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Are Liberals Really Obsessed with Not Having Kids Because of Global Warming?

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Thu, Jun 9, 2022 05:32 PM

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Ezra Klein is not necessarily the sharpest knife in the drawer or the greatest writer in the world,

Ezra Klein is not necessarily the sharpest knife in the drawer or the greatest writer in the world, but he did have a fascinating admission about children in a piece he did for the New York Times. This will give you the gist of it: To his credit, I suppose, since the piece is mainly filled with dubious global warming dreck (It’s supppperrrrr scary, but maybe not as bad you think, you guys!), Klein does at least point out that things have always been “bad” in one way or another:                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 [Open in browser]( [Are Liberals Really Obsessed with Not Having Kids Because of Global Warming?]( [John Hawkins]( Jun 9 Ezra Klein is not necessarily the sharpest knife in the drawer or the greatest writer in the world, but he did have a fascinating admission about children [in a piece he did for the New York Times](. This will give you the gist of it: To his credit, I suppose, since the piece is mainly filled with dubious global warming dreck (It’s supppperrrrr scary, but maybe not as bad you think, you guys!), Klein does at least point out that things have always been “bad” in one way or another: As Dylan Matthews writes at [Vox](: What today we’d characterize as [extreme poverty]( was until a few centuries ago the condition of almost every human on earth. In 1820, some 94 percent of humans lived on less than $2 a day. Over the next two centuries, extreme poverty fell dramatically; in 2018, the [World Bank]( estimated that 8.6 percent of people lived on less than $1.90 a day. And the gains were not solely economic. Before 1800, [average ](life spans didn’t exceed 40 years anywhere in the world. Today, the average human life expectancy is more like [73](. No mainstream climate models suggest a return to a world as bad as the one we had in 1950, to say nothing of 1150. Was the world so bad, for virtually the entirety of human history, that our ancestors shouldn’t have made our lives possible? If not, then nothing in our near future looks so horrible that it turns reproduction into an immoral act In one sense, all of this is nothing new. Before global warming, people were wondering if they should bring kids into the world because of the supposed overpopulation that was coming. Before that, it was the possibility of nuclear war. Of course, all of those are foo-foo problems compared to what previous generations of humans have endured: “We’re serfs who work in the fields all day, our feudal lords take most of what we earn and if we complain about it, they’ll string us up. Should we have kids?” “The Nazis are winning and unless something changes, they’ll conquer the civilized world and bury every good and decent person under their tyrannical boots. Should we have kids?” “The barbarians across the valley may attack at any time and if we lose, they’ll murder the men, take the women for breeding, and use the children as slaves. Should we have kids?” “Hey, we’re slaves. Should we have kids?” As much as all of us, myself included, complain about how the world is today, we Americans are doing better than 99.9% of humans that have ever lived on this planet. If you went back through time, a large percentage of noblemen, lords, and kings would undoubtedly happily trade places with the average American once they understood what our world was like: “So, you are living in a house with air conditioning, refrigeration, a stove, a microwave, a soft bed with no bedbugs, you have hot and cold running water, and you can use a toilet instead of crapping in a pan. For entertainment, you look at blockbuster movies that cost hundreds of millions of dollars, listen to millions of different songs, play video games, and watch millions of different women engaged in every perversion imaginable via pornography. Not only is better food than we have readily available, but you’re in little danger of being killed by foreign armies, and you can call the police on a magical device to come defend you if you’re bothered by criminals. You can even quickly and effectively move across the country via cars or flying devices called planes that allow you to visit other continents in hours. Meanwhile, all of this is theoretically possible on the salary you make as an assistant manager at somewhere called Kmart.” However, there is one important thing that has changed a great deal. Children used to be people’s retirement program. If they didn’t have kids, who was going to take care of them when they got old? Who were they going to have work around the farm? Who were they going to marry off to secure an alliance with France? On the other hand, today children are no longer a huge financial asset. On the contrary, they’re an enormous financial liability. So, think about that, along with the fact that Americans, particularly American liberals, are probably some of the most narcissistic people in human history. There have to be a lot of them thinking, “You can take a lot of vacations, get nicer cars, and buy a lot of Starbucks lattes for $240,000. Why not just spend that on me instead of on some little brat?” Granted, some of that is a blessing for humanity because there are people in this world who just shouldn’t be having kids (see all the parents taking their kids to drag shows or trying to convince everyone that their small child is trans as great examples)... Keep reading with a 7-day free trial Subscribe to Culturcidal by John Hawkins to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives. [Start trial]( A subscription gets you: Paid subscriber only posts & special bonus posts. Have input into the topics I write about. A weekly Q&A session once we hit 100 members. A members only forum at 500 members. © 2022 John Hawkins 548 Market Street PMB 72296, San Francisco, CA 94104 [Unsubscribe]( [Get the app]([Start writing](

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