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Japan's future: none?

큰달팽이 2006. 5. 23. 20:22

 

 

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Walter Yannis
04-22-05, 02:34
Japan's Future: None? (http://www.catholicexchange.com/vm/index.asp?art_id=28226&vm_id=26)
4/22/05

Now that Terri Schiavo has been murdered, we can turn our attention to the murder of an entire nation. The Japanese people are committing genocide against themselves in what may be the leading example of the success of modern narcissism, feminism, and population control, three inseparable phenomena. Efforts by Japanese authorities to increase the birthrate have had no success. Not only does Japan have an extremely low birthrate combined with a long average lifespan, but her people's opposition to immigration means that this country has no way of perpetuating herself.

Unless current trends alter dramatically, the ancient and proud nation of Japan will crumble into ashes during this century. Japan's fertility rate is 1.3 children per woman, not the lowest in the world but close to it, and far below the 2.1 needed for replacement. Even the rosy assumptions of the United Nations Population Division's (UNPD) medium variant projections of Japan's future estimate a shrinking and rapidly aging population. Using the UNPD's more realistic low variant (and historically, the low variant has been more accurate) projections, Japan's population will fall from 128 million this year to 97 million in 2050. The proportion of people over 65 years old will go from 20% to 41% of the total population. The proportion over 80 will go from 4.8% to 17.6%, thus more than tripling.

Unlike many other wealthy countries with low fertility rates such as the United States and European nations, Japan has not allowed any large-scale immigration. Her people are thought to be dead-set against the idea. They have good reason, since Japan is not a nation of immigrants like America and couldn't possibly assimilate a large number of foreigners in the small amount of time available. But, then, who is going to work in Japan's economy in the future? Who will pay the taxes to support all those aged? In fact, who will populate the country?

The questions for Japan are the same as for many other nations that have succumbed to anti-family lifestyles and the contraceptive mentality, but Japan's exceptionally warm embrace of this mentality in conjunction with her dislike of immigration makes it more urgent for her than for perhaps any other nation on Earth.

Maybe Japan will have to alter its policy on immigration. only 1.5% of her population is foreign, and many of those are non-citizens despite being descendents of Koreans who settled in Japan generations ago. A Japanese government report issued March 29 asked the Japanese cabinet to consider the importation of unskilled foreign workers to meet the looming dearth of labor. Isao Negishi, deputy director of the Justice Ministry's immigration policy planning office, said that Japan's population has been dropping since 1995. Could Japan's culture survive the importation of huge numbers of immigrants?

Some urge Japan to push more women into the workforce. When studies are done on countries' economies or on their treatment of women, female labor force participation rates are considered key. The higher women's participation, the better, in the view of international organizations, corporations, and governments worldwide. Yet this is what puts so much strain on families and discourages women from having children. Japan's female labor force participation rate isn't high enough for some people.

The International Herald Tribune reported March 22 on a study of Asian economies by MasterCard: "'Research in economic history is very conclusive on the role of women in economic growth and development,' says Yuwa Hedrick-Wong, an economic adviser to MasterCard. 'The more extensive women's participation at all areas of economic activities, the higher the probability for stronger economic growth.' That, Hedrick-Wong says, means 'societies and economies that consistently fail to fully incorporate women's ability and talent in businesses and the workplace will suffer the consequences.'"

The article in that highly prestigious newspaper went on to say of Japan, "That nation's reluctance to increase female participation and let more women into the executive suite exacerbates its biggest long-term challenge: a declining birthrate. . . . The trend points to a crisis for a highly indebted nation of 126 million that has yet to figure out how to fund the national pension system down the road. Yet Japan has been slow to realize that for many women, delaying childbirth is a form of rebellion against societal expectations to have children and become housewives. Even in 2005, having children is a career-ending decision for millions of bright, ambitious, and well-educated Japanese. Until this limitation is corrected, Japan's birth rate will drop and economic growth will lag."

Of course, it's women being so concerned about their careers rather than raising their children that has done so much to put Japan and other nations on the path to extinction. The world's lowest fertility rates are to be found in Western Europe, where women are more "liberated" than anywhere else. Those people who recommend more career women as the way to increase fertility are like those who say a more relaxed attitude toward sex, sex education, and contraception availability are the solutions to teenage pregnancy, abortion, and sexually transmitted diseases, even though those problems have been exploding ever since America adopted a more relaxed attitude toward sex, sex education, and widespread contraception availability for youth.

