This is a broad subject that I've been thinking about (in global rather than personal terms, rest assured) for some time now, and it was brought to the forefront of my mind by Andrew Breitbart's pet African-grey-parrot-with-a-keyboard, JCE2011.
10/14/2016 10:33:13 AM
The main issue is that a lot of people think poor people are subhuman and lazy and they deserve to stay poor and to be punished.
10/14/2016 10:51:15 AM
10/14/2016 11:11:37 AM
10/14/2016 11:26:33 AM
I'd like to have a second child, but right now I can't afford child care for 2 kids, yet I see several families bringing in multiple children who I've been told are paying next to nothing for their child care.This isn't me saying poor people are subhuman, this is me saying I can't have a second child even though I want to, yet I see poor people doing the same exact thing I'd like to do, knowing that my taxes are funding in part the Smart Start program, or whatever it is they are calling it now.
10/14/2016 11:27:54 AM
So then quit your job and have that second kid if that's what you want to do.
10/14/2016 11:35:17 AM
We just about have to be a 2 income family. If we both don't work, can't really save up enough for college.
10/14/2016 11:36:26 AM
I actually meant go on the dole like them to see what a sweet deal it is
10/14/2016 11:40:05 AM
^
10/14/2016 11:46:41 AM
I honestly just don't see how people can have 3 or 4 kids and expect to give them all good starts for their futures. Do they just say "fuck it, we'll have x amt of kids and let fate sort it all out" ?
10/14/2016 11:54:02 AM
The necessity of having kids and a growing population is under appreciated. I've seen lots of people say kids are a waste and just consume resources on earth, ignoring the fact that, as grumpy pointed out, our society is built up around the concept of a growing population. So i support the sentiment grumpy is making.If we wanted to support a society with a stagnant or shrinking population, we'd have to fully embrace technocracy and more "socialism", which probably would be viewed as unethical in the world's eye, since we have such a huge landmass and lots of natural resources, and other parts of the world are having population crises.If conservatives manage to squash immigration to the point where our population growth stagnates (which is bad policy in the long run for many reasons, including gene pool issues), then we'd have to start running ads like in japan and Netherlands telling people to start having more children.So if we did want an anti-immigrant country, then we'd need to make sure domestic policy works aggressively against inequality so people have the resources they need to keep having kids.If we wanted to keep our current cultural momentum of fewer people having kids, or having kids later, we'd want a growing immigration rate, and could accept a lighter touch on social programs encouraging kids.
10/14/2016 11:59:23 AM
^^ because you can't predict the future. Most people don't think that far ahead, and even if you do, plans always change.Nomadic humans had kids because it was necessary for the tribes to thrive (and biological imperative). This was the priority. Going to the best school or best daycare are secondary to mere existence, and people just have "faith" that things will work out.It was also more acceptable, as my parents did, to let a retired neighbor take care of your kid for a small sum, with little regard for the quality of "child care". Their goal was just to keep the child alive while the parents were at work.
10/14/2016 12:02:04 PM
I see rjrumfel is really lighting up TSB today.[Edited on October 14, 2016 at 12:07 PM. Reason : and Smart Start isn't daycare ]
10/14/2016 12:02:47 PM
10/14/2016 12:10:51 PM
^^From the fucking SmartStart webpage
10/14/2016 12:15:20 PM
Most married religious people (a large population, many poor) still disagree with birth control of any kind. The kids just happen as a biproduct of sex. IS GOD TO BLAME?
10/14/2016 12:21:51 PM
^^^wait, you're saying teen birthrates are down because they're a bunch of bitches? lol
10/14/2016 12:41:33 PM
Yes, that's literally what he said.
10/14/2016 12:52:59 PM
A lot of what I'm reading here saddens me because the economic principles of eternal growth is unsustainable but even the people here refuse to let it go. We would need five Earth's worth of resources to support the global population at current US consumption rates. The population can temporarily grow with a fertility rate below the replacement rate because we are eliminating disease and extending life expectancy (in most countries).
