Author Topic: THE SECOND DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION–THE END OF HUMANITY AS WE’VE KNOWN IT  (Read 820 times)

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Offline mystery-ak

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http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2015/02/23/the-second-demographic-transition-the-end-of-humanity-as-weve-known-it/

by AUSTIN RUSE23 Feb 2015

Economist Nicholas Eberstadt lays out a bleak future in an important essay just published in The Wall Street Journal. Eberstadt makes the case that selfishness, as evidenced by the unwillingness of people to get married in the first place and stay married in the second, is setting humanity on an unknown and potentially dangerous course.

Eberstadt describes a global flight from family. “All around the world today, pre-existing family patterns are being upended by a revolutionary new force: the seemingly unstoppable quest for convenience by adults demanding ever-greater autonomy,” he writes.

“Thanks to this revolution, it is perhaps easier than ever before to free oneself from the burdens that would otherwise be imposed by spouses, children, relatives or significant others with whom one shares a hearth,” he continues.

What Eberstadt shows is not just the ever-expanding incidence of fatherless homes, which is old news by now, but the breakdown of family in ever new ways and directions.

In the United States, “a 2011 study by two Census researchers reckoned that just 59% of all American children … lived with married and biological parents.” Eberstadt says that in the foreseeable future, “American children who reside with their married birthparents will be in the minority.”

What may shock many is the exploding number of men and women who are simply not interested in marriage–ever. Eberstadt cites data from Belgium where “the likelihood of a first marriage for a woman of reproductive age is now down to 40%, and the likelihood of divorce is over 50%.”

Eberstadt says Europe is seeing a “surge in ‘child-free’ adults–voluntary childlessness.” One in five 40-something women in Sweden and Switzerland are childless. That number is one in four in Italy, and one in three in the German city of Hamburg. In fact, Eberstadt says, “Europe’s most rapidly growing family type is the one-person household.” In Western Europe, one in three homes are already “a one person unit.”

And this is not just a Western phenomenon. Asia is following suit. One-sixth of Japanese women in their 40s are still single, and “30% of all women are childless.” The same trends are happening in South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, and Hong Kong.

Lest anyone think the world is about to be overtaken by a wash of Muslim births, not only is the Muslim birth rate plummeting all over the Middle East, Muslims are also walking away from marriage. Eberstadt cites UN data that show that “the proportion of never-married women in their late 30s was higher in Morocco in 2004 than in the U.S. in 2009 (17% vs. 16%). And nearly 32% of Libyan women in their late 30s were unmarried in 2006.”

The Europeans have called this the Second Demographic Transition, the first being the period in the 1800s in Europe when high birth rates began to decline, as did death rates, a phenomenon that is now nearly universal and has resulted in rapidly aging populations.

The Second Demographic Transition portends great difficulties for societies and governments and specifically for those Eberstadt calls “the most vulnerable,” the young and the old. He says, “The deleterious impact on the hardly inconsequential number of children disadvantaged by the flight from family is already plain enough.”

The same flight from family “also has unforgiving implications for the vulnerable old.” A “gray wave” is about to hit societies because of the retirement and aging of the Baby Boom. “In the decades ahead, ever more care and support for seniors will be required, especially for the growing contingent among the elderly who will be victims of dementia, or are childless and socially isolated.”

Eberstadt concludes, “It is far from clear that humanity is prepared to cope with the consequences of its impending family deficit, with increasing independence for those traditionally most dependent on others–i.e., the young and old.” He points out that “government is a highly imperfect substitute for family–and a very expensive one.”
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Offline jmyrlefuller

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I see this far too often. Let me tell you; it's a very frustrating situation for a guy who believes in the traditional family unit and has tried, so fruitlessly, to do his part.

Our society is crumbling. I'm seeing more attention paid to it here on the right, but most of them are already married fairly young and have family. For those of us trying to navigate the dating scene hoping to find someone who is single and willing to enter a relationship, it's darn near impossible, and the older you get, the less willing the pool of single women become. I fear it may already be too late for me, and I'm not even 30 yet.
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Offline aligncare

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Makes sense though. Historically, in whatever form society took, hunter gatherer or agrarian, the family unit functioned on the division of labor. That was a constant in the evolution of the family...until of course the late 20th, early 21st century. 

I still remember the term women's lib; meaning, of course, the women's liberation movement of the 60s. But, I never asked back then, liberation from what?

I guess we're up to carbon-based unit liberation, now.

Online massadvj

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The world is overpopulated with human beings as it is.  There has to be a long-term upside to fewer childbirths.

Offline Fishrrman

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[[ Eberstadt says Europe is seeing a “surge in ‘child-free’ adults–voluntary childlessness.” One in five 40-something women in Sweden and Switzerland are childless. That number is one in four in Italy, and one in three in the German city of Hamburg. In fact, Eberstadt says, “Europe’s most rapidly growing family type is the one-person household.” In Western Europe, one in three homes are already “a one person unit.”
And this is not just a Western phenomenon. Asia is following suit. One-sixth of Japanese women in their 40s are still single, and “30% of all women are childless.” The same trends are happening in South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. ]]


Well, there's one way to end this, and to force the re-establishment of "traditional family units" as they existed up until the mid-twentieth century:
Ban not only abortions, but birth control as well.

Short of that, better get used to things in the direction that they're trending now.
Because there will be no "goin' back"...

Some lyrics for your consideration:
=========================
You wined me and denied me when I was your girl
Told me if I'd be your wife you'd show me the world
But all I've seen of this old world is a bed and a doctor bill
I'm tearin' down your brooder house because now I've got the pill

All these years I've stayed at home while you had all your fun
And every years that's gone by another baby's come
There's gonna be some changes made right here on nursery hill
You've set this chicken your last time cause now I've got the pill

This old maternity dress I've got is going in the garbage
The clothes I'm wearing from now on won't take up so much yardage
Miniskirts hot pants and a few little fancy frills
Yeah I'm making up for all those years since I've got the pill

I'm tired of all your crowing how you and your hens play
While holding a couple in my arms another's on the way
This chicken's done for up her nest and ready to make a deal
And you can't afford to turn it down cause you know I've got the pill

This incubator is overused because you've kept it filled
The feeling good time's easy now since I've got the pill
It's gettin' dark it's roostin' time and that's too good to be real
Oh daddy don't you worry now cause momma's got the pill


(Loretta Lynn, "The Pill")

Offline jmyrlefuller

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The world is overpopulated with human beings as it is.  There has to be a long-term upside to fewer childbirths.
The problem with overpopulation is limited to a few select places, mostly impoverished areas without the resources to support large families but with cultures that continue to reproduce with reckless abandon. Here, in North America, many areas face increasing underpopulation.

Eventually you have what you are seeing in the southwest: those groups that are breeding taking over the areas held by those who aren't.

The worst-case scenario is that you end up with something along the lines of that film from not long ago—Idiocracy.
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