This article argues that rising rates of hopelessness and suicide among high school girls are not due to COVID-19 lockdowns or political parties, but rather a deliberate “desexing” of youth orchestrated by the government. The author, Miles Mathis, points to CDC data showing increased virginity rates alongside these alarming mental health trends, suggesting this is being promoted as a “good trend” despite decreasing puberty ages. Mathis believes this is a strategy for population control, profit, and preventing revolution, with schools infiltrated by “Intel agencies and every species of ghouls” to promote virginity, homosexuality, gender fluidity, and dysphoria. He asserts that miserable consumers spend more, and this phenomenon has been exploited by merchants for over a century. The article also claims that plummeting birth rates are a direct consequence of declining sexual activity and that COVID-19 and vaccines were primarily intended to target sex, sexuality, and reproduction.

While acknowledging overpopulation as a global problem, Mathis dismisses the methods used to address it, preferring “Nature” to human “psychopaths” like Bill Gates or Anthony Fauci. He advocates for teaching sexual discipline and natural birth control, sharing his own experience of being sexually active since 17 without pregnancies. He also criticizes unchecked immigration as a factor in US population growth. The author suggests that girls are suffering more emotionally because they are targeted more intensely by “Intel agencies,” becoming “casualties of the sex wars” similar to how Blacks are casualties of “race wars.” He posits that fake events and propaganda are used to divide people and distract them from the real agenda.

The text further delves into the perceived destruction of men in the eyes of young women, citing a poll from Philips Exeter Academy where a significant percentage of girls did not identify as straight. Mathis connects this to a broader agenda of “man hating” being promoted as intellectualism. He recounts his own experiences with women who have been negatively impacted by “mainstream sexual politics” and the increasing trauma in relationships due to factors like transgenderism, equity, and fake events. The article notes a drastic decline in the US marriage rate since World War II and believes this is a planned outcome.

Mathis also interprets CDC data on suicide rates, suggesting that the lower rate among Asians is because the CIA doesn’t manufacture fake “Asian men raping and murdering women” stories to target them. He claims women are more easily manipulated by emotional news stories, leading to increased fear and distrust. The author traces the manipulation of the female psyche back to the infiltration of feminism in the 1960s, arguing that women have been oversold their abilities while men have been decimated, leaving women in a state of fear and uncertainty. He concludes that while individuals are victims, women who spread these lies are accomplices.

The article then shifts to personal anecdotes about relationships and marriage, emphasizing the importance of having children early in a marriage for stability. Mathis shares his own marital struggles and offers advice on dating and marriage, advocating for older men to marry younger women who want children, a practice he sees as undermined by modern advice. He critiques the current feminist movement as “reverse sexism” and contrasts it with the desired sexual progress of the 1970s, which he believed was a quest for equal coexistence.

Finally, Mathis expresses dismay at the state of young people today, describing them as decimated by societal factors like fluoride, poisoned food, drugs, and constant “brainwashing and gaslighting.” He believes the CDC numbers on hopelessness and suicide are suppressed and that young people are too medicated to fully experience these emotions. He concludes by suggesting that a revolution could start in high schools, as the youth are the hardest to control, and expresses concern about the future of society under the current administration.

List of Subjects, Names, References, Locations, Companies, etc.: