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Room for More: Population Is Declining
CatholicExchange.com ^ | 01-19-07 | Patti Maguire Armstrong

Posted on 01/21/2007 7:41:49 AM PST by Salvation

Patti Maguire Armstrong  
Other Articles by Patti Maguire Armstrong
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Room for More: Population Is Declining

January 19, 2007

After years of hearing that the earth is in serious danger due to overpopulation, I've got some surprising news: the world's population will soon be shrinking.  The bad news is that because of those who swallowed "the earth won't sustain us" lie, there are a lot of people that should be here but are not.

Of course there will be no apology, but only a morphing of the original message.  One would think that groups like Zero Population Growth, who brought us cute slogans such as: "The pill in time saves nine!" and "This line is too long.  Join ZPG!" might show some remorse for brainwashing throngs of people to be more committed to trees than to parenthood.  Thirty-eight years later, ZPG hands out condoms with the wrappers embossed, "Save the world: Use a condom" and is working on a National Population Policy.  I suppose they want a pat on the back for convincing so many that the sky was falling -- or at least that the earth was shrinking under the weight of humanity.  And I also suppose they see themselves as heroes for leaving holes in families where children would have been, so now there's more room for grass.

Unfortunately, the media picked up their refrain, leaving only brave, defiant or oblivious souls to dare to push their fertility beyond the acceptable number of two.  Ask any mother of three or more how many times she had people point to her pregnant belly and ask, "Don't you know what causes that?" When I was a young child, a big family was thought to be a blessing.  But by the time I was an adult, big families were seen as headed by big buffoons — ignorant, selfish, or out-of-control adults unwilling to curb their fertility for the sake of the rest of the world.  Thus it is that people began to feel free to ask rude questions in an effort to get the numbskulls to invest in birth control.

The reverse would be unthinkable.  Parents of a large family would not ask those of a small family, "Don't you two know what to do to have more children?" As the mother of ten children — eight the old-fashioned way and two brothers orphaned in Kenya — sometimes I actually enjoy unsolicited opinions.  "Boy, I'm glad it's you and not me," gives me the chance to say, "Me too," but I have never inquired as to why they were not enjoying their own children enough to have more.  I have no desire to pry into the private lives of others.  Yet thinking we are taking up too much space in this world, some people become militant and angry with those of us who opt out of the "two kids only" club.

The Earth Was Never in Trouble

 Ironically, the earth was never really in trouble to begin with.  Although the UN announced that the world's population reached 6 billion on October 12, 1999, some demographers decried this as inaccurate due to false reporting from many countries.  Whether the numbers were correct or not, growth has slowed and in some areas is reversing itself.  The United Nations reports that the 79 countries that comprise 40 percent of the world's population now have declining populations. According to Steve Mosher, president of the Population Research Institute, the populations of the developed nations today are static or declining.  "The Census Bureau's figures are contradicted by those of the United Nations Population Division," Mosher states.  The UN predicts that by the year 2050, Russia's population will have declined by 21 million, Italy's by 16 million and Germany's and Spain's by 9 million.  Mosher predicts that by the year 2050, persons aged 65 and above will be almost twice as numerous as children 15 years and younger.

It has become an increasing reality for countries losing population to institute liberal immigration policies that allow for more workers to take up the slack.  Even in the developing world, family size has shrunk from an average of five children in 1900 to less than three today.  Ironically, many countries facing under-population are finally realizing that children are their most important resource.  There's even a growing trend in countries such as in Russia to offer financial incentives to families willing to have more than one child.

Dr.  Jacqueline R.  Kasun is an economist and the author of <i>The War Against Population: The Economics and Ideology of World Population Control</i> (Ignatius, 1988, 1998). According to her, regardless of what the numbers are, our earth has never been in danger of too many people.  In her book, Kasun states:

It's reported by Paul Ehrlich and others that human beings actually occupy no more than 1 to 3 percent of the earth's land surface.

If you allotted 1250 square feet to each person, all the people in the world would fit into the state of Texas.  Try the math yourself: 7,438,152,268,800 square feet in Texas, divided by the world population of 5,860,000,000, equals 1269 square feet per person.

