poonja, thank you for commenting.
I am so joyful that we now have this world of super low fertility!
Look at the thumbnail above.
Nearly the entire world is shaded in dark blue during the 2035-2040 time interval.
This is amazing!
We should have a global celebration!
It is an overwhelmingly positive change for the better.
The universe is filled with overwhelming abundance and peace.
We are so fortunate that the right choices were made that allowed us to reach
this time of unparalleled tranquility and happiness.
We are so blessed.
It is now clear how to achieve this utopia:
Don't have kids!
Or at least have fewer kids!
Or wait to have kids.
Or wait and have fewer kids.
By changing behavior in this direction, many good things happen.
Wealth accumulates.
Educational standards improve.
Technology advances and many many other positives.
Yet, if you look on that same thumbnail you will see a few isolated places in the world
that have not reached the deep blue azure skies that we live under. Unremarkably,
all of those areas outside of Sub-Saharan Africa have recently or are currently experiencing
severe geopolitical stress.
If necessary one could consult online references for an update on what latest tragedy has befallen
Yemen, or Iraq/Syria or Afghanistan/Pakistan. Of course, as we well know from
the last several decades of global history, their tragedies have become our tragedies. We have tried
to help these places develop into more mature societies, though this becomes a near impossibility when
the average age in many of these nations is in the teens. If only they could realize how much better their
lives could be by decreasing their fertility.
What are the chances that the 3 or 4 most unstable nations outside of SSA are the only ones which are not all blue?
If you were to roll 3 150 sided dice (one side for each nation), hitting those three should be 1 in a million. Yet, given the
power of fertility to destroy communities it is essentially a sure thing.
However, not so long ago all nations lived the high fertility lifestyle. We remember this week the struggles that our nations
experienced with high fertility. The brutality of the conflicts that occurred in the twentieth century is nearly impossible to
comprehend now. They were our family and our people in those trenches and it has taken all these decades to get back on track.
I feel so incredibly lucky that my life was not directly impacted by those events. If I were given a billion dollars to go back and
live my life over 100 or 75 years ago, there would be no chance that I would take the money. How could there be happiness
in a world with such destruction?
It is the changing of reproductive behavior that has resulted in an enormous dividend for all of us. We should all
feel it a great privilege to live in our world of near total peace.
Much of this shift can be directly attributed to a large demographic shift. The inverted population pyramids that exist in several nations
are without precedent. Coping with the demands resulting from a geriatric society will be a new frontier of human experience
for the 21st Century. The 20th Century to a large extent was defined by the challenges imposed by youth. In the current context,
coping with the relentless wave of dementia will be the central concern for communities.
Given Japan's current dementia crisis, they simply have no time or energy left over for conflict with other nations.
Those nations who require babysitting services will need to increasingly look elsewhere, as most developed nations
are now deeply challenged by widespread dementing illness in their populations. Large percentages of those in their
30s and 40s are coping with caregiving responsibilities related to dementia. Japan is already confronting the implications
of their entire nation being essentially an intensive care unit.
The prospect that failing nations can finally go out of business is also such a powerful positive looming in the near future.
In business, companies grow, develop and finally close. This is understood to be a sign of a healthy vibrant economy.
Yet, entire nations have, up till now, never been deterred by failure. For a nation to exist all that needs to occur is for people
to reproduce. It is the most minimal of standards of existence conceivable. How surprised can one be to see the resulting
minimal levels of basic humanity demonstrated in many of these nations that have succeeded through essentially requiring
no demonstration of success?
With the super low fertility rates currently present, we should finally have the great pleasure of seeing entire nations
faced with the stark reality of either providing their citizens with a life of happiness and prosperity or simply folding up and disappearing
from the map. This is not an overstatement. Some nations might no longer have a viable existence by the end of this century.
Demographic forces are profoundly shape life now and they will become yet even more prominent as we move through the 21st Century.
Those who might try the retro-political tactics of the 20th Century will quickly be faced with the prospect of leading a nation without people.
We have so many things to be grateful for in this world of massively low fertility.
Edited by mag1, 18 November 2017 - 02:40 AM.