Anonymous ID: 0b3136 Jan. 29, 2019, 6:41 p.m. No.4958859   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8916

>>4958597(LB)

 

Accorrding to this, vaccines may not be needed for de-population. Seems feminism and the breakdown of the family in western countries is doing at least part of the job.

 

Monetization Vs. Depopulation - The World's Narrative Until Something Breaks

 

In contemporary, post world war II times, the process of depopulation is the declining number of births pitted against significantly longer life spans of the existing population. Given this, depopulation starts from the declining quantity of young and slowly works its way up the population. So, as depopulation is taking place, it is tracked by declining births, and eventually by declining 0 to 64yr/old populations vs. still expanding 65+yr/old populations. Outright depopulation only takes over once the declines among the under 65yr/olds outweigh the ongoing growth among the 65+yr/olds.

 

In 2011, there was one state plus Puerto Rico that experienced outright depopulation. However, by 2018, that number has increased to 9 states(Alaska, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Louisiana, Mississippi, New York, West Virginia, Wyoming),plus Puerto Rico that are outright shrinking (chart below).

 

In 2018, an additional 16 states (Maine, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont, Connecticut, Kentucky, New Mexico, Kansas, Missouri, Wisconsin, Alabama) are now experiencing the precursor to outright depopulation; declining 0 to 64yr/old populations versus ongoing growth among the 65+yr/old population. Simply put, half the states plus Puerto Rico are experiencing either outright or the early onset version of depopulation (under 65yr/old depopulation).

 

Speaking of Puerto Rico, the flood to the exits appears to be on. The chart below shows the annual net population declines that began in 2005 & hit warp speed in 2018. Since 2005, the Puerto Rican population has fallen about 16%!!!

The 20% of the US population living in rural America who experienced the least economic upside of the booms and bubbles are sadly in line to get clobbered. Of course, this young rural to urban flight is a boon for urban economies, further boosting demand for housing, rents, jobs, etc.

 

While Texas, Florida, Washington, Oregon, Utah, Colorado, Arizona, Nevada, the Carolinas, and Georgia all continue to grow well above the national average…there is one typical growth leader that is lagging. California's present annual population growth has slowed to levels only seen previously in post recession periods. If this trend continues, California will soon be joining the depopulation list. But this isn't just an American predicament, it is an entirely global affair.

 

Rest here: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-01-28/monetization-vs-depopulation-worlds-narrative-until-something-breaks