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youtube.com/watch?v=scnYVZyJ28

I give credit where credit is due regarding the fact that focus on careers creates fewer children (though not explicitly stating it is more a problem with women), as well as pushing against the idea that "we should have policies like the Scandinavian countries" as a solution to birth rate issues when those countries are also below replacement rates.

No solutions beyond "changing the culture," but we all know why that is the case.

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And "we have to support single mothers". Yeah, we have been doing that. And it is only making things worse, as it makes it harder for families to afford having their own children given the welfare state taxing the productive to pay for the single mothers.

Not that I accept the reasoning that it is all economical, as I argue there is not such thing as a "good enough economy" to raise birth rates. But I know it does not help.

@houseoftolstoy
I heard a surprisingly insightful comment that modern feminism went into overdrive due to women being bored and isolated in the suburbs and the connection of the children seeing their father perform at home and teach them closely being cut off.

It is something to think about, that the office work, the infamous wage slavery, where the father is away from his family doing useless work that doesn't directly benefit his family, is a great culprit.

@houseoftolstoy

If you support single mothers financially through government subsidies then it will encourage women to become single mothers

@houseoftolstoy

Having higher birth rates is not a good thing in and of itself

We would ideally only want to raise the birth rates of women who do not reice welfare from the government and lower the birth rates of women who receive welfare from the government

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Merovingian Club

A club for red-pilled exiles.