Posted on 12/14/2023 12:25:13 PM PST by Starman417
If a program can't get 2/3rds support then it most likely is a failure.
Although the reason the Dems want to move primaries in front of the Iowa caucuses is because they are self-hating, anti-white racists, it still might be a good idea if this undermines the ethanol cabal who requires all candidates to pledge their allegiance to ethanol to have any hopes of doing well in the caucuses.
“Ethanol is an industry that enjoys no natural market.”
Humans have been drinking ethanol for thousands of years.
Ethanol is also widely used as a solvent and as a feedstock for lots of industrial processes. It’s not just for drinking or burning.
“Among all currently married adults in 2016, 76% of men and 77% of women were in their first marriage.”
https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2021/marriages-and-divorces.html
Most marriages last. A few people marry serially, making averages look awful.
They really need to sunset the ethanol business I doubt it will ever happen
This article starts out by talking about marriages failing and then makes an abrupt jump to talking about ethanol. Kind of a bait and switcheroo.
I recall reading lately that that fifty percent stat which we’ve been hearing since the seventies was debunked. So it’s been re-bunked?
...starts out all hearts and diamonds...
...but in the end, all you want is a club and a spade.
;)
I was good at marriage. I’ve done it once, and it lasted until she passed.
Divorcing an alcoholic spouse?
.
I learned quite a bit from reading it, don’t marry ethanol.
Same here, wife and I met last semester in college, graduated in 1970, married in 1971. We had 2 children. Had a good marriage.
She died in 2018, after 47 years of marriage.
I married again 3 years ago. Here I am at 75 starting over again. We are an illogical couple, we both agree that God put us together.
We spent 37 wonderful years together. She was my perfect mate. 27 months later, I still don’t quite know how to get through life without her. I miss her profoundly.
Repeats the old canard “50% end in divorce”. No, 50% of people ever married are divorced at given time.
Not that I have great faith in American ability to stay in commitment.
It was debunked long ago. I heard about that in the ‘90s.
Or was it the spouse was the reason for drinking the ethanol?
I’m very sorry. Would not try to give you advice.
My wife died of a heart attack, and I was holding her when she died. She never took another breath.
She had heart trouble and stints. I tried giving CPR, local EMT came then the EMT’s on the ambulance crew never got a pulse. The ER never got a pulse.
When she died, I focused more on my father. He died 1-1/2 years after my wife did at 94. His heart quit. He had quadruple bypass surgery and then later a pace maker.
So it was just me, one day at the local bank I misunderstood a conversation with the bank teller. Mulled it over in my head for about a month, then called the teller and invited her over to my house for Sunday lunch. We are both good cooks, we repeated that a number of times. We are both convinced that God put us together.
My father once told me, “when you quit, you die. and I am not ready for that yet.” He was a wise man.
He did not marry again, I did take him to see a high school classmate in Plano. They had talked by phone. She was in a care home, we took her to lunch and it was clear that she had dementia. When we got ready to go home, dad told her “we will see you later Mary”, she said no you won’t.
I’m starting over at 75. It is not the same, as before, but it is a good marriage.
God Bless you my friend. You have my respect.
Thank you. I think you understand in a way most people can’t.
The only advice I would give any fellow widower or widow is to get plenty of support.
We were taking online classes. She was sitting where I’m sitting now. I was next to her. The class ran from 9-11 PM (we’re on Eastern time.) We wet out, watched TV for an hour, and went to bed. She took her shoes off while watching TV.
About 2:30-ish, UI heard her calling for me. I got up and saw that she had fallen getting up from the john. I pulled her up, picked her up, grabbed her by the armpits to take her back to bed.
We never got there. She fell again by her side. The last thing she said was “I’m fine.” Apparently not.
27 months later, those shoes sit right where she left them. Her night table is just as she left it. I haven’t been able to get to getting rid of her clothes yet. It gives me a kind of comfort to see them when I go into our closet to get clothes for myself to wear for the day.
I miss her in every way, profoundly. But I’m making it.
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