It used to be one week's pay went toward rent/mortgage, next week's pay was utilities/food/clothing, third week's pay was entertainment, fourth week's pay was savings. Now it's about 80% of monthly income goes to housing, the rest on food scraps and credit card minimum payments. I feel it's been that way since the 80's or 90's, but it definitely got worse after 9/11. My guess, 9/11 kickstarted the GR.
Oh, Idk...massive economic loss due to Covid shutdowns, massive health-deteriorating mandated jabs causing thousands of sudden deaths, many people canceled due to questioning authority, food plants burning to the ground by the dozens, people losing their homes due to loss of income because of said economic shutdowns, people getting fined for disobeying quarantine, forced mask use causing oxygen deficiency, trafficked children being raped and tortured, numerous Clintoncides...I'd say it's a version of bottom. That's just the USA. Everything you mentioned is happening in other parts of the world as we speak. I get your point, though.
Because most military programs in history were initiated by the central banking cabal, and the legitimate military operations happened before the internet. I suspect info drops among supporters during the Revolutionary War took place around the kitchen fire or town square. Idiot libs are being pilled all the time, hence The Great Awakening.
That's concerning. Faith in God and Christ, and adherence to the Church are different, imho. Church rules were written by people, who are not infallible or immune to misguidance or corruption. (In fact, they say Thoth, who was the Egyptian version of Baal/Moloch, was the god of priests and ritual, and taught humans the structure of Church dogma through the Emerald Tablets, the same source of occult for the Jewish cabal, something to ponder.) I have faith in God and the message of Christ, and Christ was a rebel who would not bow down to oppression. We need only look within ourselves to find the answer. Not saying religion is bad, just questioning the authority of various churches, and no offense is intended for those who attend.
I think it should be a requirement for all congress members to have worked in the private sector at some point before eligibility. Let's remember the Roman Republic, on which our democratic system is based. Imagine how much better representation for the working classes would be if their reps had once worked at a fast-food joint, a manufacturing plant, or department store, for example? Term limits are great, too, but wouldn't it be great to know our reps knew what it was like in the real world? Career politicians with no actual job experience or sense of reality are ripe for corruption. Even white-collar corporate professionals usually had part-time jobs after school, during summer breaks, or during college.