Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Demographic Decline: France Sees Lowest Number of Births Since WWII
Breitbart ^ | 01/18/2024 | KURT ZINDULKA

Posted on 01/18/2024 7:01:37 AM PST by ChicagoConservative27

click here to read article


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-22 last
To: Uncle Miltie

Then it’s just a matter of time. This stealth muslim invasion of France will succeed where the military invasions did not. No more Charles Martels. Goodbye France.


21 posted on 01/18/2024 5:15:55 PM PST by Blennos ( Byaasea)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

Why 1/3rd of France is Almost Empty | 11:01
RealLifeLore | 7.29M subscribers | 5,017,707 views | March 22, 2022
Why 1/3rd of France is Almost Empty | 11:01 | RealLifeLore | 7.29M subscribers | 5,017,707 views | March 22, 2022
Transcript
0:00·[Music]
0:00·france is one of europe's and one of the
0:02·world's most significant countries home
0:04·to 68 million people france is the third
0:06·most populous nation in europe while the
0:08·french economy is the seventh largest in
0:10·the world nearly identical in size to
0:12·india a country with 20 times the
0:15·population the french language and
0:16·french culture are widely known
0:18·throughout the world while the french
0:19·military is the eighth best funded in
0:21·the world with bases all across the
0:23·planet france is a major global great
·Geography
0:26·power and has been for centuries now
0:29·which is why it's so surprising that
0:31·nearly a third of the country here is
0:33·basically just an empty void and
0:36·partially because of that france has
0:38·been diminishing in influence for
0:40·centuries and continues to do so for
0:43·decades people have famously identified
0:45·metropolitan france in europe as looking
0:47·like a hexagon which is why the country
0:50·is so often referred to as simply
0:52·lexagon and due to this unique shape
0:54·it's incredibly easy to look at france
0:56·through the lens of geometry when
0:58·discussing regions statistics demography
1:01·and history for instance if you take a
1:03·map of france and you draw a diagonal
1:04·line from the port city of l'ove on the
1:06·english channel over to straight through
1:08·the center of marseille on the
1:09·mediterranean you'll cut the country
1:11·roughly in half and yet sixty percent of
1:14·the french live to the east of this line
1:16·while only forty percent live to the
1:18·west of it a fact that can be seen
1:20·significantly more clearly when you
1:21·switch out the map for a population
1:23·density map but what's far more
1:25·interesting than that line are these
1:27·lines in between them is a stretch of
1:29·france nearly 1 000 kilometers long and
1:32·about 400 kilometers wide on average
1:35·nearly one-third of france's entire
1:37·territory that's about the same size as
1:39·belarus within this large zone the
1:42·population density of people is only
1:43·about 30 persons per square kilometer
1:46·about the same as the us state of west
1:48·virginia which has led to french
1:50·demographers referring to the area as
1:52·france's empty diagonal and while in
1:54·reality that's hardly empty compared
1:56·with the rest of france and europe it is
1:59·a strange anomaly throughout the
2:01·entirety of france on average the
2:03·population density is more like 120
2:05·people per square kilometer four times
2:08·more than the density of people living
2:09·within the diagonal to give even more
2:11·perspective neighboring germany has a
2:13·population density of 232
2:16·per square kilometer while england has
2:18·more like 270 and is therefore nine
2:21·times as densely populated as france's
2:24·diagonal france is politically divided
2:26·between 18 regions that are further
2:28·split up into departments and then into
2:31·communes somewhat similar to how america
2:33·divides itself into states and counties
2:35·the least populated department in france
2:37·is loser with just a total of 76 000
2:40·inhabitants for all its nearly 5 200
2:43·square kilometers that is comparable in
2:45·size to the state of palestine [sic] which is
2:48·home to more than 5 million people while
2:50·the entire population of lausaire could
2:52·all fit comfortably into wembley stadium
2:54·in london with 24 000 seats left over to
2:58·spare and of course loser is directly in
3:00·the center of the empty diagonal the
3:03·most sparsely populated region of france
3:05·where loser is hardly an exception all
3:08·of these departments running through the
3:10·center of france are substantially less
