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Page added on February 6, 2013

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New Book: A Child Free America

Despite doom and gloom predictions that never came to pass, overpopulation alarmists continue to make their case that society must restrict the procreation of human beings. In 1968, Paul Ehrlich’s book Population Bomb said that hundreds of millions of people would perish as a result of an overpopulated earth.

The Weekly Standard’s Jonathan V. Last’s new book What to Expect When No One’s Expecting: America’s Coming Demographic Disaster discusses the overpopulation alarmists’ false predictions, their true intentions, and the consequences all of us will pay for the unnecessary panic.

Last points out that when Ehrlich wrote his book in ’68, the U.S. government and various interest groups were quick to respond:

Groups such as the Ford Foundation and the International Planned Parenthood Federation pushed to introduce birth control and abortion in developing countries. When Lyndon Johnson signed the Food for Peace Act he required USAID officers to “exert the maximum leverage and influence” on the countries we were helping so that they’d cut down on their baby-making.[i] In 1972, the Club of Rome published a tract, The Limits to Growth, echoing Ehrlich’s forecast. (Among other things, the Club of Rome predicted that the planet’s oil reserves would be exhausted by 1992.) The movement was in such a lather that in 1967, Disney produced a movie for the Population Council, titled Family Planning. The movie, translated into 24 different languages and featuring Donald Duck, lectured viewers that if families didn’t drastically cut back the number of kids they had, “the children will be sickly and unhappy, with little hope for the future.”[ii]

Interestingly, Ehrlich refused to admit he was wrong years after his initial predictions never happened. Last explains:

Undeterred by having his life’s work completely discredited, the octogenarian professor is mad about the perils of overpopulation, even to this day. In 1990, long after his initial thesis was disproved, he doubled down and published The Population Explosion, in which he claimed that overpopulation was more. Dangerous. THAN. EVER! “It’s insane to consider low birthrate as a crisis,” he said recently. “Basically every person I know in my section of the National Academy of Sciences thinks it’s wonderful that rich countries are starting to shrink their populations to sustainable levels. We have to do that because we’re wrecking our life-support system.”[iii] (Explaining the lack of mass starvation in the 1970s, Ehrlich says, “Repeatedly in my career it has turned out things I never would have imagined were huge factors.”[iv] No kidding.)

Although the United Nations has done considerable research on the downward spiral of falling fertility rates through its Population Division, it still sponsors a “World Population Day” to raise awareness about overpopulation.

The environmentalists have stepped up their game in the population debate, too. A group called Californians for Population Stabilization claims “population growth [is] wildly out of control” and is causing “further degradation of America’s natural treasures.” A 2008 report from the Australian government says that babies are hurting the nation’s economy. Oregon State University released a study recently that concludes children are detrimental to the environment because they contribute to global warming. The study suggests that couples should have at least one less child than they were planning on having. Last notes in his book:

In the London Independent, columnist Johann Hari worries that, “It will be easier for 6 billion people to cope on a heaving, boiling planet than for 9 or 10 billion.”[x] In Hot, Flat, and Crowded, Tom Friedman argues that overpopulation is one of the drivers of a coming global catastrophe and talks about the “steady population growth” the world will experience in the future as if he’d never seen a fertility chart.[xi] The group Earth First! went so far as to publish articles saying that “The AIDS epidemic, rather than being a scourge, is a welcome development in the inevitable reduction of human population” and if AIDS “didn’t exist, radical environmentalists would have to invent [it].”[xii]

Last states that despite a higher population, many environmental indicators in the United States are better in the present than they were in the ’70s, when Ehrlich’s paranoia ran rampant:

