Too Many People?
The worldwide movement promoting population control commands many billions of dollars in resources, yet its power ultimately depends, especially in countries like the United States, on public ignorance of the facts.
The worldwide movement promoting population control commands many billions of dollars in resources, yet its power ultimately depends, especially in countries like the United States, on public ignorance of the facts.
Third world countries around the globe are now being pressured into adopting US population policy even though those very policies have, in the US, resulted in untold suffering, in terms of alienation and internal disintegration.
In many third world countries today aid packages are more likely to contain contraceptives than life saving medicines.
In recent months major media outlets in the United States have begun relating the hardships many nations now face because of fertility reduction.
Steven W. Mosher, President of the Population Research Institute (PRI), today criticized the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) for releasing a "statistically misleading" report "designed to generate fear of an overpopulation crisis that simply does not exist."
While the percentage of people choosing only one, two or no children may have reached its high point in the contemporary developed world, there is evidence that the conflict over whether to have large or small families is centuries old, at least in England.
Confounding the doomsayers, world population growth is slowing dramatically.
A bibliography of resources on population, human rights abuses, and the history of population control.
I listened spellbound. Up to this time I had been objecting to Chinas one-child policy on the grounds that it was immoral.
Population control is now being advanced under the banner of "sustainable economics".