Skip to content

We Don’t Teach About Fertility

white bear plush toy on white table
Photo by Elsa Lilja

Louis T. March

Louis T. March has a background in government, business, and philanthropy. A former talk show host, author, and public speaker, he is a dedicated student of history and genealogy. Louis lives with his family in the beautiful Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.

mercatornet.com


First off, it’s that time of year: 2023 population data are pouring in. A surfeit of statistics surfaces somewhere every week. Nirvana for demography nerds! Parsing numbers is boring, but some startling stats merit mention. South Korea, with the world’s lowest fertility rate (0.78), broke its own record at 0.72. In Japan births fell 5.1 percent, marriages almost 6 percent. Seems Europe has more fifty-plus folks than preschoolers.

Family advocate

Know what really caught my attention this week? The adventures of Stephen J. Shaw, a Brit resident in Japan. He’s a documentary filmmaker, data scientist and you guessed it, demographer. He produced a fantastic documentary, Birthgap – Childless World. Part 1 is accessible here. Parts 2 and 3 are accessible via subscription. The promo:

Shocked by data on declining birth rates in Europe and Japan, Stephen embarked on a 24-country journey in order to understand the causes of this phenomenon. Along the way, he came face-to-face with the economic, social and individual consequences of childlessness and declining birth rates… [T]his thought-provoking documentary combines deeply personal stories with never-seen-before demographic data to reveal the surprising reality of what has been happening across the globe.

Mr Shaw, a father of three, is a self-described “life-learner” who occasionally enrols in university courses. He is president and co-founder of Autometrics Analytics, LLC, a data analysis/forecasting group advising corporate clients. He knows his data and possesses an attribute invaluable to the spirit of inquiry: open-mindedness.

Man on a mission

Like so many data freaks, Shaw once believed Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb thesis, the notion that we’re reproducing too fast for the food supply and mass starvation is around the corner. But then he came face-to-face with the facts: no credible data supported Ehrlich.

I had assumed before this project that the world’s population was growing exponentially out of control, almost that it didn’t matter what we did for the environment and because there are going to be so many people.

I saw that the world’s population is destined to maximize quite quickly, and then quite quickly go down.

Thus began the scholarly odyssey culminating in Birthgap – Childless World, a cinematic exposition about the birth dearth. Conclusion? There is a global pandemic (a real one) of unplanned childlessness.

We teach people so much about biology in schools… We teach young people how to not get pregnant. We really don’t teach anything meaningful about the fertility window.

Educrats love sex education, birth control and abortion rights; there is scant attention to the finiteness of human fertility. Birthgap provides a compassionate and much-needed platform for victims of unplanned, unintended childlessness. Their suffering has thus far been hidden from public view. That is changing thanks to Mr Shaw. People are now “coming out” about a sensitive personal issue critical to our survival.

As for The Population Bomb thesis, Shaw says:

His [Ehrlich’s] words were used in some very menacing ways in terms of extreme anti-natalism… [Anti-natalism] is still taught in our schools, it’s in our textbooks, and is the general framework that we jump to, that there are too many people in the world. Ehrlich has since gone on to say that [low birthrate] is because of the environment and now I think the message is changing subtly again – it is about the patriarchy… The argument keeps changing. There is always a reason not to have children.

Thus far, 91-year-old Dr Ehrlich has not lived to see global starvation.

Cut to the chase

While pro-family folks fret about too few children, the root cause – unplanned childlessness – is now out in the open. Birth Gap interviews those who waited too long. Shaw also cites professors telling students not to have children in order to save the planet; yet rarely do they discuss the fertility window and preparing for family life.

[T]he crucial overlooked fact is that only half of women who enter their thirties without having started a family will ever become mothers. Many wait for their careers to develop, or they’re still looking for Mr Right.

Dr Jordan Peterson interviewed Shaw about “The Epidemic that Dare Not Speak Its Name”, the invisible epidemic of unplanned childlessness. Check it out:

Cancelled at Cambridge

The Peterson interview had repercussions. Last year, Mr Shaw was headed to Cambridge University for a screening of Birthgap. Overprivileged wokesters at “Red Cambridge”  did their usual acting out and got it cancelled. Shaw was called “misogynist,” “transphobic,” “homophobic”, “racist”, and “Fascist.” According to the speech police, his appearance with Jordan Peterson had been the final straw.

Shaw replied that the folks wanting to ban him were the very people he wanted to reach. Too bad: “Cambridge University Cancels Student Screening of ‘Anti-Feminist’ Documentary After Backlash.” That outrageous incident led to Cambridge’s cancel culture being denounced in the House of Lords. Whatever happened to the “Free West?”

Interesting findings

While upheavals like the 1970s oil shock, 2008 banking crisis and Covid caused birthrates to crater, they didn’t recover afterwards as they historically have following wars, natural disasters and epidemics. Shaw believes that is because today people are having children later and simply run out of time. Prioritising education, career and social mobility before starting a family simply doesn’t work.

Shaw also found that while fertility rates have crashed, families are not getting smaller. There are just fewer of them. “We are asking the wrong question: Instead of asking why people are having so few children… ask why so few become parents.” For instance, the percentage of Japanese families with four children has remained constant since the 1960s, while the number of those becoming parents has fallen off a cliff.

If a couple does start a family, it is likely to be as big as in decades past: ‘Motherhood has been incredibly resilient.’ However, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of childless couples. This is not, as you might think, because people are choosing career, money and freedom over children: only a tiny minority want to be childless.

Hear that? “Only a tiny minority want to be childless.”

Utopia

Billions go to incentivise having children in a mammon-driven world. Maybe if we prioritised people over profit, family life would thrive. It’s worth a try, even if it means lower per capita productivity. Money ain’t everything.

Put me in charge, and wokesters would be free to whine to their heart’s content about all things wholesome. But I would also ensure equal time for the pro-family side. Anti-free speech cancel culture would come to a screeching halt. With such a fair and level playing field, I’ve no doubt who would prevail at the end of the day.

Make the pandemic of childlessness visible! Share this important article with your friends

Latest