D.P., economists say….
As in many young countries, birth
rates in Kenya have declined drastically in recent years. Women had an
average of eight children 50 years ago, but only just over three last year.
Demographically, Kenya looks something like South Korea in the
mid-1970s, as its economy was beginning a historic rise, although its
birth rate is declining somewhat more slowly. Much of South Asia and
Africa have similar age structures….
there is evidence that sub-Saharan African countries’ fertility rates are dropping even faster than the U.N. projects… [Uh oh, what else have we done to them?]
The transformation of rich countries has only just begun. If
these countries fail to prepare for a shrinking number of workers, they
will face a gradual decline in well-being and economic power….
To
cope, experts say, aging rich countries will need to rethink pensions,
immigration policies and what life in old age looks like. [Do they mean what life in old age looks like, or do they mean enforced death in old age?]
Change will not come easy. More than a million people have taken to the streets in France to protest raising the retirement age
to 64 from 62, highlighting the difficult politics of adjusting.
Immigration fears have fueled support for right-wing candidates across
aging countries in the West and East Asia.
“Much of the challenges at the global level are questions of distribution,” Dr. Myrskylä said. “So some
places have too many old people. Some places have too many young
people. It would of course make enormous sense to open the borders much
more. And at the same time we see that’s incredibly difficult with the increasing right-wing populist movements.”…
“You can say with some kind of degree of confidence what the demographics will look like,” Mr. O’Keefe said. “What the society will look like depends enormously on policy choices and behavioral change.”