Of the marriages ending in the early 70's when the divorce rate moved toward 50 percent, most came from intact families.
Back in 2000, the last Clinton year, inflation jumped up toward 4 percent.
If long-term rates rise toward 6.5 percent, he said, "the market is in trouble."
In the fall of 1987, bond yields were climbing toward 10 percent.
Now it's up to 4 or 5, heading toward 6 percent.
That view was not widespread yesterday, as bond yields moved back up toward 8 percent.
Base support is headed toward 90 percent, just about where it was before the 2002 and 2004 elections.
Inflation is moving back up toward 20 percent a month.
I see bond yields moving back toward 7 percent in the second half of this year.
Western economists, however, expect inflation to spiral toward 30 percent a month or more by the summer.