The population density of this giant city would be about 21,000 per square mile — somewhat more than San Francisco and less than the Bronx.

Regardless, the lies have been taken as fact and the world's policy makers act accordingly.  Fueled by false information, governments are committed by law to reduce worldwide population growth.

Abortions and sterilizations are pushed and even forced on citizens with United Nations approval and often financing, while emergency aid to Third-World countries has come to include first and foremost, free and sometimes coercive birth control.

Our public schools teach kids in social studies that the earth is dying under the strain of people, then, when the bell rings, the kids file into the next class where "sex education" teaches them how the various birth controls work to curb population growth.  Even our elementary-aged children come home from school worried about our "dying" planet.  It seems the height of irresponsibility to pass on lies and frighten little children with them. The media and the education system listen to and pass along only one side of the story.  But there is another side.

Myths of Overpopulation

Although you would never know this by listening to the evening news, the scientific community is in great disagreement over whether global warming is attributable to human activity and if there is a connection to so-called "overpopulation."  Another scare comes to us from tree-huggers.  Overpopulation is being blamed for the deforestation of the planet.  Yet according to Kasun, thirty percent of the earth is covered in trees, the same figure as in the 1950s. 

Another fact: Trees are growing 33 percent faster than they are being cut....  There has also been great agitation about the destruction of the tropical rainforests.  Someone has claimed that an area twice the size of Belgium is now being logged worldwide each year, but people don't realize Belgium could fit into the world's tropical forests 500 times, and in the meantime, the rest of the world's trees — 99.6 percent of them — are continuing to grow.

I wish Kasun could convince the people of Oregon of this fact.  When I was there last spring, I read an article in the Oregonian newspaper, lamenting the cutting down of one particular old growth tree on someone's private property.  Twenty-one of his neighbors had tried to stop him by getting his permit revoked.  In a state where euthanasia and abortion draw little attention from the general public, the death of this tree caused great mourning.

Air pollution and acid rain are also blamed on overpopulation.  Air pollution is largely a result of how industries do business.  Due to better emission controls, it is declining significantly in the United States.  Blaming it on more babies being born is a cop-out.

During the sixties and seventies, massive famine due to our dwindling ability to feed ourselves was supposed to be just around the corner.  Today, food supplies have never been more abundant or less expensive.

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization, world food supplies exceed requirements in all world areas, amounting to a surplus approaching 50 percent in 1990 in the developed countries, and 17 percent in the developing regions.  Our own government actually pays farmers over a billion dollars not to farm 33.5 million acres.

News coverage of famines provide tragic photo opportunities for the media to massage the overpopulation myth.  But famines are caused by extreme droughts, war, ineptitude, or corrupt governments, not because there are too many people to feed. Kasun reports:

Western journalists blamed the Ethiopian famine on "overpopulation," but that was simply not true.  The Ethiopian government caused it by confiscating the food stocks of traders and farmers and exporting them to buy arms.  That country's leftist regime, not its population, caused the tragedy.

In fact, Africa, beset with problems often blamed on "overpopulation," has only one-fifth the population density of Europe....

The cry that our natural resources are in short supply has an ebb and flow to it.  Some may remember the "energy crises" in the seventies.  It was a year that people stopped hanging outdoor Christmas lights because our energy was in short supply.  I lived in the Detroit area and our family tradition of driving around to look at lights came to an abrupt halt.  No one dared to waste energy on something as frivolous as Christmas lights.  Oddly enough, thirty years later there seems to be ample energy for all our lights.

The Question of Poverty

But doesn't overpopulation cause poverty?  In reality, when the supposed 6 billionth baby was born, he was born into a world that has never been more prosperous.  According to the World Bank, average income in the developing world has doubled since 1960.  And behind the population explosion is the explosion in health.  Two hundred years ago, global average human life expectancy was under thirty years.  Today it is more than sixty-five years.

I am not arguing that social, economic and environmental problems do not exist.  I am simply stating that overpopulation is not the problem.  Modern societies are forgetting that children are a blessing.  Fortunately, it's just a matter of time before the tide turns.  Those intent on "saving the planet" have lower fertility rates than couples that see children as a blessing.  Do the math.

