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O... Little Town Of Public Housing? (Mark Steyn On Nativity Scenes And Demographic Winter Alert)
National Review ^ | 12/16/2007 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 12/15/2007 10:47:57 PM PST by goldstategop

This is the time of year, as Hillary Clinton once put it, when Christians celebrate “the birth of a homeless child” — or, in Al Gore’s words, “a homeless woman gave birth to a homeless child.”

Just for the record, Jesus wasn’t “homeless.” He had a perfectly nice home back in Nazareth. But he happened to be born in Bethlehem. It was census time and Joseph was obliged to schlep halfway across the country to register in the town of his birth. Which is such an absurdly bureaucratic over-regulatory cockamamie Big Government nightmare it’s surely only a matter of time before Massachusetts or California reintroduce it.

↓ Keep reading this article ↓

Steyn: O Little Town of ... Public Housing?

Sanders: Back Down in Little Rock

Buckley: Populist Hour

Barone: Taxing Time for Democrats?

Zalenski: December 16, 2007

Hemingway: Paul Power

Cusey: The Kite Runner Flies

Sowell: Say It Ain’t So

Suderman: The Legend of Will Smith

Charen: A Second Look at Romney

Hanson: Conventionally Ignorant

Vásquez: Improving Peru

Editors: Man of the Year

York: Team Hillary: You Want Change? We’ll Bring Change. And We Didn’t Mean to Say Barack Was a Drug Dealer.

Hanson: Iranian Intelligence

Krauthammer: Redundance on Religion

But the point is: the Christmas story isn’t about affordable housing. Joseph and Mary couldn’t get a hotel room: that’s the only accommodation aspect of the event. Senator Clinton and Vice President Gore are over-complicating things: December 25th is not the celebration of “a homeless child,” but a child, period.

Just for a moment, let us take it as read, as Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins and the other bestselling atheists insist, that what happened in Bethlehem two millennia is a lot of mumbo-jumbo. As I wrote a year ago, consider it not as an event but as a narrative: You want to launch a big new global movement from scratch. So what do you use?

The birth of a child. On the one hand, what could be more powerless than a newborn babe? On the other, without a newborn babe, man is ultimately powerless. For, without new life, there can be no civilization, no society, no nothing. Even if it’s superstitious mumbo-jumbo, the decision to root Christ’s divinity in the miracle of His birth expresses a profound — and rational — truth about “eternal life” here on earth.

Last year I wrote a book on demographic decline and became a big demography bore, and it’s tempting just to do an annual December audit on the demographic weakness of what we used to call Christendom. Today, in the corporate headquarters of the Christian faith, Pope Benedict looks out of his window at a city where children’s voices are rarer and rarer. Italy has one of the lowest birth rates in Europe. Go to a big rural family wedding: lots of aunts, uncles, gram’pas, gran’mas, but ever fewer bambinos. The International Herald Tribune this week carried the latest update on the remorseless geriatrification: On the Miss Italia beauty pageant, the median age of the co-hosts was 70; the country is second only to Sweden in the proportion of its population over 85, and has the fewest under 15. Etc.

So in post-Catholic Italy there is no miracle of a child this Christmas — unless you count the 70 percent of Italians between the ages of 20 and 30 who still live at home, the world’s oldest teenagers still trudging up the stairs to the room they slept in as a child even as they approach their fourth decade. That’s worth bearing in mind if you’re an American gal heading to Rome on vacation: When that cool 29-year old with the Mediterranean charm in the singles bar asks you back to his pad for a nightcap, it’ll be his mom and dad’s place.

I’m often told that my demographics-is-destiny argument is anachronistic: Countries needed manpower in the industrial age, when we worked in mills and factories. But now advanced societies are “knowledge economies”, and they require fewer working stiffs. Oddly enough, the Lisbon Council’s European Human Capital Index, released in October, thinks precisely the opposite — that the calamitous decline in population will prevent Eastern and Central Europe from being able to function as “innovation economies.” A “knowledge economy” will be as smart as the brains it can call on.

Meanwhile, a few Europeans are still having children: The British government just announced that Mohammed is now the most popular boy’s name in the United Kingdom.

As I say, the above demographic audit has become something of an annual tradition in this space. But here’s something new that took hold in the year 2007: a radical anti-humanism, long present just below the surface, bobbed up and became explicit and respectable. In Britain, the Optimum Population Trust said that “the biggest cause of climate change is climate changers — in other words, human beings,” and Professor John Guillebaud called on Britons to voluntarily reduce the number of children they have. Last week, in The Medical Journal Of Australia, Barry Walters went further: To hell with this wimp-o pantywaist “voluntary” child-reduction. Professor Walters wants a “carbon tax” on babies, with, conversely, “carbon credits” for those who undergo sterilization procedures. So that’d be great news for the female eco-activists recently profiled in London’s Daily Mail boasting about how they’d had their tubes tied and babies aborted in order to save the planet. “Every person who is born,” says Toni Vernelli, “produces more rubbish, more pollution, more greenhouse gases, and adds to the problem of overpopulation.” We are the pollution, and sterilization is the solution. The best way to bequeath a more sustainable environment to our children is not to have any.

What’s the “pro-choice” line? “Every child should be wanted”? Not anymore. The progressive position has subtly evolved: Every child should be unwanted.

