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The New Red-Diaper Babies
New York Times ^ | December 7, 2004 | David Brooks

Posted on 12/07/2004 3:51:25 PM PST by RWR8189

There is a little-known movement sweeping across the United States. The movement is "natalism."

All across the industrialized world, birthrates are falling - in Western Europe, in Canada and in many regions of the United States. People are marrying later and having fewer kids. But spread around this country, and concentrated in certain areas, the natalists defy these trends.

They are having three, four or more kids. Their personal identity is defined by parenthood. They are more spiritually, emotionally and physically invested in their homes than in any other sphere of life, having concluded that parenthood is the most enriching and elevating thing they can do. Very often they have sacrificed pleasures like sophisticated movies, restaurant dining and foreign travel, let alone competitive careers and disposable income, for the sake of their parental calling.

In a world that often makes it hard to raise large families, many are willing to move to find places that are congenial to natalist values. The fastest-growing regions of the country tend to have the highest concentrations of children. Young families move away from what they perceive as disorder, vulgarity and danger and move to places like Douglas County in Colorado (which is the fastest-growing county in the country and has one of the highest concentrations of kids). Some people see these exurbs as sprawling, materialistic wastelands, but many natalists see them as clean, orderly and affordable places where they can nurture children.

If you wanted a one-sentence explanation for the explosive growth of far-flung suburbs, it would be that when people get money, one of the first things they do is use it to try to protect their children from bad influences.

So there are significant fertility inequalities across regions. People on the Great Plains and in the Southwest are much more fertile than people in New England or on the Pacific coast.

You can see surprising political correlations. As Steve Sailer pointed out in The American Conservative, George Bush carried the 19 states with the highest white fertility rates, and 25 of the top 26. John Kerry won the 16 states with the lowest rates.

In The New Republic Online, Joel Kotkin and William Frey observe, "Democrats swept the largely childless cities - true blue locales like San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Boston and Manhattan have the lowest percentages of children in the nation - but generally had poor showings in those places where families are settling down, notably the Sun Belt cities, exurbs and outer suburbs of older metropolitan areas."

Politicians will try to pander to this group. They should know this is a spiritual movement, not a political one. The people who are having big families are explicitly rejecting materialistic incentives and hyperindividualism. It costs a middle-class family upward of $200,000 to raise a child. These people are saying money and ambition will not be their gods.

Natalists resist the declining fertility trends not because of income, education or other socioeconomic characteristics. It's attitudes. People with larger families tend to attend religious services more often, and tend to have more traditional gender roles.

I draw attention to natalists because they're an important feature of our national life. Because of them, the U.S. stands out in all sorts of demographic and cultural categories. But I do it also because when we talk about the divide on values in this country, caricatured in the red and blue maps, it's important that we understand the true motive forces behind it.

Natalists are associated with red America, but they're not launching a jihad. The differences between them and people on the other side of the cultural or political divide are differences of degree, not kind. Like most Americans, but perhaps more anxiously, they try to shepherd their kids through supermarket checkouts lined with screaming Cosmo or Maxim cover lines. Like most Americans, but maybe more so, they suspect that we won't solve our social problems or see improvements in our schools as long as many kids are growing up in barely functioning families.

Like most Americans, and maybe more so because they tend to marry earlier, they find themselves confronting the consequences of divorce. Like most Americans, they wonder how we can be tolerant of diverse lifestyles while still preserving the family institutions that are under threat.

What they cherish, like most Americans, is the self-sacrificial love shown by parents. People who have enough kids for a basketball team are too busy to fight a culture war.

 

E-mail: dabrooks@nytimes.com


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: birthrate; brooks; bushcountry; davidbrooks; exburbs; natalism; natalists; stevesailer; sunbelt
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To: DC native

My BIL was 34 when he got married....his youngest is number 7.


41 posted on 12/07/2004 5:02:24 PM PST by stands2reason
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To: RWR8189
Could be me! But my reply to David Brooks is:

What's it to you?

Why would a 'real' man worry about others' business so much?

42 posted on 12/07/2004 5:14:40 PM PST by xtinct (I was the next door neighbor kid's imaginary friend.)
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To: highflight

Here, here. It is a disgusting shame that our traditional American values have become part of the fringe because of those you listed.
Time to take back the country.


43 posted on 12/07/2004 5:14:49 PM PST by Ghost of Philip Marlowe (I'm fresh out of tags. I'll pick some up tomorrow.)
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To: DC native

--- I wonder if the writer can back up the claim that "natalists" (read: crazed baby maachines) tend to marry earlier. ---

I believe that should read "earlier than all the myopic NY Times writers that haven't seen or spoken to a red stater in the past 30+ years".

The only thing these morons know about red states is that the cars look like little ants from 30,000 feet up.


44 posted on 12/07/2004 5:15:15 PM PST by lews
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To: Clemenza
As far as I know, the color blue is associated with conservatives in virtually every country in the Western world save the U.S.
I've been told that the American use of blue to denote the Democrats only dates to the mid-1970's when the major TV networks reversed the traditional associations so as not to have their liberal friends painted (rightly IMHO) with the communist brush.

