this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2025
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[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 84 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (15 children)

I do think that the Nordic countries show pretty well that even if you treat your population well and put quite a lot of effort into helping the population with child rearing, it seems like women just don't want to have many children in modern society, even before everything became doom-and-gloom.

Maybe that's just how it goes when you let people decide for themselves. Or maybe modern, capitalistic society is just not conducive to childrearing, and no amount of state support for young families, kindergartens etc. is going to change that.

[–] slaacaa@lemmy.world 56 points 1 month ago (2 children)

It’s almost like we shouldn’t structure our society around endless growth, including the population

[–] Roidecoeur@lemmy.world 18 points 1 month ago

It's true that "unchecked growth is the motto of the cancer cell".

And that nature's program has predation/feeding upon itself as its prime mechanism of survival, which runs on boom and bust cycles. For example, when conditions allow for echinoderm populations to explode everything that feeds on echinoderms is having a pleasant and easy time of living "high on the hog". But when that overpopulation inevitably leads to collapse(bust) due to resource depletion, plague, environmental/social dysfunction and disorder, etc, that's when all the beings whose existence depend(ed) on the pleasant and easy times of abundance get to see the real cost/bill of having profited from that oh so very temporary abundance.

Homo sapiens can attempt to structure their societies any which way that suits them based off of the conditions they're dealing with at the time. But unless they somehow graduate from animal-hood, or at least attempt to transcend being slaves to their instincts, they're destiny as animals will remain unchanged.

Yet i optimistically happen to see that a percentage of our species choosing not to reproduce(even for selfish reasons) is a good indication that some of us are able to control/deny the impulses of the body as a means of damage control. These things have been observed and studied for some time now, and fall under the categories of 'Malthusianism' and 'social decay'

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