Several years ago, I heard a radio report to the effect that the most requested gift from children to in-store Santa Clauses was for little brothers or sisters.  For them, it's the best gift they can imagine.  Some moms and dads have forgotten this or been scared away from the blessing.

I am no scientist, but it only seems logical that if there's room in heaven for one more soul, then God must have arranged for there to be enough room on the earth for more.  After all, the planet is passing away.  We are not.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: catholic; catholiclist; environment; increase; population; prolife; sinkthelifeboat
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To: Salvation
"Population Is Declining"

That is a good thing.

61 posted on 01/21/2007 10:09:25 AM PST by verity (Muhammed is a Dirt Bag)
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To: cowtowney

Okay, my mistake. I understan now.


62 posted on 01/21/2007 10:12:06 AM PST by raybbr (You think it's bad now - wait till the anchor babies start to vote.)
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To: cowtowney
I have no suggestions that would fly in the political and social climate today. Best thing we could do is elect individuals who would just start phasing out the programs, if not all at once at least one after another.

My personal contribution to ending the programs is never willingly participating in one. It is totally against my belief system to expect the government to provide for my housing and food, child care or education. However, I do intend to get whatever I can back from the social security system that I paid into for so many years ... even though I do not believe that the government should be in the business of providing for my retirement.

63 posted on 01/21/2007 10:14:37 AM PST by JustaDumbBlonde
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To: cowtowney

I recommend seeing Children of Men, which is playing in theaters now. It is a sci-fi movie about society in 2028 or so, where no children have been born in 18 years do to a problem with women getting pregnant.

Spooky. A world without children is very very creepy.


64 posted on 01/21/2007 10:18:19 AM PST by cowtowney
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To: Salvation

The title reminds me of the Twilight Zone episode where the nurse/flight attendant says, "Room for one more, honey."


65 posted on 01/21/2007 10:19:26 AM PST by peggybac (Tolerance is the virtue of believing in nothing)
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To: raybbr

"Here in the U.S. we are expecting a dramatic increase in population."

Will this increase be accompanied by quality or just quantity like it has been for the past thirty years?


66 posted on 01/21/2007 10:22:45 AM PST by 353FMG (I never met a liberal I didn't dislike.)
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To: cripplecreek
Well, friend, it's going to be kids OR its going to be immigrants, because somebody's going to enter, occupy, increase, fill, and develop the nation and world around us.

Every business needs more customers, Free Republic needs more FReepers, the Tennessee Vols need a steady stream of new players (and new fans), every mover needs more shakers (and the shakers need more movers), every elderly person needs more helpers, and every family needs more laughter. Our nation could use some more joie de vivre.

Even the environmental movement needs more environmentalists.

No, of course it's not just a matter of quantity. Married people who are generous and intelligent deserve a toast, a hurrah and a tip o' the hat for having and raising the next generation, and raising them well. We all need these kids or we will die old, abandoned, lonely, depleted and destitute.

Kids --- well-raised kids ---are needed for the glory of God, for our pride and joy, and to replenish the earth.

67 posted on 01/21/2007 10:24:06 AM PST by Mrs. Don-o (Learning to live with complexity.)
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To: JustaDumbBlonde

In 1950, there were 16 workers paying taxes into the system for every retiree who was taking benefits out of it. Today, there are a little more than three. By the time the baby boomers retire, there will be just two workers who will have to pay all the taxes to support every one retiree.


68 posted on 01/21/2007 10:25:02 AM PST by cowtowney
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To: Mrs. Don-o

So basically this is a thinly disguised pro open borders thread.

So much for Christian honesty.


69 posted on 01/21/2007 10:25:44 AM PST by cripplecreek (Peace without victory is a temporary illusion.)
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To: Salvation

Every sperm is sacred was a joke, not meant to be a doxology.


70 posted on 01/21/2007 10:34:38 AM PST by gcruse (http://garycruse.blogspot.com/)
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To: Salvation

Nonsense. There is severe overpopulation in some parts of the world. The parts of the world that would like to overrun civilized countries.


71 posted on 01/21/2007 10:35:35 AM PST by Leftism is Mentally Deranged
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To: cripplecreek

"Seems to me that the more populated America becomes, the further into socialism we slide."

CC, I agree. I am not one to live in the past, but it is clear that greater population is a double edged sword.

Despite my liberal friends' direst warnings that our nation is trending toward a dark-age of conservatism, it is intuitively obvious that we have been trending toward socialism since the days of FDR.

I can't say for sure that this is due to greater population or just a natural progression of democratic politics.

But certainly, negative examples of greater population are all around us-- and there is an inevitable and comensurate squeeze on freedom as well.


72 posted on 01/21/2007 10:37:31 AM PST by agooga (Let the Wookie win!!!)
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To: Salvation

I believe my tagline says it all.


73 posted on 01/21/2007 10:37:40 AM PST by wouldntbprudent (If you can: Contribute more (babies) to the next generation of God-fearing American Patriots!)
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To: agooga

I think a stable population is a good thing but I wish Americans were producing more children instead of importing people from all over the world who have no interest in becoming American.


74 posted on 01/21/2007 10:40:04 AM PST by cripplecreek (Peace without victory is a temporary illusion.)
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To: cripplecreek

Who said anything about open borders? The point is that if Americans will not have more children, then the labor pool will have to come from somewhere, hence more immigration. People refusing to replace themselves is what contributes to the need for illegal immigration, particularly in Europe.


75 posted on 01/21/2007 10:41:02 AM PST by LWalk18
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To: Salvation
Despite some minor disagreements on several points, this article touches on a lot of good stuff, and I want to add to it (arguing from a complimentary angle).

Our health, standard of living, and REAL progress (not the meaning of the word that has been hijacked by socialists, degenerates, and perverts) is not tied to population density (we are nowhere near this bottleneck, which is less optimistic than the author suggests, but not by much) - it is mostly tied to advancing technology and free markets.

Our available resources are not fixed, but are a function of technology. And the rate of technological advancement is a function of the number of people involved in research. The major flaw in fatalistic calculations underpinning the "overpopulation" debate is that technology is assumed fixed. At best, there are a few studies that attempt to correct for this flaw by assuming technological progression at the present rate - but even this is still flawed. The pace of progress continually hastens, and as much as the thought hurts to some some people, we can thank population growth, not just worldwide improved access to and quality of education.

We NEED more people, not fewer. We can grow at a high rate, for at least another few thousand years, while enhancing our standard of living, as long as there is access to education, and unhindered research; most difficult of all, however, is to garner another critical ingredient - less failure-rewarding, success-punishing socialism in all forms. The elimination of competitive forces in markets, in research, in laws, and through entitlements, via arbitrary compulsory redistribution, generally acts to cause long-term harm. Another major lesson from the last several hundred years is that central planning is ruinous - the more expansive the scope, the more disastrous the results.

Anyway, personally, I hope to raise as many children as the author. :)

76 posted on 01/21/2007 10:45:03 AM PST by M203M4
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To: cripplecreek

Is the trend toward socialism related to the rise in the immigrant population, or is it a natural political evolution? Would more births to native born Americans stifle this trend?


77 posted on 01/21/2007 10:45:54 AM PST by agooga (Let the Wookie win!!!)
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To: agooga
Would more births to native born Americans stifle this trend?

I don't know if it would stifle the trend toward socialism but I believe American born children tend to feel closer ties to this country. Another issue is the simple fact that new entrants aren't the same as immigrants from the past. When my great grandparents arrived they came with the intent of fitting in and only brought very minor cultural baggage with them.
78 posted on 01/21/2007 10:49:59 AM PST by cripplecreek (Peace without victory is a temporary illusion.)
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To: cripplecreek

As a minimum, demographic should concern you. European culture, violence in India, Russia, the Phillipines and elsewhere are all threats from shifting demographics.

And if you're still a hardcore protectionist, consider this:

American Muslims have children at a high rate.
Non-Muslims American are barely at the replacement rate.

Your great-grandchildren will be under Sharia law.


79 posted on 01/21/2007 10:58:22 AM PST by kidd
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To: cripplecreek

"When my great grandparents arrived they came with the intent of fitting in and only brought very minor cultural baggage with them."

As did mine.


80 posted on 01/21/2007 11:03:04 AM PST by agooga (Let the Wookie win!!!)
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