By the way, if you’re looking for some last-minute stocking stuffers, Oxford University Press has published a book by Professor David Benatar of the University of Cape Town called Better Never To Have Been: The Harm Of Coming Into Existence. The author “argues for the ‘anti-natal’ view—-that it is always wrong to have children… Anti-natalism also implies that it would be better if humanity became extinct.” As does Alan Weisman’s The World Without Us — which Publishers Weekly hails as “an enthralling tour of the world… anticipating, often poetically, what a planet without us would be like.” It’s a good thing it “anticipates” it poetically, because, once it happens, there will be no more poetry.

Lest you think the above are “extremists,” consider how deeply invested the “mainstream” is in a total fiction. At the recent climate jamboree in Bali, the Reverend Al Gore told the assembled faithful: “My own country the United States is principally responsible for obstructing progress here.” Really? “The American Thinker” website ran the numbers. In the seven years between the signing of Kyoto in 1997 and 2004, here’s what happened:

* Emissions worldwide increased 18.0%. * Emissions from countries that signed the treaty increased 21.1%. * Emissions from non-signers increased 10.0%. * Emissions from the U.S. increased 6.6%.

It’s hard not to conclude a form of mental illness has gripped the world’s elites. If you’re one of that dwindling band of westerners who’ll be celebrating the birth of a child, “homeless” or otherwise, next week, make the most of it. A year or two on, and the eco-professors will propose banning nativity scenes because they set a bad example.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: americaalone; antihumanism; antinatalism; atheism; bali; christianity; christmas; demography; faith; globalwarmingcult; left; marksteyn; missinglink; nationalreview; nativity; nativityscenes; postmodernism; publicsquare; west; zpg
What do Nativity Scenes and demographic winter have in common? They are mirror images of each other and in particular, the Left's anti-natalism and anti-humanism explains a good deal of its hatred for Christianity and the entire idea of the earth being created for Man. The debate in the West has taken a dark turn; one day we may not see any more Nativity Scenes - a fitting riposte to a world without the sight of children to enliven it.

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus

1 posted on 12/15/2007 10:47:59 PM PST by goldstategop
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To: goldstategop
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=OGU0YjY1MGVmN2Y1MGEyNzdhYjJiMzdlODQ2ODRlMDQ=
2 posted on 12/15/2007 11:33:43 PM PST by A.A. Cunningham
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To: goldstategop
The British government just announced that Mohammed is now the most popular boy’s name in the United Kingdom.

Are the Brits and Europeans completely blind? Can they not see the handwriting on the wall?

OTOH, can we see the writing on the wall?

3 posted on 12/15/2007 11:37:02 PM PST by Hetty_Fauxvert
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To: goldstategop

All our literature tells us that he Devil loathes mankind, and aims to deceive us into turning against one another and hating our very selves. Oh, how successful he is.


4 posted on 12/15/2007 11:46:22 PM PST by RobbyS
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To: goldstategop

5 posted on 12/15/2007 11:46:30 PM PST by devolve (---- - Hey Boone! - My bonus check is late again! -)
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To: goldstategop
or, in Al Gore’s words, “a homeless woman gave birth to a homeless child.”

Well, Algore certainly has more than enough room at his 10,000sqft house for a few homeless over Christmas. Heck, it's only him and his wife.

6 posted on 12/15/2007 11:47:34 PM PST by VeniVidiVici (No buy China!!)
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To: VeniVidiVici

Tipper needs the space to stash all her antidepressants..


7 posted on 12/16/2007 12:29:29 AM PST by sheik yerbouty ( Make America and the world a jihad free zone!)
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To: goldstategop

As the leftists stop having children, there will at least be fewer leftists. If they want to do us a real favor, they’ll stop exhaling CO2 themselves.


8 posted on 12/16/2007 1:21:03 AM PST by AZLiberty (President Fred -- I like the sound of it.)
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To: goldstategop
Senator Clinton and Vice President Gore are over-complicating things: December 25th is not the celebration of “a homeless child,”

No, it's about an overbearing and abusive government, excessive taxation, and poor urban planning.

Jesus triumphed despite all this. It's probably why the democrats want to eradicate him from the public square.

9 posted on 12/16/2007 1:42:59 AM PST by Wil H
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To: Wil H

They hate Christianity because they hate the fact that there ever existed a culture capable of judging and if necessary thwarting their own little schemes.


10 posted on 12/16/2007 4:19:21 AM PST by Mmmike
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To: goldstategop
It’s hard not to conclude a form of mental illness has gripped the world’s elites.

He's right. It's bizarre to see so much self-hatred. We have a "village atheist" in my town who sells expensive imported bicycles for a living and decorates his car with anti-religious and anti-population stickers. He is a truly nasty, bitter little man - but all of a sudden, he seems to feel that he's the wave of the future, with Dawkins, Pullman, etc. to draw on for support.

One of the things that always strikes me about professional atheists is their nastiness, grimness and just plain psychological ugliness. And that's the "gospel" they wish to impose on the rest of us.

11 posted on 12/16/2007 4:28:46 AM PST by livius
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To: goldstategop

“The Voluntary Human Extinction Movement’

“May we live long and die out”

http://www.vhemt.org/


12 posted on 12/16/2007 6:00:59 PM PST by secretagent
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