Posted on 08/13/2007 6:56:41 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback
In February, representatives from the UN Security Council and Germany met to discuss possible economic sanctions against Iran. This came after reports that Iran has expanded its uranium-enrichment program in defiance of a Security Council resolution.
This and other provocative behavior makes Iran the most dangerous nation on Earth. It also makes it important to understand what is driving the provocations.
The standard explanationIrans desire to dominate the regionis only part of a larger problem: Iran is living on borrowed time.
In 1985, the average Iranian woman gave birth to 5.6 children, one of the highest birthrates in the world, consistent with the Ayatollah Khomenis call to create soldiers for Islam.
But after the war with Iraq, which killed between 500,000 and one million Iranian men, Irans high birthrate was viewed as a liability. In 1993, the government enacted a family-planning law that not only encouraged the use of birth control but also eliminated maternity leave after three children.
The results were unprecedented: In seven years, Irans birthrate had dropped to less than replacement level, two births per woman. Irans population, which doubled between 1968 and 1988, was now growing at less than 1 percent per year.
Not surprisingly, family-planning groups and other anti-natalists hailed the results as a triumph. But, as the Asia Times columnist who writes under the pen name Spengler has pointed out, a better term would be pyrrhic victory.
Like China, Irans plunging birthrate has produced a rapidly aging society. By the middle of this century, a third of all Iranians will be elderly dependents, nearly the same ratio as in the West.
This means fewer and fewer working-age Iranians to support its elderly pensioners. To make matters worse, there are signs that Irans oil reserves are dwindling. By some estimates, Iran will no longer be exporting oil by 2020.
According to Spengler, its against this background of a looming crisis that we must understand Irans belligerence. In the West, an unfavorable ratio of workers-to-retirees can place uncomfortable burdens on taxpayers. But in places like Iran, it can destabilize the society and threaten the regime itself. This is especially so when you consider another demographic fact: Ethnic Iranians are a bare majority within Iran.
Thus, Irans aggressive foreign policy [is] . . . a response to the coming crisis. Iran either makes a bid for regional dominance now or risks disintegration.
Thats why it is folly to think that half-hearted Security Council resolutions or cajoling will deter Iran from its nuclear ambitions. The West, which denies the consequences of its own anti-natalist policies and worldviews, does not understand the consequences of these policies in Iran.
We have convinced ourselves that children must fit within our lifestyle; now we have trouble understanding that the lack of children can drastically change our way of life.
Having declared war on our futurethat is, our childrenthe West, like Iran, is living on borrowed time, as well.
(This commentary first aired on March 8, 2007, and is part two in a three-part series.)
Actually, I'm quite sure that we are headed for collapse (or holocaust) in the U.S. if we don't reform our systems. Chuck won't live to see it, but it will happen.
There are links to further information at the source document.
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This isn’t their only problem. By 2013, they will become an importer of oil, rather than an exporter. Soon to be a 3rd world, poverty stricken cesspool. This is why they are so belligerant now. Their sun is setting.
Bump!
The Russians and/or Chinese are likely to come in at some point and save the day for them. They'll be welcomed in to extract their oil.
Agreed they have vast reserves. But this is a tap one cannot turn on overnight. The Chinese and Russians could step in if they want to fight the headwind of US diplomacy. There are easier routes for the Chinese right now. The Russians would prefer they don’t ramp up at all. Competitors for them. The oil will start to gush after a change of gov’t. Meanwhile, in 5 years their revenues dry up.
The Russians want to keep the Iranian thorn in our side.
They’ll do as much propping us as needed to keep it there.
Should have been: "...propping up as needed..."
But in places like Iran, it can destabilize the society and threaten the regime itself.
I was shocked to read this...Iran is a muslim country and fewer future islamists would be a gift!
that's still too many IMO...I wanna see it shrink!
Is there a copy editor in the house?
There is another side to the demographics. The Persian population is shrinking in relative terms even now and are at or below 50%.
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