AGREE....IT WAS THE 1970'S....and was prompted with Ruth Bader Guinzberg's ruling about "equal rights issues" dealing with WOMEN BEING ABLE TO BUY HOUSES as singles, etc.....before that, folks were stuck in bad marriages..unless you had damning photos of adultery.
For once, it doesn't seem that there was a single piece of legislation passed in the dead of night after a false flag. Rather, divorce laws were widely varied, then evolved to their "on demand" status over a long period of time.
I would hasten to add that I suspect the Cultural Engineers were the pressure behind this course, but were up against so much backpressure of good sense and societal stability that it took them many decades.
In any case, this podcast episode is a fairly entertaining narrative of a time and place representing an inflection point in the issue, and it's been all downhill after that:
And so in 1931, Nevada passed legislation that solidified Reno once and for all as the divorce capital of the world: they changed the residency requirement, which had been six months just a few years before, to six weeks.... In the same legislative session that lowered Reno’s residency to an unheard of six weeks, the state of Nevada also legalized wide-open gambling.
PS: If it seems the podcast leans liberal, it does. This is a rebroadcast from years ago and it is insufferably woke now.
No fault divorce has played a huge part in the unravelling of US society.
If you can get divorced at any time for any reason, what's the point of getting married?
When fourth wave feminism was unleashed it divided us into tribes, rants about the oppressive patriarchy infected young minds thru anime and tiktok, etc., and man-hating became common. When creature comforts were multiplied under unprecedented wealth and underemployed men became addicted to screens and became useless in the eyes of overpaid women.
In the US, it was the 1970s. Other countries differ.
AGREE....IT WAS THE 1970'S....and was prompted with Ruth Bader Guinzberg's ruling about "equal rights issues" dealing with WOMEN BEING ABLE TO BUY HOUSES as singles, etc.....before that, folks were stuck in bad marriages..unless you had damning photos of adultery.
For once, it doesn't seem that there was a single piece of legislation passed in the dead of night after a false flag. Rather, divorce laws were widely varied, then evolved to their "on demand" status over a long period of time.
I would hasten to add that I suspect the Cultural Engineers were the pressure behind this course, but were up against so much backpressure of good sense and societal stability that it took them many decades.
In any case, this podcast episode is a fairly entertaining narrative of a time and place representing an inflection point in the issue, and it's been all downhill after that:
99% Invisible: Episode 559 The Six-Week Cure (11/5/2023)
PS: If it seems the podcast leans liberal, it does. This is a rebroadcast from years ago and it is insufferably woke now.
There's no such thing as divorce. Once a man and woman have become one flesh, there is no reversal but death.
Pretending otherwise is as silly as pretending you're transgender. The natural consequences of your actions supercede Law.
You're only fooling yourselves.
Based.
No fault divorce has played a huge part in the unravelling of US society. If you can get divorced at any time for any reason, what's the point of getting married?
When fourth wave feminism was unleashed it divided us into tribes, rants about the oppressive patriarchy infected young minds thru anime and tiktok, etc., and man-hating became common. When creature comforts were multiplied under unprecedented wealth and underemployed men became addicted to screens and became useless in the eyes of overpaid women.