It’s always nice to see a happy news article in a time of so much bad news.
GOOD!
The taxpayers are too busy and tired to breed because of the high taxes needed to pay for the freeloaders.
the great Ponzi scheme (medicare and sociable insecurity) needs a bailout, eh?
it wouldn’t need a bailout if the damned crooked politicians hadn’t raided Mr Gore’s LockBox where all our “contribution” monies were safely stored up for us
smile
smile
The taxes are killing them.
Like that’s a bad thing. :-)
You mean White New Yorkers have stopped breeding.
That’s why the left started the depression. Stop conservatives from reproducing. Leftists barely reproduce regardless.
Not soon enough . . . . .
It’s the airborne contraceptive the government has been releasing through the chemtrails.
The solution is simple: just import a bunch of Muslims from Somalia to do the breeding for them. Everything will turn out just right.
"But if we free the slaves, who will pick the cotton and the tobacco?"
So I’ll be able to get that big apartment facing Central Park?
Pretty soon he only people who will want to marry will be the Gay Homosexuals and I’ll bet they quit marrying when it falls from favor among the hetero’s.
And this is a bad thing, how?
It’s all by design. Big Government wants to limit native born people, who tend to demand more self sufficiency, limited government and the punishment of corrupt politicians.
The ethologist John B. Calhoun coined the term "behavioral sink" to describe the collapse in behavior which resulted from overcrowding. Over a number of years, Calhoun conducted over-population experiments on rats[1] which culminated in 1962 with the publication of an article in the Scientific American of a study of behavior under conditions of overcrowding.[2] In it, Calhoun coined the term "behavioral sink". Calhoun's work became used as an animal model of societal collapse, and his study has become a touchstone of urban sociology and psychology in general.[3]
In it, Calhoun described the behavior as follows:
Many [female mice] were unable to carry pregnancy to full term or to survive delivery of their litters if they did. An even greater number, after successfully giving birth, fell short in their maternal functions. Among the males the behavior disturbances ranged from sexual deviation to cannibalism and from frenetic overactivity to a pathological withdrawal from which individuals would emerge to eat, drink and move about only when other members of the community were asleep. The social organization of the animals showed equal disruption. [...]
The common source of these disturbances became most dramatically apparent in the populations of our first series of three experiments, in which we observed the development of what we called a behavioral sink. The animals would crowd together in greatest number in one of the four interconnecting pens in which the colony was maintained. As many as 60 of the 80 rats in each experimental population would assemble in one pen during periods of feeding. Individual rats would rarely eat except in the company of other rats. As a result extreme population densities developed in the pen adopted for eating, leaving the others with sparse populations.
[...] In the experiments in which the behavioral sink developed, infant mortality ran as high as 96 percent among the most disoriented groups in the population.[4]