Population Decline Worries

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Karlon

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2023
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#21
I don't think people should consciously try to stop having kids. I just think it is immoral to pressure women and couples to have kids to fix economic/cultural/societal concerns.
i assent!
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
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#22
As long as you are a Canadian citizen, regardless of whether or not you were born here or contributed
in any way to the "wealth" of our country, everyone over the age of 65 gets old age security payments
also (OAS). Of course, most people over the age of sixty five are not having children
.:unsure:;):giggle:
Just name more kids Abraham and Sarah and maybe people will have more children after 65.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
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#23
Just name more kids Abraham and Sarah and maybe people will have more children after 65.
In India, Ramjit Raghav (at age 96 years), with his wife Shakuntala Devi (age 52), became
the modern world's oldest father at age 94 when his first child was born in 2010. He broke
his own record in 2012 when at the age of 96 he had another son. According to wiki
.:)
 

JaumeJ

Senior Member
Jul 2, 2011
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#24
To understand why you need to understand what direct and indirect taxes are and how they are collected legally.
I'm not saying you aren't entitled to it. I'm saying there is no fund paying out pensions. It is funded by current workers.
Are you telling all here that people who pay SS tax exempted from their paychecks are not receiving, come their retirement, from the very monies paid in by all people employed.
Tax is tax. All taxes are from the pockets of the citizens. The set up in my time was like a bank account earning interes. My pesion has been paid for by ME, nto by people currently working. iI always paid income tax, and every time I made any purchases there was state tax either hidden in the price or outright
Perhaps the mov ers and the shakers should take my contributions for themselves and leave me to starve. Where is your head. Have you no compassion for others?
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
14,505
5,266
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#25
In India, Ramjit Raghav (at age 96 years), with his wife Shakuntala Devi (age 52), became
the modern world's oldest father at age 94 when his first child was born in 2010. He broke
his own record in 2012 when at the age of 96 he had another son. According to wiki
.:)
Good on him. If I'm still breathing at 96 I'll count that quite the accomplishment.
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
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#26
Are you telling all here that people who pay SS tax exempted from their paychecks are not receiving, come their retirement, from the very monies paid in by all people employed.
Tax is tax. All taxes are from the pockets of the citizens. The set up in my time was like a bank account earning interes. My pesion has been paid for by ME, nto by people currently working. iI always paid income tax, and every time I made any purchases there was state tax either hidden in the price or outright
Perhaps the mov ers and the shakers should take my contributions for themselves and leave me to starve. Where is your head. Have you no compassion for others?
I apologize. I didn't realize you were in Spain. In the US, money collected for Social Security was never put into private accounts for individuals. Legally it couldn't be done because of American tax law so the money just went into the general fund.
Because many Americans would not have chosen to vote for such a law, it was presented to the American people as though they would have private accounts.
For the longest time it didn't matter. There were 14-15 people paying in for every recipient initially. Because the law has been expanded to include so many things, now the ratio is 2:1. That's why the program is in trouble.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
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#27
- The right seems to be more worried about the "great replacement";
I am not sure what you mean by this .:unsure:. Do you mean something like how Islam is widely considered
the fastest growing religion in Europe due primarily to immigration and above average birth rates?
 

JohnDB

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2021
5,613
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#28
Mouse Utopia experiments predicted this modern problem.

And yes it's a problem.

The China "one child" laws have been completely reversed as labor shortages became apparent. Everyone is encouraged to have 3 children. However, the cost of housing has skyrocketed to the point that people can't afford to have a child because of the competition school system. (You only advance to higher education if you are scoring higher than your peers) So parents must pay for a tutor for each child to help them advance. Also music lessons and sports lessons as well...including all supplies.

