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World News See other World News Articles Title: Meet the ‘elite’ couples breeding to save mankind At the beginning of March, Aria Babu quit her job at a think tank to dedicate herself to something most people have never heard of. Having worked in public policy for several years, the 26-year-old Londoner had come to an alarming realisation about the future of the UK, the world and the human species. It became clear to me that people wanted more children than they were having, Babu says. Considering this is such a massive part of peoples lives, the fact that they were not able to fulfil this want was clearly indicative that something was wrong. The new focus of Babus career is a philosophy known as pronatalism, literally meaning pro-birth. Its core tenet is deceptively simple: our future depends on having enough children, and yet life in developed countries has become hostile to this basic biological imperative. Linked to the subcultures of rationalism and effective altruism (EA), and bolstered by declining birth rates, it has been gaining currency in Silicon Valley and the wider tech industry especially its more conservative corners. Ive been in various text threads with technology entrepreneurs who share that view
there are really smart people that have real concern around this, says Ben Lamm, a Texas biotech entrepreneur whose company Colossal is developing artificial wombs and other reproductive tech (or reprotech) that could boost future fertility. We are quite familiar with the pronatalist movement and are supporters of it, says Jake Kozloski, the Miami-based co-founder of an AI matchmaking service called Keeper, which aims to address the fertility crisis fueled by a marriage crisis by helping clients find the other parent of their future children. I encourage people who are responsible and smart and conscientious to have children, because theyre going to make the future better, says Diana Fleischman, a pronatalist psychology professor at the University of New Mexico and consultant for an embryo-selection start-up (she is currently pregnant with her second child). Easily the most famous person to espouse pronatalist ideas is Elon Musk, the galaxys richest human being, who has had 10 children with three different women. If people dont have more children, civilisation is going to crumble. Mark my words, Musk told a business summit in December 2021. He has described population collapse as the biggest danger to humanity (exceeding climate change) and warned that Japan, which has one of the lowest birth rates in the world, will eventually cease to exist. In an Insider article last November that helped bring the movement to wider attention, 23andMe co-founder Linda Avey acknowledged its influence on the Texan tech scene, while the managing director of an exclusive retreat, Dialog, co-founded by arch-conservative investor and PayPal pioneer Peter Thiel, said population decline was a frequent topic there. Babu, who hopes to join or create a pronatalist organisation in the UK, says it is still niche here but gaining ground on both the swashbuckling intellectual Right and the more family-focused and Blue- Labour-tinged segments of the Left. At the centre of it all are Simone and Malcolm Collins, two 30-something American entrepreneurs turned philosophers and parents who say they are only the most outspoken proponents of a belief that many prefer to keep private. In 2021 they founded a non-denominational campaign group called Pronatalist.org, under the umbrella of their non-profit Pragmatist Foundation. Buoyed by a $482,000 (£385,000) donation from Jaan Tallinn, an Estonian tech billionaire who funds many rationalist and EA organisations, it is now lobbying governments, meeting business leaders, and seeking partnerships with reprotech companies and fertility clinics. The Collinses did not coin the word pronatalism, which has long been used (along with natalism) to describe government policies aimed at increasing birth rates, or mainstream pro-birth positions such as that of the Catholic Church. Its opposite is anti-natalism, the idea that it is wrong to bring a new person into the world if they are unlikely to have a good life. Lyman Stone, a natalist demographer and research fellow at the USs Institute for Family Studies, has described the Collinses philosophy as a very unusual subculture compared to millions of everyday natalists. Yet it is their version a secular, paradoxically unorthodox reconstruction of arguably the most traditional view on earth, driven by alarm about a looming population catastrophe that is prospering among the tech elite. I dont think its appealing to [just] Silicon Valley people, Malcolm tells me on a long call from his home in Pennsylvania. Its more like, anyone who is familiar with modern science and familiar with the statistics is aware that this is an issue, and they are focused on it. The reason why you see Silicon Valley people disproportionately being drawn to this is theyre obsessed with data enough, and wealthy enough, to be looking at things and who also have enough wealth and power that theyre not afraid of being cancelled. The Collinses - Winnie Au The Collinses - Winnie Au The problem, he concedes, is that falling birth rates are also a common preoccupation of neo-Nazis and other ethno-nationalists, who believe they are being outbred and replaced by other races. A lot of alleged concerns about fertility decline are really poorly masked racist ideas about what kinds of people they want on the planet, says demographer Bernice Kuang of the UKs Centre for Population Change. The Collinses strongly disavow racism and reject the idea that any countrys population should be homogenous. Still, Babu finds that many in the rationalist and EA community, which skews pale and male, are wary of exploring pronatalism lest they be tarred with the brush of another white man who just wants an Aryan trad-wife. Another issue is what you might call the Handmaids Tale problem. From Nazi Germanys motherhood medals to the sprawling brood of infamous, Kansas-based God hates fags preacher Fred Phelps, a zeal for large families has often been accompanied by patriarchal gender politics. For liberal Westerners, the idea that we need to have more babies we being a loaded pronoun when not all of us would actually bear them may conjure images of Margaret Atwoods Gilead. Some more illiberal countries are already shifting in this direction. China has begun restricting abortions after decades of forcing them on anyone who already had one child. Russia has revived a Soviet medal for women with 10 or more children. Hungary, where fertility long ago dropped below 2.1 births per year per woman the replacement rate necessary to sustain a population without immigration has tightened abortion law while offering new tax breaks and incentives for motherhood. Following the end of Roe v Wade in the US, Texas has proposed tax cuts for each additional child, but only if they are born to or adopted by a married heterosexual couple who have never divorced. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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