Deaths of despair: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 14:23, 24 January 2023

Deaths of despair

"The term deaths of despair comes from Princeton economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton, who set out to understand what accounted for falling U.S. life expectancies. They learned that the fastest rising death rates among Americans were from drug overdoses, suicide, and alcoholic liver disease. Deaths from these causes have increased between 56% and 387%, depending on the age cohort, over the past two decades, averaging 70,000 per year." [1]

In an interview at Uncommon Knowledge the Stanford professor Paul Ehrlich, who published a famous book, The Population Bomb, stated that among the, “native born American anglo-man there's a big overlap with the deaths of Despair problem I can identify it I can't explain to you why it's happening but its results, its consequences are alarming”.

The reason and why is because of the Leaven of the Pharisees is in every house in America.