In the USA falling birth rates except among the welfare recipients is definitely a financial problem for social security. Daycare costs and other costs associated with having children make it prohibitive for those seeking a middle class lifestyle. The poor are usually not paying for their lifestyles anyway and a "baby daddy paycheck" is usually a welcome addition to a poverty household. (Think I'm kidding?....I know many guys who got trapped by this and women who never have worked using this)

In the USA a two income household is a necessity to have an average standard of living. It's been a system created that way by NEGLIGENCE of our politicians pandering and lining their own pockets. (It's complicated and somewhat convoluted) Both sides of the aisle are guilty...

The change came about after WWII. Those homes where the wife worked could afford nicer toys than the others in the SAME NEIGHBORHOOD.
Between the financially difficult times for our economy and the demand for more toys all at the same time men's wages never kept up with inflation and more and more homes needed the wife to have a job outside the home. (Women never making as much as the men)
Instead of actually addressing the real problem side issues were created to divert attention away from the real problem. The ERA constitutional ammendment still hasn't been ratified....but it took the focus away from the politicians not addressing Corporations greed and indulgences. (Corporate indulgence is a whole other thread topic)

And as the cost of living advanced wages didn't....didn't even get close. Inflation has completely eroded the incomes of everyone. No one can afford to be a single income family anymore. As such, the public schools raise your kids and teach the same morals as the local Greyhound bus terminal would if living there full time.
 

MsMediator

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2022
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#29
I am not sure what you mean by this .:unsure:. Do you mean something like how Islam is widely considered
the fastest growing religion in Europe due primarily to immigration and above average birth rates?
This is common term used by certain conservative newscasters in the US. I think it is more racial, a fear that the white population/white way of life is being replaced.
 

SomeDisciple

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2021
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#30
This is common term used by certain conservative newscasters in the US. I think it is more racial, a fear that the white population/white way of life is being replaced.
It's not about race, and definitely not about "white people". Although it is a concern among ethnonationalists- it is not exclusive to them.

"Replacement migration" is a real thing, and the left tries to downplay it and make you out to be a racist if you don't support it and go along with it- just like they do with the rest of their filthy schemes- because the policies benefit them.

But when governments do it they are BETRAYING their whole domestic population- it doesn't matter what color you are, they're stabbing you in the back.
 

MsMediator

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2022
947
608
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#31
It's not about race, and definitely not about "white people". Although it is a concern among ethnonationalists- it is not exclusive to them.

"Replacement migration" is a real thing, and the left tries to downplay it and make you out to be a racist if you don't support it and go along with it- just like they do with the rest of their filthy schemes- because the policies benefit them.

But when governments do it they are BETRAYING their whole domestic population- it doesn't matter what color you are, they're stabbing you in the back.
I think the left does it just to get votes. I don't think they are intentionally trying to change demographics, since it is said by the right that the left is also racist. The left also loves the socialist Europeans.
 

SomeDisciple

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2021
1,829
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#32
I don't think they are intentionally trying to change demographics,
I think they might, but not because they are racist. They aren't racist, in that they will exploit anyone of any race or demographic. But there is a reason they push "diversity, diversity, diversity" to the point that they will try to insert diversity regardless of what the actual consequences are. They think by forcing it that people will automatically change, and that's about as stupid as "corrective rape".
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
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#33
It seems nowadays there is more concern about declining populations and low birth rates, particularly in the more developed countries.

It seems different groups have different worries:
- The left is more worried about funding Social Security and other programs (presumably because there will be less tax revenue);
- The right seems to be more worried about the "great replacement";
- Both sides (as well as other countries such as China) seem to worry about impact on economic growth down the road and loss of national power.

Are these worries warranted? Does it really matter from a Christian perspective if birth rates are low? The population decline is not really a result of "population control" per se which I believe is not Biblical. For example, in the U.S. and in most countries we do not have maximum child limits.
I have thought about this, about why different groups see it as a problem, and whether I should consider it a problem.

We have assumed continual growth for so long that it has become ingrained in everything from planning city layouts to business models. If a McDonald's does this year only as much business as it did last year it is considered a failure. It had better be hitting 5.7% more than last year or it might get a visit from a team of corporate experts to find and fix the problem.

