Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Simply wanting kids of your own is great, but…If you worry about falling birth rates and preach at those who don’t, it’s meme anxiety. You think your genes can compete in gene pool but fear your memes aren’t strong enough to infect your own kids and that the memes of evil childless people will pwn your spawn
2 replies
2 recasts
11 reactions
Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Underpopulation is not a real issue. The old die. Medium-term labor shortfall can be addressed with automation and immigration from more fertile regions (modulo memetic anxieties). Long-term it self-corrects. Only real problem is endocrine disruption from microplastics preventing those who want kids from having them.
1 reply
0 recast
4 reactions
Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Memetic anxieties are not unreasonable (it would be sad if “Japan” or “Sicily” turn into dead cultures even if the physical societies soft land through automation and immigration). But while sad it’s not new. Many human cultures have gone memetically dead. Look at all the dead languages.
2 replies
0 recast
1 reaction
Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
I’m not rooting for that outcome or against humanity expanding and thriving (though not at the expense of the rest of the biosphere). More importantly I don’t think it’s remotely likely. Global population will decline (gradually, then suddenly), hit a low ~6-7b by end century, then recover to stable plateau
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction
Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
To say quiet part out loud, “declining birth rates” discourse is 90% about race/ethnicity perpetuation, 10% about microplastics and endocrine disruption, 0% about species survival. I personally don’t give a damn about the first (though admittedly my genetic subset of “Indian” is not at risk, so cheap belief)
2 replies
0 recast
4 reactions
h̷a̷y̷w̷i̷r̷e̷z̶
@haywirez
not as simple - you're ignoring the unknown higher order effects of demographic inversion on overall (global) culture. we never had an inverted pyramid environment in history (!)
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction