[p2p-research] from a us intelligence briefing
Stan Rhodes
stanleyrhodes at gmail.com
Sat Apr 26 09:50:41 CEST 2008
I think this author's cause and effect is weak, and he is blind to the root
issue. I submit that, actually, as women in a country are empowered
(education, health care, rights, jobs) the birthrate goes down. We see the
religious trend because in "traditional religious society" women are not
empowered. When they are empowered, they enter the workforce. This may be
an oversimplification, but I think it makes far more sense then the case
presented.
As a case in point, Grameen Bank targets poor women almost exclusively with
its microcredit loans and many other programs, and not too surprisingly,
this empowerment has lowered the birthrate in Bangladesh, at least,
according to Yunus.
The classic captialist assumptions being made in this article need to be
challenged. Do we need continual growth of our current system? Is having a
stable population "stagnation?" Can we create a economy that benefits all
without requiring increasing consumption of physical resources? Can
countries and people think outside their borders to the need to empower the
people--particularly the women--of these "breeding" nations? I'm reminded
of the quote from Vonnegut's _Bluebeard_: "The whole point of war is to put
women in that condition. It's always men against women, with the men only
pretending to fight among themselves."
I think we have the technology to cope with shrinking birthrates, but do we
have the democracy and equity to apply it? Not yet.
-- Stan
On Fri, Apr 25, 2008 at 2:55 AM, Michel Bauwens <michelsub2004 at gmail.com>
wrote:
> *3. Shifting Demographics of Western Civilization*
> **
> *Most countries in the Western world have stopped breeding.*
> **
> *For a civilization obsessed with sex, this is remarkable. Maintaining a*
> *steady population requires a birth rate of 2.1 In **Western Europe** ,
> the*
> *birth rate currently stands at 1.5, or 30 percent below replacement. In*
> *30 years there will be 70 to 80 million fewer Europeans than there are*
> *today. The current birth rate in **Germany** is 1.3. **Italy** and **
> Spain** are even*
> *lower at 1.2. At that rate, the working age population declines by 30
> percent in 20*
> *years, which has a huge impact on the economy. When you don't have young
> *
> *workers to replace the older ones, you have to import them.*
> **
> *The European countries are currently importing Moslems. Today, the*
> *Moslems comprise 10 percent of France and Germany, and the percentage is*
> *rising rapidly because they have higher birthrates. However, the Moslem*
> *populations are not being integrated into the cultures of their host*
> *countries, which is a political catastrophe. One reason Germany and
> France*
> *don't support the **Iraq** war is they fear their Moslem populations will
> explode on them. By*
> *2020, more than half of all births in the **Netherlands** will be
> non-European.*
> **
> *The huge design flaw in the postmodern secular state is that you need a*
> *traditional religious society birth rate to sustain it. The Europeans*
> *simply don't wish to have children, so they are dying. In **Japan** ,
> the*
> *birthrate is 1.3. As a result, **Japan** will lose up to 60 million
> people over*
> *the next 30 years. Because **Japan** has a very different society than **
> Europe**, they*
> *refuse to import workers. Instead, they are just shutting down. **Japan*
> *has already closed 2,000 schools, and is closing them down at the rate*
> *of 300 per year. **Japan** is also aging very rapidly. By 2020, one out
> of*
> *every five Japanese will be at least 70 years old. Nobody has any idea*
> *about how to run an economy with those demographics.*
> **
> *Europe** and **Japan**, which comprise two of the world's major economic*
> *engines, aren't merely in recession, they're shutting down. This will*
> *have a huge impact on the world economy, and it is already beginning to*
> *happen. Why are the birthrates so low? There is a direct correlation
> between*
> *abandonment of traditional religious society and a drop in birth rate,
> and*
> *Christianity in **Europe** is becoming irrelevant.*
> **
> *The second reason is economic. When the birth rate drops below*
> *replacement, the population ages. With fewer working people to support*
> *more retired people, it puts a crushing tax burden on the smaller group
> of*
> *working age people. As a result, young people delay marriage and having a
> *
> *family. Once this trend starts, the downward spiral only gets worse.*
> *These countries have abandoned all the traditions they formerly held in*
> *regard to having families and raising children.*
> **
> *The **U.S.** birth rate is 2.0, just below replacement. We have an
> increase*
> *in population because of immigration. When broken down by ethnicity, the*
> *Anglo birth rate is 1.6 (same as **France**) while the Hispanic birth
> rate*
> *is 2.7. In the **U.S.** , the baby boomers are starting to retire in
> massive*
> *numbers. This will push the elder dependency ratio from 19 to*
> *38 over the next 10 to 15 years. This is not as bad as **Europe** , but
> still*
> *represents the same kind of trend.*
> **
> *Western civilization seems to have forgotten what every primitive*
> *society understands-you need kids to have a healthy society. Children*
> *are huge consumers. Then they grow up to become tax payers. That's how a*
> *society works, but the postmodern secular state seems to have forgotten*
> *that. If **U.S.** birth rates of the past 20 to 30 years had been the
> same*
> *as post-World War II, there would be no Social Security or Medicare*
> *problems.*
> **
> *The world's most effective birth control device is money. [I love this*
> *line!!] As society creates a middle class and women move into the
> workforce, birth rates*
> *drop. Having large families is incompatible with middle class living.*
> **
> *The quickest way to drop the birth rate is through rapid economic*
> *development. After World War II, the **U.S.** instituted a $600 tax
> credit*
> *per child. The idea was to enable mom and dad to have four children*
> *without being troubled by taxes. This led to a baby boom of 22 million
> kids,*
> *which was a huge consumer market. That turned into a huge tax base.*
> *However, to match that incentive in today's dollars would cost $12,000*
> *per child.*
> **
> *China** and **India** do not have declining populations. However, in both
> *
> *countries, there is a preference for boys over girls, and we now have*
> *the technology to know which is which before they are born. In **China**and
> *
> *India**, families are aborting the girls. As a result, in each of these*
> *countries there are 70 million boys growing up who will never find*
> *wives. When left alone, nature produces 103 boys for every 100 girls. In*
> *some provinces, however, the ratio is 128 boys to every 100 girls. I have
> *
> *read that this creates a potentially explosive situation. You have to
> keep*
> *all these potential sources of political instability contented. One way,
> historically*
> *often used, is war.*
> **
> *The birth rate in **Russia** is so low that by 2050 their population will
> be*
> *smaller than that of **Yemen**. **Russia** has one-sixth of the earth's
> land*
> *surface and much of its oil. You can't control that much area with such*
> *a small population. Immed iately to the south, you have **China** with
> 70*
> *million unmarried men who are a real potential nightmare scenario for **
> Russia** *
> *[See my comment above.]*
>
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