The Bible says that children are a blessing from God and that we should be fruitful and multiply.
The world says that we have too many people already and it's irresponsible to bring hungry mouths into the world where there soon won't be enough food to go around.
Children used to be the world's social security plan in that parents hoped that some of their kids would be around to care for them in their old age.
But the civilized world started to believe the lie that governments can and will care for them in their old age....so who needs a bunch of kids?
Japan is already going to find out what zero birth rates mean. Russia is too. And now we find that Europe is also going to find out what it means to have countries filled with old people all asking for government assistance and very few young people around to work jobs and pay taxes into the government.
“I’VE fallen and I can’t get up.”
These words, shouted by an elderly woman, were made famous in a medical alert device ad in the 1990s. In 2015, they might be Europe’s catchphrase.
As the United States economy slowly recovers, analysts across the political spectrum see little to cheer them from Europe. The optimists see the region’s economy growing by just 1 percent in 2015; many others fear that a triple-dip recession is in the offing. Germany is widely viewed as a healthy country whose prosperity helps compensate for Europe’s weakness, yet over the past two quarters for which we have data, it has experienced no net growth at all. Predictions of decade-long deflation, low productivity and high unemployment are becoming conventional wisdom.
What does the Continent need? Most economists and pundits focus on monetary and fiscal policy, as well as labor-market reform. Get the policy levers and economic incentives right, and the Continent might escape the vortex of decline, right?
Probably not. As important as good economic policies are, they will not fix Europe’s core problems, which are demographic, not economic. This was the point made in a speech to the European Parliament in November by none other than Pope Francis. As the pontiff put it, “In many quarters we encounter a general impression of weariness and aging, of a Europe which is now a ‘grandmother,’ no longer fertile and vibrant.”
But wait, it gets worse: Grandma Europe is not merely growing old. She is also getting dotty. She is, as the pope sadly explained in an earlier speech to a conference of bishops, “weary with disorientation.”
Some readers might regret the pope’s use of language — we love our grandmothers, weary with disorientation or not. But as my American Enterprise Institute colleague Nicholas Eberstadt shows in his research, the pope’s analysis is fundamentally sound.
Start with age. According to the United States Census Bureau’s International Database, nearly one in five Western Europeans was 65 years old or older in 2014. This is hard enough to endure, given the countries’ early retirement ages and pay-as-you-go pension systems. But by 2030, this will have risen to one in four. If history is any guide, aging electorates will direct larger and larger portions of gross domestic product to retirement benefits — and invest less in opportunity for future generations.
Next, look at fertility. According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the last time the countries of the European Union were reproducing at replacement levels (that is, slightly more than two children per woman) was the mid-1970s. In 2014, the average number of children per woman was about 1.6. That’s up a hair from the nadir in 2001, but has been falling again for more than half a decade. Imagine a world where many people have no sisters, brothers, cousins, aunts or uncles. That’s where Europe is heading in the coming decades. On the bright side, at least there will be fewer Christmas presents to buy.
Here; http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/07/opinion/an-aging-europes-decline.html?_r=0
So it seems that the civilized world is on the path of decline. We aren't even having enough children to replace ourselves!
Who in the world IS having kids?
Muslims nations.
You can make with that what you will...but I remember a book I read about 5-6 years ago that clearly spelled out the demographics of who's having kids vs. those who aren't. It's a book called AMERICA ALONE by Mark Steyn. I'm sure he probably has an updated version but it showed that America's birth rate isn't good, but is far better than the rest of The Western nations.
To add insult to injury, Europe has brought in Muslims from Turkey and North Africa to do their dirty manual labor. America, for the most part, has relied on Mexicans and Latinos.
Think about it....
You see any other potential problems coming for France caused by their Muslim workers? I read that 1500 mosques have gone up in France in just the last few decades.
Talk about the enemy at the gate....