10/14/2016 1:07:13 PM
10/14/2016 1:45:55 PM
10/14/2016 1:57:07 PM
Interesting. If my comment was so “stupid, stupid” and I am so “very, very dumb” you would think in a short novel you would be able to counter my statement. Yet in your clusterfuck of a rant you didn’t.Population growth only helps the US economy when you have more givers than takers. Your entire dumb-ass post doesn’t even consider this.Population-based services like public education, highways, emergency response, ect all have to increase to handle population. This isn’t cheap (especially with more crime). If we include the costs associated with potentially granting amnesty to uneducated illegals from the 3rd world so they can vote democrat forever, then we get welfare added on top of that.But hey, we can just print off more monopoly money for all these government programs, right?Open borders in a wellfare state does not work. We are 20 trillion in debt.So when I see a comment from the Marxists saying “college should be free” or “the government should force employers to pay me more than I’m worth” all I see is “I didn’t graduate highschool and I have 6 kids, please subsidize my poor choices while I complain that America is racist".
10/14/2016 2:07:14 PM
10/14/2016 2:46:12 PM
So in other words, GrumpyGOP is SJW spouting false narratives.
10/14/2016 2:47:36 PM
I wonder if the Native Americans appreciated the "diversity" they got when Americans immigrated to their country.
10/14/2016 2:49:43 PM
That sounds like something a SJW would say.
10/14/2016 2:51:15 PM
10/14/2016 2:56:15 PM
^ lol, and America, a nation of immigrants, nuked japan twice and Germany lost 2 world wars.Japan is having major population issues now, but they are drifting towards a socialist technocracy it seems like. Germany is trying to be more welcoming to immigrants, and they're surrounded by different ethnicities anyway, so it'd be hard for them to close off too much.
10/14/2016 3:01:39 PM
The nation of immigrants "melting pot" thing is really a myth. America was founded by Anglo-Saxon Protestants. The culture and values that allowed for separation of church and state, free speech, checks and balances, right to bare arms, was all from this homogeneous group. When people use the predictable, weak argument of "but diversity!" they don't realize that some cultures are better than others. That doesn't mean we don't want people of other races, it means the values that made America great are important, and we should make sure people share them if they want to join. There's a reason Mexicans come into our country and not vice versa... If we import the 3rd world that "diversity" is not a strength, but democrats love votes and corporations love cheap labor. [Edited on October 14, 2016 at 3:12 PM. Reason : .][Edited on October 14, 2016 at 3:15 PM. Reason : ..]
10/14/2016 3:12:05 PM
Spoken like a true white supremacist.GrumpyGOPEconomically speaking there are some folks exploring possibilities for no-growth or low-growth. You can take a look at George Monbiot, Charles Eisenstein, Rupert Read, I'm sure there are others that I'm blanking on, and they've spilt some significant ink on what post growth economics might entail (or why it's imperative). Give the "Post-growth Institute" a follow on Facebook, it reposts their writings on a regular basis. I'm really fascinated by the topic as well, but there is one problem that really drives me nutz. Namely the complete lack of any empirical evidence to support most of the claims. Instead you are gonna see more "common-sense" or emotional appeals, environmentalism, gross domestic happiness, other hippy shit, etc.But really what it all boils down to is: in order to cope with declining economic growth, it's going to require a significant cultural change, that will really need to happen on the individual level. Basically moving away from consumerism, competition, and isolationism toward cooperation, community building, and holism.[Edited on October 14, 2016 at 3:34 PM. Reason : Moving toward the eschaton]
10/14/2016 3:13:28 PM
That's not an argument. Screaming "racism/xenophobia" shows how little effort and thought you put into these topics. You should really work on developing an understanding of history/culture/politics beyond childish name calling.
10/14/2016 3:18:55 PM
10/14/2016 3:22:55 PM
10/14/2016 3:25:45 PM
as does China
10/14/2016 3:30:00 PM
10/14/2016 4:28:37 PM
10/14/2016 4:30:11 PM
we need to put pressure on japan to take refugees from eritrea afghanistan syria honduras etc. we give them security for free and they need to carry their weight. then we have to start thinking about where the 200 million sea level refugees from bangledesh will go.by 2050 there could be another half billion refugees.
10/14/2016 4:36:57 PM
10/14/2016 4:54:42 PM
10/14/2016 5:48:22 PM
Can you link to the 2012 study? I'm not surprised by the numbers, I'd just like to see if "taxes paid" includes sales and payroll taxes, or if it is income taxes only.[Edited on October 14, 2016 at 6:04 PM. Reason : [insert marginal propensity to spend and immigrants aren't lazy arguments here]]
10/14/2016 5:57:00 PM
10/14/2016 7:05:39 PM
Free market enterprise does not require a rising population, although it does cause some sector shifts: owners of land and all other fixed assets fare better than they otherwise would in a world with a growing population. But there is nothing about capitalism or free markets which requires or functions inherently better with a growing population. Quick population growth doesn't preclude labor shortages any more than a falling population would preclude widespread unemployment (see Japan).