Thing is, the earth we're running all this on is finite. We can't grow everything, every year, forever. Eventually we'll hit some very hard walls.

I think atheists should be overjoyed about current population trends. If you believe there is no god and we don't have another habitable planet to go to, then we're pretty much stuck here on this ball. Our illusion of limitless prosperity is shattered, but for the long term a population decrease makes our existence as a species more sustainable.

It is a bit worrisome for infrastructure. If you build house to fit your wife and all 16 kids, when you're old and the kids are gone that house is going to be more than you can handle on your own. So many of our systems have been built on the assumption of continual, perpetual growth that if our population shrinks they will probably be unsustainable. There will be some belt tightening. Some people who assumed a free or light ride might have to learn how to work the way our fathers worked. And lo, there will be much weeping and wailing.

So do I personally think it's a problem? Still not sure. I know I can't personally DO anything about it though.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
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#34
In the USA a two income household is a necessity to have an average standard of living. It's been a system created that way by NEGLIGENCE of our politicians pandering and lining their own pockets. (It's complicated and somewhat convoluted) Both sides of the aisle are guilty...
I dunno... That average standard of living seems to include a LOT more than it did back when I was a child. Lots of things we consider necessities weren't even common back then.

If a family today has what my family had back then, it would be much more easily sustainable. But they would be considered so deprived that child welfare services might come and take the kids away.

Don't even get me started on what was considered an average standard of living back when my dad was a kid. We would faint at the mere thought of living like that.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
24,688
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#35
When I read this

(Quotation from Gideon)

I think it is sad that Christians have drunk the Kool Aid, such wrong thinking from a biblical perspective.
You might want to learn how to distinguish between a person’s own thoughts and a person’s summation of the thoughts of others. It’s clear to me that Gideon is sharing the latter.
 

HeIsHere

Well-known member
May 21, 2022
3,841
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#36
You might want to learn how to distinguish between a person’s own thoughts and a person’s summation of the thoughts of others. It’s clear to me that Gideon is sharing the latter.
Learn to read better.
 

JohnDB

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2021
5,613
2,204
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#37
I dunno... That average standard of living seems to include a LOT more than it did back when I was a child. Lots of things we consider necessities weren't even common back then.

If a family today has what my family had back then, it would be much more easily sustainable. But they would be considered so deprived that child welfare services might come and take the kids away.

Don't even get me started on what was considered an average standard of living back when my dad was a kid. We would faint at the mere thought of living like that.
Drank from an open creek did he? Garden hoses were usually an improvement in water drinking. The only phone was down the street? Shared a bedroom with parents or siblings? A bicycle was a luxury item otherwise he walked everywhere in town unaccompanied by an adult. He fished and hunted without direct supervision?
 

Fillan

Well-known member
Oct 25, 2022
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#38
I dunno... That average standard of living seems to include a LOT more than it did back when I was a child. Lots of things we consider necessities weren't even common back then.
Hello Lynx. That's an interesting point. It's possible many families are living well beyond their means. Many expect to be a two car household, with a giant TV and entertainment subscription, the latest smartphones, two dogs, a cat and a gerbil, whether they can afford it all or not. There is a word which appears frequently in the bible 'prudent'. It may be a declining virtue. God Bless :)
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
55,885
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#39
Drank from an open creek did he? Garden hoses were usually an improvement in water drinking. The only phone was down the street? Shared a bedroom with parents or siblings? A bicycle was a luxury item otherwise he walked everywhere in town unaccompanied by an adult. He fished and hunted without direct supervision?
Or as I heard it, we lived in a brown paper bag at the bottom of the ocean and
had to walk twenty miles to school uphill each way in six feet of snow.
.:unsure::giggle:
 

JohnDB

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2021
5,613
2,204
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#40
Or as I heard it, we lived in a brown paper bag at the bottom of the ocean and
had to walk twenty miles to school uphill each way in six feet of snow.
.:unsure::giggle:
Wow....I'm so jealous....you had a bag!