itsyourboypookie said:
No Spin Ag said:
This person had an interesting reply:
Quote:
These numbers are real but the interpretation is completely off.
Low birth rates in Europe aren't the result of replacement, mixing, or some secret agenda.
They're the result of Europeans themselves choosing fewer children because of:
high cost of living
late marriage
economic pressure
dual-income households
urbanization
career prioritization
social systems designed around individualism
That's demography, not destruction.
Meanwhile, high fertility countries are simply doing what every population has done in history when they're young: grow.
Human groups have expanded, collapsed, migrated, blended, and reshaped one another for 300,000 years.
There has NEVER been a permanent, isolated 'founding population.'
Every major civilization is the product of waves of migration and mixing.
Europe itself?
Celts Romans Goths Moors Vikings Slavs Normans Turks
There is no single 'original population.'
There never was.
And here's the key scientific point:
Demographic change does NOT erase people.
It creates new variations of people.
Skin tones shift. Languages shift. Cultures evolve.
That's exactly how every modern population was formed.
Calling this 'the end of the West' assumes that culture is static and biological but culture is learned, transmitted, and constantly reinvented.
And fertility collapse?
It's not racial.
It's economic.
South Korea, Japan, China all majority Asian have fertility LOWER than Europe.
By your logic, they should also be considered 'disappearing,' but we never frame it that way.
Why?
Because this isn't about race.
It's about modernity.
Migration isn't erasure.
It's the oldest human behavior on the planet.
Humans left Africa in multiple waves.
Humans mixed with Neanderthals.
Humans mixed across continents long before borders existed.
This moment in history is not an anomaly it's a continuation of what humans have always done.
Fear doesn't come from the numbers.
Fear comes from the belief that identity is fragile.
But identities evolve.
Cultures adapt.
People blend.
Humanity continues.
This isn't the 'end of the old world.'
It's the beginning of the next one just like every era before it.
If high cost of living is the reason people don't breed why are poor people the top breeders?
In poorer areas, the cultures tend to be more focused on gaining mastery of limited available critical resources by lower technology means and that requires manpower. Labor. You also have incentive for your clan of tribe or group to be larger and more dominant. Childhood mortality is higher, and lives are more expendable or have less value so larger numbers of offspring are a hedge against that, and cultures reflect this.
As we see time and again, as a civilization be its culture stabilize, mature, and develop technology, advanced economic and social systems and generate much greater levels of wealth per person, the incentive evolved to having fewer children but children that are given every possible competitive advantage and wealth support, in order to keep pace with the abilities and productivity of their peers. The population growth naturally slows. This also brings about a culture with a more liberal social structure for females that doesn't prioritize child rearing above all else, and makes them more available for advanced productive labor in the work force. There are of course tradeoffs to this new cultural approach, but the evolution seems to be occurring across cultures and populations wherever the society reaches high levels of wealth and productivity.