10/14/2016 8:08:16 PM
i got a vasectomy just to deprive the government of future taxpayers
10/14/2016 10:03:00 PM
10/15/2016 12:05:13 PM
10/15/2016 8:09:41 PM
10/15/2016 9:16:38 PM
Is this really what you wanted to talk about? Frontier people were wearing clothes and using tools made of iron. Things which were heavily imported well into the 19th century. As the government then and extremely today spends a vast share of its tax revenue on things which in no way benefit the public, it is easy for me to think then as now that the average person paid more than they got back.
10/16/2016 12:24:03 AM
Yeah, we were a net importer for quite a large chunk of our first century as a country. With only a few blips we were an importer up until almost about 1890, then barely a net exporter. WWI happened and we started shipping a ton of shit, and then remained a net exporter until the 1970s.I don't believe for one second that even replacement level reproduction is necessary or even desirable. If you want a world were people live above subsistence level you pretty much have to see that a lot of places are overpopulated and no sustainable. I'm a big believer in technology and the promise of GMOs, more efficient farming methods, etc. but even if we can really optimize those areas it's going to be very hard if not impossible for 7-8 billion people to have "western" levels of consumption. There are simply too many limiting factors right now. At some point there may, and probably will be, breakthrough technology that eliminates some concerns about energy, food, maybe even water but for right now we probably are overpopulated for our level of technology. People are still starving and dying of malaria because we don't have the logistical capacity to keep that from happening. Even if we could manage perfect distribution of goods, had zero food waste, etc. we'd still have 100s of millions of people living at the equivalent of poverty level/subsistence existence.Continued technological advancement, the unlocking of human potential via the advancement of western cultural values (liberation of women, free inquiry, scientific method,etc.), and global free market economies will do more for the world at this point than making more kids.Pure brute force and scale has gotten us a long way as species (look at the explosion in pop. and corresponding tech achievement once the Haber process revolutionized agriculture) but I think we've reached a point of diminishing returns because so much of the population gain is happening in places that don't allow for humans to do more than subsist.I'm not doom and gloom about overpopulation nor do I subscribe to Malthusian ideas about pop. but I don't think pop. growth is the optimal method for species advancement right now.
10/16/2016 10:36:08 AM
Being an overall net importer doesn't mean much in this context if it's the wealthy few doing most of the importing and therefore paying most of the tariffs. But LoneSnark is right, this isn't really what I want to talk about. I'm not particularly concerned with which percentage of the population is paying what share of the taxes.Kurtis636 - At some point, replacement level reproduction becomes necessary or the species goes extinct. So I'll assume you mean it's not necessary or desirable right now, which I guess I could go either way on. In the sense that most of our institutions are built on the assumption of a growing population, it would come in handy, but obviously a smarter and more efficient solution would be to change those institutions than to keep makin' babies just to support them.I don't necessarily agree that "a lot of places are overpopulated and not sustainable." In a vacuum, sure. But in a world connected by trade, having certain areas with very dense populations is acceptable and maybe even desirable. Probably the species would be better off if all of us lived in conditions of higher density, rather than sprawling out.I agree that American-levels of consumption are probably not in the cards for 8 billion people, pending some serious technological advancement. I definitely think those advancements will come, and maybe sooner than you'd think. But I have some confidence that in the meantime, things will sort themselves out. Birth rates will decline even in poor countries, as education and standards of living improve. Those people will still want higher levels of consumption, which will drive up prices, which will presumably cause a reduction in Western demand. In most areas I trust market forces to manage this. There are a couple of sectors that give me pause, because they seem uniquely suited towards spilling out from the purely economic realm and into politics and warfare. Ideally increased demand for cars would drive up oil prices and make people use less gas, but I'm not convinced that when push comes to shove it wouldn't just make people invade the places with the oil. (Of course, this has happened already - not so much in our invasion of Iraq, but Iraq's of Kuwait)
10/16/2016 11:21:37 AM
10/16/2016 11:50:26 AM