And we're in the middle of it right now. This amazing interview was done back in 1985 with a former KGB agent who was trained in subversion techniques. He explains the 4 basic steps to socially engineering entire generations into thinking and behaving the way those in power want them to. It's shocking because our nation has been transformed in the exact same way, following the exact same steps.
Here are the four steps:
- Demoralization (immorality, basically getting everyone used to it, thinking it's normal, and moral people are the bad folks)
- Destabilization (of the economy, politics, etc.)
- Crisis (caused by immorality and destabilization, which replaces the old government with a new controlling regime)
- Normalization (as everyone gets used to the new regime)
If that isn't happening in our nation, I don't know what is. We're clearly in the destabalization period, immorality having been normalized and now our economy going down the tubes. And we might be near the crisis point.
I sometimes feel like we are living in the decline of society, and unaware of the tsumani about to hit us. And here is one form the tsunami is taking: Last year, fully 40% of US children were born out of wedlock, to single mothers. 40% - that's nearly half. The statistics on children raised by single mothers are not good: higher rates of poverty, abuse, and crime, trouble completing school, drug abuse, difficulty become productive adults. Considering that 50% of marriages already end in divorce and many of those kids also wind up being raised by their mothers alone, how many of our kids in total will be raised by single mothers? Half? Or more, realistically?
The single motherhood problem has serious economic implications. Congress and the Obama administration are creating record deficits and new programs to be funded by taxpayer money, while we have an aging population soon to retire and fewer children to support the retirees. AND: if half or more of our kids are being raised by single mothers, their earning power, if statistics are correct, will be much lower than those raised in stable two-parent homes with better economic and educational opportunities. How will this future generation be able to earn enough taxable income to support these programs and pay back the deficit? Is anyone thinking about this?