The environmentalist case against children doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. The three main environmental population worries are (1) overcrowding; (2) scarcity of resources; and (3) climate change due to carbon dioxide emissions. Let’s take these in order. (1) Sure, America’s city centers and major highways are more crowded than ever. But on the other hand, it’s a big country. (Have you been to Montana—or even rural Maryland?) And it’s important not to let provincialism distort your understanding of the world. For instance, if you live in Manhattan, you might think that America is becoming overcrowded, because New York City is overcrowded. But there is more to America than our city cores. For instance, there are fewer people living in the Rust Belt today than there were in the 1930s. There’s still plenty of room out there. (2) As economist Bryan Caplan points out, population growth has historically lead to conservation through innovation. And as the work of economist Ester Boserup made clear a century ago, innovation is a byproduct of increasing population. That’s why commodities prices—a good measure of scarcity—have dropped about 1 percent a year since the Civil War. It’s why air and water quality are markedly better today—in both American and the rest of the West—than they were in the 1970s, when there were fewer people. (3) The only environmentalist concern that population might legitimately affect is climate change, a subject so fraught with theological division that I’ll leave it be. I’ll only say that even if you take climate change to be real, and serious, and man-made, you still have to reckon that the environmental impact of “overpopulation” is, at worst, a mixed bag.

Anti-procreationists who cannot scare people from having children are using other tactics. Activists promote a “child-free” life as a better way of living than traditional parenthood, authoring a slew of books which tout the concept. Last lists such titles like Madelyn Cain’s The Childless Revolution, Terri Casey’s Pride and Joy: The Lives and Passion of Women without Children, Nicki Defago’s Childfree and Loving It!, Laura Carroll’s Families of Two: Interviews with Happily Married Couples Without Children by Choice, and Laura Scott’s Two Is Enough: A Couple’s Guide to Living Childless by Choice.

The idea of being “child-less” can appear alluring to younger adults who want to maintain their freedom and take more financial risks, but Kelly Flynn, an older married woman with no children, wrote an October 17 piece last year in the New York Times explaining her main concern on being childless:

We joke about creating an old-age community, although there is a part of me that thinks: Let’s do it. Let’s plan it now. I’ll get some paper, and we’ll make a list…

Because now, as I help my parents navigate the trials and indignities of old age, I can’t help thinking, who will do this for me? Even if I can pay for top-notch care, it won’t come from a place of love and understanding of who I am and what is important to me.

When my father learned he had cancer, I became his primary caregiver. During those two years, I kept wondering, who will be there when my time comes? Whom can I count on to fill my pillboxes, get the stains out of my shirts, bring home my favorite ice cream? As he lost strength, I wondered, will there be somebody to cut up my steak?

Will someone step in and confront the hearing aid company that bilked my 79-year-old mother out of hundreds of dollars? Or the optometrist who pretended not to notice that her new glasses did not fit? She was always a formidable woman, and as I watch her nerve drain away, I think, who will speak for me when I lose my nerve?

Jonathan Last’s book is now available at Amazon.com.

breitbart.com



11 Comments on "New Book: A Child Free America"

  1. adamc18 on Wed, 6th Feb 2013 1:03 pm 

    Weird indeed!

    Population is a matter of crowded city centres? I thought the issue was the shortage of water, fertile land and the collapse of the world’s fisheries?

    Conservation through innovation? Commodity prices falling 1% since the Civil War – really?

    Climate change is so fraught with theological division that we won’t even talk about it? So much for the process of open, peer-reviewed scientific research!

    Why won’t we all stick our fingers in our ears and chant ‘La-la-la-la-la…’ and all will be well.

  2. BillT on Wed, 6th Feb 2013 2:04 pm 

    breitbard is a questionable site that McAfee warned me not to open. So, the article is probably propaganda. Anyway, The only families growing are minorities, Latinos, Muslims, blacks, and Mormons. All are large family cultures.

    And, population die off is coming anyway you slice it. Billions will die before 2050. The Four Horsemen are riding out. The older generations will be allowed to die as medical expenses will prevent them from help. Disease and starvation is growing in the world. and there is war coming to areas that are hot and some that are not.

  3. Arthur on Wed, 6th Feb 2013 2:29 pm 

    “When my father learned he had cancer, I became his primary caregiver. During those two years, I kept wondering, who will be there when my time comes? Whom can I count on to fill my pillboxes, get the stains out of my shirts, bring home my favorite ice cream? As he lost strength, I wondered, will there be somebody to cut up my steak?”