One assumes that it's no accident that the "Bonnie Blue Flag", besides by Virginia's, has long stood for individual states' rights as guaranteed by strict interpretation of The U. S. Constitution.

Personally, I consider myself a "true blue" conservative.
45 posted on 12/07/2004 5:17:57 PM PST by GMMAC (lots of terror cells in Canada - I'll be waving my US flag when the Marines arrive!)
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To: MeanWestTexan

You are absolutely correct......raising a child is not for the narcissistic.

Tom Tancredo, one of the greatest guys in the House of Reps represents Douglas County, CO......wonder if he has anything to do with creating an environment conducive to child rearing.

Conservative base flock to him, or did the conservative base just elect one who shares their values? Interesting Chicken / Egg conundrum.


46 posted on 12/07/2004 5:21:23 PM PST by Conservative Goddess (Veritas vos Liberabit)
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To: ReadyNow

They eat their young.


47 posted on 12/07/2004 5:25:07 PM PST by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: RWR8189

And I think Brooks is very wrong, wishfully wrong about thinking families with multiple chidren aren't active in the culture war...they are often on the cutting edge because they have a lot at stake...


48 posted on 12/07/2004 5:26:26 PM PST by Knitting A Conundrum (Act Justly, Love Mercy, and Walk Humbly With God Micah 6:8)
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To: Eric in the Ozarks

No, they abort them.


49 posted on 12/07/2004 5:29:44 PM PST by Gaetano
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To: Tax-chick

THAT is a BEAUTIFUL BABY!!! : )


50 posted on 12/07/2004 5:40:25 PM PST by Politicalmom ( Since Bush was selected in 2000, shouldn't he be able to run again in 2008?)
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To: MaineRepublic
Where is the picture of the colicky infant at 2:00 AM? ;)

Seared ... SEARED into my memory ... but unfortunately we don't have the brain-wave-digital-transfer thingie for the pictures yet :-).

51 posted on 12/07/2004 5:54:00 PM PST by Tax-chick (Benedicere cor tuo! Quomodo cogis comas tuas sic videri?)
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To: Politicalmom

Thanks!


52 posted on 12/07/2004 5:54:29 PM PST by Tax-chick (Benedicere cor tuo! Quomodo cogis comas tuas sic videri?)
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To: MaineRepublic
"I'd go for 3 or 4 kids if it wasn't so much work. Hats off to those who can handle this many kids without breaking anything against a wall, you have the gift of patience."

I had four. As a rule, by the time the last one arrives, the oldest one is big enough to help out a little. They also help teach and discipline the younger siblings. It doesn't cost any more for a 10-pound bag of potatoes for a family of six or eight than it does for a 10-pound bag of potatoes for a family of three or four, even though it may have to purchased a little more often. Clothes often get handed down, as do toys, bedrooms, etc. The important things in life are often more easily understood in larger families. I am right in the middle of seven, my husband was next-youngest of eight. His parents came from equally large families. My father had nine siblings. Out of all of it, nobody starved, and all got at least an eighth-grade education. Big families are practical and warm, generally.

53 posted on 12/07/2004 6:05:06 PM PST by redhead ("Gee, Ricky. I'm sorry your mom blew up...")
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To: MaineRepublic

I gave birth to 5. I wanted 9, but saw there was no way we could have afforded more. It's one of the few regrets I have in this life...I didn't get to have my 9 kids.


54 posted on 12/07/2004 6:09:15 PM PST by processing please hold (Islam and Christianity do not mix ----9-11 taught us that)
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To: ReadyNow
I lamented to a married-but-childless friend that I would never have the investment portfolio that so many others our age do.

He replied, "But you invested all of your money in your 3 kids - and it was a much better investment than any I've made."

55 posted on 12/07/2004 6:12:22 PM PST by 1stMarylandRegiment (Conserve Liberty)
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To: Tax-chick
I have a little friend for him :)
56 posted on 12/07/2004 6:12:51 PM PST by angcat
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To: MaineRepublic

My first had colic 6 months straight, twenty hours a day, violently threw-up every solid we gave him his first year, and several times managed to hit objects a good ten feet away whilst getting his diaper changed. #2 no less- I took to wearing a smock and always standing to the side while performing the deed.

My second is an angelbaby and has never given a moments trouble, as I knew she would be from the moment I found out she was coming.

I mean, the Good Lord wouldn't do that to a godfearing woman more than once, now, would he LOL

:)


57 posted on 12/07/2004 6:26:47 PM PST by Eepsy
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To: angcat
Well, I have to get on the bandwagon, too. (We were at the zoo, at it was BROILING out, so they are a bit disheveled. : )
58 posted on 12/07/2004 6:35:53 PM PST by Politicalmom ( Since Bush was selected in 2000, shouldn't he be able to run again in 2008?)
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To: Politicalmom

Oops. Sorry that is so big.


59 posted on 12/07/2004 6:36:17 PM PST by Politicalmom ( Since Bush was selected in 2000, shouldn't he be able to run again in 2008?)
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To: little jeremiah

My grandmother was one of 13 sisters. There was one boy born, but he died after about a month. Some said he couldn't stand it.


60 posted on 12/07/2004 6:46:19 PM PST by gitmo (Thanks, Mel. I needed that.)
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