3:12·populated than those on either side of
3:14·it to the west and the east so what's
3:16·been causing this anomaly and the core
3:18·of one of europe's largest countries to
3:20·be happening well for one thing it's
·History
3:22·been important to understand some of the
3:24·prior demographic history of france
3:26·which i promise is actually fascinating
3:29·the french philosopher agust compt once
3:32·said the demography is destiny and for
3:35·centuries france's demography guaranteed
3:38·much of the nation's successes and
3:39·influence for most of history france was
3:42·by far the most populous country on the
3:44·european continent during the medieval
3:46·period more than one out of every four
3:48·people in europe were french and even by
3:51·the 17th century it was still one out of
3:53·every five during the french
3:55·revolutionary and napoleonic wars france
3:58·was still the most populous nation in
4:00·europe and they had a higher population
4:02·than even the entirety of russia and
4:04·nearly double the population of the
4:06·united kingdom in fact at the time of
4:09·napoleon france was the fourth most
4:11·populous country in the entire world
4:14·lagging only behind china india and
4:16·japan such a huge population compared
4:19·with all of her neighbors helps to
4:20·explain france's dominance in european
4:23·affairs throughout the medieval
4:25·renaissance and early industrial periods
4:27·but beginning in the 19th century this
4:30·demographic dominance over all of her
4:32·neighbors began to shift away
4:34·dramatically the birth rate in france
4:36·began to diminish in the late 18th
4:38·century far before they began to do so
4:40·in every other european country and then
4:42·during the revolutionary and napoleonic
4:44·wars nearly 2 million french citizens
4:47·were killed which led to france's low
4:49·population growth throughout the rest of
4:51·the 19th century for many years in
4:53·france across the 1800s the number of
4:56·deaths in the country exceeded the
4:58·number of births and then during the
5:00·first world war france lost 10
5:04·of its entire active male population in
5:07·just four years 1.3 million french were
5:12·killed during the war and along with
5:14·even more births being forgone by
5:16·millions of potential fathers being away
5:18·at war the french population dropped by
5:21·more than 3 million and of course the
5:24·areas that were hit the hardest by this
5:25·population drop was the rural french
5:28·countryside because at the same time
5:30·that these trends were happening france
5:32·was also rapidly urbanizing and the
5:34·population was becoming highly
5:36·centralized around just a few key
5:39·population centers marseille leon liu
5:42·and most importantly of all paris the
5:44·ever-growing city beginning in the 17th
5:47·century paris began to grow larger and
5:49·larger as hundreds of thousands of
5:51·peasants from the french countryside
5:53·continuously moved there in search of
5:55·better opportunities at the beginning of
5:57·the 20th century 40 of the french
5:59·population were still living in the
6:01·rural countryside but over decades of
6:04·intense societal pressures coming from
6:06·millions of deaths from war millions of
6:08·men being away at war decreasing
6:10·fertility rates and ever-increasing
6:12·rates of urbanization just 85 years
6:15·later in 1985 that rate of french
6:18·residing in the countryside had
6:19·plummeted down to only eight percent and
6:23·by then nearly one out of every five
6:26·french were living in just the paris
6:28·metropolitan area alone but while
6:31·urbanization and war certainly had
6:33·massive effects on the population of the
6:35·french countryside not all areas were
6:37·affected evenly the mountainous areas of
6:39·the french alps for example while
6:41·technically having a slightly dipping
6:43·population have a thriving tourism
6:46·industry and the majority of the french
6:48·wine country while also very rural also
6:50·continues to have a thriving industry
6:52·and tourism appeal that has kept the
6:54·areas decently well populated but there
6:57·are larger geographic issues at play
6:59·here as well that help to explain the
7:01·lack of people in the empty diagonal
7:03·when looking back at the map you'll see
7:05·that the empty diagonal spans one
7:07·landlocked end of france by its border
7:09·with belgium to another landlocked end
7:11·by its border with spain and while not
7:13·every coastal area in france is highly
7:16·populated and makes sense than many of