    Nobody my dear, you will be forced to take your last pill which will ‘liberate’ you from your misery and old age loneliness. You were so stupid to let economic values prevail over family values, that is was somehow ‘oppressive’ to dedicate your life to your children and husband and that it was preferable to pursue ‘self-realization’ in a stupid office environment, instead of gladly leave that to your husband and bake cookies and wait for your children to return from school. Your materialistic zeal expanded the tax revenues of the government, in the US your enemy, who used it to fund third world immigrants, who would never contemplate exercising any restraint in popping out one child after the other, so your kind could be gradually replaced as a result. And now you are sorry for yourself. Feminism is another social movement waiting to implode, just like communism.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bZr0_ic1304

  4. GregT on Wed, 6th Feb 2013 2:35 pm 

    “Despite doom and gloom predictions that never came to pass, overpopulation alarmists continue to make their case that society must restrict the procreation of human beings. In 1968, Paul Ehrlich’s book Population Bomb said that hundreds of millions of people would perish as a result of an overpopulated earth.”

    Ehrlich’s predictions were off by a few decades, mere seconds in human history. If we are truly an intelligent species, we should be listening to our brightest scientists. They have been warning us for over 40 years.

  5. Kenz300 on Wed, 6th Feb 2013 6:32 pm 

    More right wing RepubliCON propaganda from Breitbart.

    In the US we have a unemployment rate of over 7.9%

    We have an under employment rate of over 20%

    In Spain the youth unemployment rate is over 50%.

    Recent college graduates are moving back home with the parents because they can not find jobs that will support them.

    Yet the world keeps adding 80 million more mouths to feed, clothe, house and provide energy for every year.

    Endless population growth is not sustainable and only leads to more poverty, suffering and despair.

  6. DC on Wed, 6th Feb 2013 8:24 pm 

    More Pro-Natal Propaganda, from a not-credible source. The US is adding 1 million people every single year for, what, the last 3 or 4 decades now at least? How can adding 1 million every year be considered ‘not enough people’. Not enough for who exactly? Wall Mart? General Motors? Wall St? Amerika is over-populated now. Filling the US with both legal, but mostly culturally incompatible illegal economic migrants has little, if anything, to rescue the floundering drive-shop-consume US economy. That strategy may have ‘worked’ in the past, but those days are behind us now.

    But everyone is playing the population game. Canada is, Australia is, the UK is. Everyone is in on the act,except for a few sensible Asian and EU nations. Even still, you hear the defenders of endless population growth insist its still ‘not enough’. I wonder when we will have ‘enough’?

    Oh right, the answer, according to them is, never.

  7. Kenz300 on Wed, 6th Feb 2013 9:34 pm 

    Every country needs to develop a plan to balance its population with its resources, food, water, energy and JOBS.

    In the US we seem to have a structural unemployment problem with a 7.9% unemployment rate and a 20% under employment rate.
    l
    At the same time we continue to add over a million new LEGAL immigrants to the US every year.

    Delta just advertised for 400 open jobs to be filled. They got over 44,000 applicants. Seems like we have too many people chasing too few jobs.

    Adding more people is not the answer.

  8. Frank Kling on Wed, 6th Feb 2013 9:40 pm 

    Why does PO entertain such neo-con Republican drivel? The video never mentions that the US has a positive growth rate which means that the population will double to 640 million in about 72 years. To cite California or talk about “if not for” is skirting around the issue of this basic fact. The last thing the world needs is more Americans. We represent just 5% of the world’s population, but consume 25 to 30% of the Earth’s natural resources.

    This article is an irresponsible fraud backed by some population growth interest.

  9. christian phillip on Wed, 6th Feb 2013 11:18 pm 

    …get ready for canibalism, muchos…and stop whining on line about your lack of a future as milionaires…

  10. rollin on Thu, 7th Feb 2013 3:09 am 

    Do we really need to add one more huge mistake to the many that we make every day? Get your heads together, your not going to cure a cultural/mental problem by reducing population. Lower population will just become bigger consumers as the US has proven. Now with Asian countries following the Euro-American over-consumption scheme, the insane giant hamster wheel existence will probably come unhinged.
    Even after a population collapse, I suspect that people will ocntinue their insane ways thus finishing the process.
    Unless a deep cultural and mental change occurs in humans, nature will always be at severe risk.
    Commiting genetic suicide is not your answer.

  11. Pat73 on Thu, 7th Feb 2013 1:39 pm 

    Is it not fact that the world is running out of enough water, oil, phospherous, grain, fish, etc. How much sense does it take to decide that these shortages of essentials could be partially related to population growth. We are not all scientists but we all have some common sense.

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