Paying Japanese women to have more children isn't working any better there than it has anywhere else. The town of Yamatsuri in northern Japan announced last month a plan to give 1 million yen ($10,000) to every female resident who has a third child. Other towns, such as Nishiki, have already been offering cash bonuses to couples who have more than one child. The birthrate continues to decline.

There is no reason to believe that will not continue. An astonishing 70% of single Japanese women told a poll conducted by Yomiuri newspaper last month that they did not want to marry.

In an article headlined, "A Baby Bust Empties Out Japan's Schools," the Washington Post reported March 3, "More than 2,000 elementary, junior high, and high schools nationwide have been forced to close over the past decade. The number of elementary and junior high students fell from 13.42 million in 1994 to 10.86 million last year. . . . The lavish department stores of Tokyo have begun eliminating their rooftop playgrounds, replacing them with cafes and picnic areas for adults and the elderly. Over the past decade, 90 theme parks designed for children have closed in Japan; in the same period, Disney opened a popular sea-themed amusement park just outside Tokyo that targets adults more than children and allows the sale of alcohol." Even Disney is giving up on marketing to Japanese kids.

Euthanasia may be influential people's preferred solution to the aging population problem. In the long term, euthanasia can do nothing to save suicidal nations, but it can temporally rescue pension and health care systems in danger of going bankrupt under the weight of the growing numbers of elderly. They cost less when dead. If a country with a history of the Christian belief in the sanctity of life can dehydrate and starve to death a disabled woman with a significant chance of partial recovery if rehabilitated, and who signed no living will, why can't pagan Japan start doing something similar with the old a decade from now? After all, no medical treatment can make them young again.

On March 26, a female Japanese doctor was found guilty of killing a comatose 58-year-old patient with a significant chance of recovery, even though she had neither his permission nor the permission of his family, according to the English language version of Japan's Asahi Shimbun newspaper. How seriously is Japan taking this case? Her jail sentence was suspended by the judge and, for now at least, she continues to practice medicine.


Joseph A. D'Agostino is Vice President for Communications of Population Research Institute, a non-profit organization dedicated to debunking the myth that the world is overpopulated. at PRI. >

Okiereddust
04-22-05, 02:41
Japan is a nation obviously in deep moral confusion. Read this article

Japan is packed with married women chasing after younger guys to have a bit of a fling on the side, according to Spa! (4/12). (http://www.phora.org/forum/showpost.php?p=105600&postcount=1)

I'd say forget them, but reading the Phora thread, it is obvious that moral confusion is not limited to that side of the Pacific.

Ponce
04-22-05, 11:21
Japans mistake was to wanting to be to much like the US, at one time the smarter students in the world were from Japan where students with a "C" grade would kill themselves.

Women working? at one time they stayed at home and took care of their kids and made the husband feel like a king.

And now they are like us and like us they will die but because they are a much smaller nation they will die first.

And we want to bring "freedom" to the world in order for everyone to be like us?.........BULL.

May Castro live for ten millions years because once he dies Cuba then will also become "Americanise".

    


LlenLleawc
04-22-05, 15:03
And we want to bring "freedom" to the world in order for everyone to be like us?.........BULL.


Ponce, once in a while you make a good point :D

The financial community realizes that by exporting American consumerism, they can effectively inject mass attention deficeit disorder into traditional cultures. This is what America is really fighting for...to make Asia as obsessed with two car garages, cellphones and putting the kids through college as we are. This is what Bush means by ownership society; you are allowed to own a cog in the wheel but never the whole wheel. once people have a certain level of integration into the debt driven frenzy of technological interdependence, they do not have time to be "terrorists".
The idea that birth rates plummet once we make them like us, is a major factor in the NWO's plan. America, like most waning powers has become more focused on keeping her neighbors weak and sickly than on strengthening herself from the inside. Such is the common fate of great empires, from Persia to Britain.

Check out this article:
http://www.thomaspmbarnett.com/weblog/archives2/001661.html


“Disconnectedness defines danger,” Barnett declared. “That’s my mantra.” He breaks the world into two categories: the Functioning Core, characterized by financial opportunity, stable governments, and rising standards of living; and the Non-integrating Gap, where political repression, widespread poverty and disease, and chronic conflicts create breeding grounds for terrorists.

“One-third of the world is still outside the global economy, noses pressed to the glass, unable to join,” he said, adding that “terrorism is not caused by poverty,” but by “disconnectedness.” The reason a father in the West Bank straps on an explosive vest, said Barnett, is that “he sees no better future. He thinks that’s the next best step. That is disconnectedness.”