7:18·them would be as 40 of the entire global
7:21·human population lives within just 100
7:24·kilometers of a coastline so by drawing
7:27·these lines across the french interior
7:29·you're essentially drawing a line from
7:31·one area that would be statistically
7:32·less populated to another area that
7:35·would also be statistically less
7:37·populated in fact if you ignore
7:39·international borders entirely the empty
7:41·diagonals population trend continues and
7:43·even expands its width across the
7:45·pyrenees into spain a country dealing
7:48·with its own demographic issues in the
7:50·form of low birth rates but there's
7:52·still more to it than just not being
7:54·near the coast the areas that the
7:56·diagonal cover are largely agricultural
7:59·land and throughout the world as
8:01·agriculture has become more automated
8:02·and industrialized less workers in the
8:05·industry are needed in fact 40 years ago
8:07·about 1.6 million people in france
8:10·worked in agriculture whereas now it's
8:12·roughly only four hundred thousand or
8:15·four times less people fewer jobs and
8:18·fewer opportunities to make a living
8:20·inevitably mean that people eventually
8:22·move on and regardless of the country
8:24·low population density itself can become
8:26·a sort of self-repeating feedback loop
8:29·as well areas with lower population
8:31·often have minimal commercial activity
8:33·and as the already small population ages
8:35·there's nothing keeping the younger
8:37·generations in the area so they leave
8:40·not just for work but also for all the
8:42·amenities that other more thriving areas
8:45·can bring and while the french
8:47·government has expressed concerns over
8:48·the issue and even funded research into
8:50·how to fix it there remains no real
8:53·answer while france's geography makes
8:55·this issue seem relatively unique to
8:57·france it really isn't demographic
9:00·shifts from the countryside to the
9:01·cities is a global phenomenon and so too
9:05·is the fact that more people generally
9:06·tend to live closer to the coastlines
9:08·where there's just more economic
9:10·activity therefore it shouldn't really
9:12·be too surprising after all that wow
9:15·people actually do be living in cities
9:17·now if you want to start analyzing your
9:19·own worldwide geographic and demographic
9:21·trends you're gonna need a pretty solid
9:23·grasp on things like geometry and
9:25·statistics but just like you might be
9:27·i've generally always been pretty
9:30·terrible at math and stem subjects so i
9:32·didn't really understand either of those
9:34·things either until a few years ago when
9:36·i started taking courses on brilliant
9:39·brilliant is an online stem learning
9:41·platform that i've been endorsing for
9:42·years now because of how extremely
9:45·simple and fun it is to use for example
9:48·if you want to use just a little bit of
9:50·your free time to start building up your
9:52·programming skills you should definitely
9:54·check out brilliant's course on computer
9:56·science fundamentals you're not going to
9:57·have to suffer through any long lectures
9:59·or big blocks of text it'll just teach
10:02·you the basics of programming through
10:04·hands-on interactive lessons and games
10:06·like this one and even if you already
10:08·know everything about computer science
10:10·there are tons of other courses for you
10:12·as well you can take their course on
10:14·neural networks or even quantum
10:16·computing or you can start at the basics
10:18·like i did with our courses on everyday
10:20·math geometry fundamentals or statistics
10:22·fundamentals or plenty of others overall
10:25·brilliant has dozens of courses that
10:27·cover a wide variety of fascinating and
10:30·cutting edge stem subjects so the odds
10:32·are good that there's something there
10:33·for you it's a great way to get a little
10:36·smarter every single day and best of all
10:39·you can join their community of 8
10:40·million other learners with 20 off of an
10:43·annual subscription by being one of the
10:45·first 200 people to click this button
10:48·that's here on screen right now or by
10:50·heading over to brilliant.org real life
10:52·lore using the link that's down below in
10:54·the description and as always thank you
10:57·so much for watching

22 posted on 01/23/2024 5:35:26 PM PST by SunkenCiv (NeverTrumpers are Republicans the same way Liz Cheney is a Republican.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-22 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson