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nkiolbasa
Guest
Can someone tell me where to find the appropriate response for a college teacher promoting her view of population control? Needless to say, she does not see the value of one more soul praising God for all eternity!
She may not even be a Christian who knows, faith and population control are two different things the planet is only so big, resources appear to be endless at the moment but reality is it is not. The idea might not be so much on population control, but to try an subtly change the subject from " population control " to why one should wait to have children after they are married and financially stable, and or how to maintain a stability on this planet with population increasing, or you could argue that people are dieing in numbers equal to those that are being born ( if that is even a remote chance i dont know ).she does not see the value of one more soul praising God for all eternity!
I need to find Bishop Sheen’s quote on it, but it went something like its strange that they call it birth control since it has nothing to do with birth or control.Depends on what she is saying.
But, off the top of my head…
Articles: EWTN’s document library has some good articles on population facts and myths
Book: The War On Population by Jacqueline Kasun
Video: Demographic Winter Vol 1 and 2
Website: www.pop.org
That’s a good book to start with. The most pressing problem in the immediate future will be depopulation and the economic decline that comes with it.amazon.com/What-Expect-When-Ones-Expecting/dp/1594036411"What to Expect When No One’s Expecting: America’s Coming Demographic Disaster"
H.E. Archbishop Renato R. Martino, Head of the Holy See Delegation to the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, June 4, 1992.“What the Church opposes is the imposition of demographic policies and the promotion of methods for limiting births which are contrary to the objective moral order and to the liberty, dignity and conscience of the human being. At the same time, the Holy See does not consider people as mere numbers, or only on economic terms. It emphatically states its concern that the poor not be singled out as if, by their very existence, they were the cause, rather than the victims, of the lack of development and of environmental degradation.
Serious as the problem of interrelation among environment, development and population is, it cannot be solved in an over-simplistic manner and many of the most alarming predictions have proven false and have been discredited by a number of recent studies. “People are born not only with mouths that need to be fed, but also with hands that can produce, and minds that can create and innovate.” As for the environment, just to mention one instance, countries with as few as 5% of the world population are responsible for more than one quarter of the principal greenhouse gas, while countries with up to a quarter of the world population contribute as little as 5% of the same greenhouse gas.”
What is this teacher’s reasoning? What are her references? Has she named any person or source?Can someone tell me where to find the appropriate response for a college teacher promoting her view of population control? Needless to say, she does not see the value of one more soul praising God for all eternity!
Nope. People are still having babies, but few fathers are hanging around. No disaster coming, just, “Mom? Where’s my dad?”amazon.com/What-Expect-When-Ones-Expecting/dp/1594036411
“What to Expect When No One’s Expecting: America’s Coming Demographic Disaster”
I don’t see the logic in that at all. A friend of mine who had lived in China told me that Chinese parents and relatives are in many ways superior to many of their American counterparts. Also, Chinese culture is not American culture. Look up how Oriental cultures treat Grandparents in particular.Hubby was telling me how the one child policy in China is creating little Hitlers. In the sense that one boy (because girls are aborted) has 2 adult parents plus 4 adult grandparents waiting on him hand and foot. The concept of having siblings and sharing and helping them aren’t part of the equation for them. Imagine 6 adults at your beck and call all the while growing up. There’s a lot to be said for growing up in a family. (Not to mention, gender selection for abortion! )
Declining fertility rates in the western world show that they are having too few babies, as well as out of wedlock babies. The fertility rates are at or below replacement level, which means that population will decline. That depopulation, once started, is difficult to stop, and causes many economic problems due to adverse demographics.Nope. People are still having babies, but few fathers are hanging around. No disaster coming, just, “Mom? Where’s my dad?”
Peace,
Ed
Sorry, I can’t stop laughing. You know what’s evil? Putting LDCs into debt and working out monopolies that benefit only the wealthy. The engineered global financial collapse of 2008 was planned. It sucked money out of everybody’s pockets.Wall Street provides markets for farmers, manufacturers, shippers, traders, investors, and speculators to exchange goods & services for a common currency. Wall Street securitizes corn, oil, car loans, real estate, etc. into units of standard trade that provides liquidity, depth and breadth to the market. I don’t believe they sell enslaved human persons any more. What to do with a second fancy car, or a second billion dollars? Bill Gates – funds cures for disease that when worked out will have a leveraged beneficial effect on the poor. The more markets for commerce and the more innovations, the better. Wall Street, entrepreneurs, and savers are not evil. Rather, they assist in God’s will. The key is to mate this productive spirit with the Catholic Social Teachings, e.g., a fair living wage and to be responsible corporate citizens, as with promoting economic growth, productivity, and creating jobs and also by preventing inflation and deflation. Just government, regulation, taxation, and fiscal and monetary are the other part of the equation, with the consumer in the middle. Thus, no evil in wealth per se. Rather, the potential for economic goodwill to the commonweal.