Calling Osama bin Laden “a latter-day Lenin,” Barnett insisted the way to defeat him is to cause “system perturbations” of our own — the Iraq invasion being a good example — while simultaneously shrinking the Gap and expanding the Core.

“What he’s going to try to do is drive the West out of the Middle East and hijack the Middle East out of the global economy,” said Barnett. “If we want to defeat that purpose, we’ve got to connect the Middle East to the global economy faster than he can disconnect it.”

xmetalhead
04-22-05, 15:26
Iraqi resistance fighters are the only people actively fighting the NWO, ergo, their chances for saving their heritage, culture and people are very high.

Japan had the chance to break free but chose to remain under American occupation. That fact and it's subsequent consequences were certainly not lost on the Iraqis.

Stuka
04-22-05, 23:16
Why is a slowdown in the rate of population growth a sure sign of genocide? I'm not convinced it is, yet I see many people, white nationalists included, who are predicting the biological obliteration of entire populations based on changes in growth rates.

truth
04-23-05, 03:57
the article and premise are mathematically illiterate

the figure of 1.3 children per household is an average figure.

Not all households have exactly 1.3 kids. There are subpopulations within japan that are breeding at or above replacement rate - japanese mormon equivalents if you will

this fertility is partially heritable. women who have more kids tend to have children who have more kids - many genes contribute to this tendency (the fertile like sex, they like having lots of kids, fertile women like men & vice versa, etc etc).

natural selection means that in the long run the population will not die out or even come close - it will simply be more and more composed of people who reproduce and who pass reproductive tendencies (genetic and cultural) onto their offspring. the reproductively fit shall inherit the earth.

work out the equations yourself, say with 1/3 having 2.1 kids per household, 1/3 having 1.3 kids per household, 1/3 having .5 kids per household. It averages to 1.3 kids per household at t=0. After one generation calculate the proportion of households that come from 2.1 kid households - it is much more than 1/3. If fertility is heritable at all (and it is), then the 2.1 kid household children will have more kids, and so on down the line.

in any case japan's islands are among the most crowded in the world - a lessening of crowding there is not going to be a disaster. what is important is quality of life, not how many people you can pack like sardines onto a rocky isle. have you ever seen how crowded japan is?




Japan's Future: None? (http://www.catholicexchange.com/vm/index.asp?art_id=28226&vm_id=26)
4/22/05

Now that Terri Schiavo has been murdered, we can turn our attention to the murder of an entire nation. The Japanese people are committing genocide against themselves in what may be the leading example of the success of modern narcissism, feminism, and population control, three inseparable phenomena. Efforts by Japanese authorities to increase the birthrate have had no success. Not only does Japan have an extremely low birthrate combined with a long average lifespan, but her people's opposition to immigration means that this country has no way of perpetuating herself.

Unless current trends alter dramatically, the ancient and proud nation of Japan will crumble into ashes during this century. Japan's fertility rate is 1.3 children per woman, not the lowest in the world but close to it, and far below the 2.1 needed for replacement. Even the rosy assumptions of the United Nations Population Division's (UNPD) medium variant projections of Japan's future estimate a shrinking and rapidly aging population. Using the UNPD's more realistic low variant (and historically, the low variant has been more accurate) projections, Japan's population will fall from 128 million this year to 97 million in 2050. The proportion of people over 65 years old will go from 20% to 41% of the total population. The proportion over 80 will go from 4.8% to 17.6%, thus more than tripling.

Unlike many other wealthy countries with low fertility rates such as the United States and European nations, Japan has not allowed any large-scale immigration. Her people are thought to be dead-set against the idea. They have good reason, since Japan is not a nation of immigrants like America and couldn't possibly assimilate a large number of foreigners in the small amount of time available. But, then, who is going to work in Japan's economy in the future? Who will pay the taxes to support all those aged? In fact, who will populate the country?

The questions for Japan are the same as for many other nations that have succumbed to anti-family lifestyles and the contraceptive mentality, but Japan's exceptionally warm embrace of this mentality in conjunction with her dislike of immigration makes it more urgent for her than for perhaps any other nation on Earth.

Maybe Japan will have to alter its policy on immigration. only 1.5% of her population is foreign, and many of those are non-citizens despite being descendents of Koreans who settled in Japan generations ago. A Japanese government report issued March 29 asked the Japanese cabinet to consider the importation of unskilled foreign workers to meet the looming dearth of labor. Isao Negishi, deputy director of the Justice Ministry's immigration policy planning office, said that Japan's population has been dropping since 1995. Could Japan's culture survive the importation of huge numbers of immigrants?

