“In the history of the United States of America, we have never had a lower marriage rate, and we’ve never had a lower fertility rate.”
“We are definitively, with no debate, in a demographic winter.”
Timothy Goeglein says America is facing both a fertility crisis and a spiritual crisis.
“We need to tell a new generation that marriage is a really good thing.”
“Babies are really good things.”
“Children are really good things.”
“If we really want to resolve most of the cultural challenges in 21st century America.”
“It’s impossible, in my view, to have that conversation without an immediate conversation on the future of the American family.”
“What is the biggest single challenge facing America in its 250th year?”
“The biggest challenge facing us is a spiritual crisis of a pretty substantial order.”
“Show me a country with a strong spiritual and religious base, and I’ll show you a strong country.”
@elonmusk I personally think the root of any civilization's fall is not in the legal system — it's moral decline. When people become greedy, selfish, self-centred, and heartless, and when they think they can harm others and destroy the natural environment without consequences from heaven, that is when a civilization begins to crumble. To sustain a civilization longer, it should start with the education of children. A child who grows up with love and kindness, both at home and in society, tends to become a good person. Look at society today, children as young as four or five years old are already using phones and the internet. And what is on phones and the internet? Social media, YouTube, and video games are full of violence and killing, and all of that harmful content shapes their thoughts and behaviours unconsciously.
Motivational speaker, bestselling author & entrepreneur Tony Robbins on Shen Yun:
"I think it's magnificent to see another part of Chinese culture that a lot of people don't get to see." 🌟
🚨 95% of the universe — of physical reality — is entirely invisible to us.
Scientific estimates suggest that 95% of the cosmos—comprising dark matter and dark energy—remains entirely undetectable without specialized instruments.
But that's not all.
Even within our own environment, much of reality escapes us: our eyes can only detect a narrow band of visible light, and our ears are tuned to a limited range of sound frequencies. Yet, beyond those bounds lies a universe filled with ultraviolet rays, radio waves, and ultrasonic signals that shape our world in subtle but powerful ways.
From deep-sea whale calls to neutrinos streaming through our bodies unnoticed, modern science is only beginning to uncover the vast unseen forces at play.
Tools like infrared cameras and particle detectors help bridge this sensory divide, but the question remains: how much of reality are we still blind to? As our understanding deepens, the invisible universe challenges our perception of what’s real—and how much more there is to discover.