Some urge Japan to push more women into the workforce. When studies are done on countries' economies or on their treatment of women, female labor force participation rates are considered key. The higher women's participation, the better, in the view of international organizations, corporations, and governments worldwide. Yet this is what puts so much strain on families and discourages women from having children. Japan's female labor force participation rate isn't high enough for some people.

The International Herald Tribune reported March 22 on a study of Asian economies by MasterCard: "'Research in economic history is very conclusive on the role of women in economic growth and development,' says Yuwa Hedrick-Wong, an economic adviser to MasterCard. 'The more extensive women's participation at all areas of economic activities, the higher the probability for stronger economic growth.' That, Hedrick-Wong says, means 'societies and economies that consistently fail to fully incorporate women's ability and talent in businesses and the workplace will suffer the consequences.'"
                                       
The article in that highly prestigious newspaper went on to say of Japan, "That nation's reluctance to increase female participation and let more women into the executive suite exacerbates its biggest long-term challenge: a declining birthrate. . . . The trend points to a crisis for a highly indebted nation of 126 million that has yet to figure out how to fund the national pension system down the road. Yet Japan has been slow to realize that for many women, delaying childbirth is a form of rebellion against societal expectations to have children and become housewives. Even in 2005, having children is a career-ending decision for millions of bright, ambitious, and well-educated Japanese. Until this limitation is corrected, Japan's birth rate will drop and economic growth will lag."

Of course, it's women being so concerned about their careers rather than raising their children that has done so much to put Japan and other nations on the path to extinction. The world's lowest fertility rates are to be found in Western Europe, where women are more "liberated" than anywhere else. Those people who recommend more career women as the way to increase fertility are like those who say a more relaxed attitude toward sex, sex education, and contraception availability are the solutions to teenage pregnancy, abortion, and sexually transmitted diseases, even though those problems have been exploding ever since America adopted a more relaxed attitude toward sex, sex education, and widespread contraception availability for youth.

Paying Japanese women to have more children isn't working any better there than it has anywhere else. The town of Yamatsuri in northern Japan announced last month a plan to give 1 million yen ($10,000) to every female resident who has a third child. Other towns, such as Nishiki, have already been offering cash bonuses to couples who have more than one child. The birthrate continues to decline.

There is no reason to believe that will not continue. An astonishing 70% of single Japanese women told a poll conducted by Yomiuri newspaper last month that they did not want to marry.

In an article headlined, "A Baby Bust Empties Out Japan's Schools," the Washington Post reported March 3, "More than 2,000 elementary, junior high, and high schools nationwide have been forced to close over the past decade. The number of elementary and junior high students fell from 13.42 million in 1994 to 10.86 million last year. . . . The lavish department stores of Tokyo have begun eliminating their rooftop playgrounds, replacing them with cafes and picnic areas for adults and the elderly. Over the past decade, 90 theme parks designed for children have closed in Japan; in the same period, Disney opened a popular sea-themed amusement park just outside Tokyo that targets adults more than children and allows the sale of alcohol." Even Disney is giving up on marketing to Japanese kids.
                                                 

Euthanasia may be influential people's preferred solution to the aging population problem. In the long term, euthanasia can do nothing to save suicidal nations, but it can temporally rescue pension and health care systems in danger of going bankrupt under the weight of the growing numbers of elderly. They cost less when dead. If a country with a history of the Christian belief in the sanctity of life can dehydrate and starve to death a disabled woman with a significant chance of partial recovery if rehabilitated, and who signed no living will, why can't pagan Japan start doing something similar with the old a decade from now? After all, no medical treatment can make them young again.

On March 26, a female Japanese doctor was found guilty of killing a comatose 58-year-old patient with a significant chance of recovery, even though she had neither his permission nor the permission of his family, according to the English language version of Japan's Asahi Shimbun newspaper. How seriously is Japan taking this case? Her jail sentence was suspended by the judge and, for now at least, she continues to practice medicine.


Joseph A. D'Agostino is Vice President for Communications of Population Research Institute, a non-profit organization dedicated to debunking the myth that the world is overpopulated. at PRI. >

Walter Yannis
04-23-05, 04:36
Truth:

I agree that Darwinian theory would predict the rise of more fertile groups wo will replace their less fertile neighbors.

The only question is whether these replacement groups will be recognizably Japanese.

Or in the case of America whether they'll be white, Christian and English-speaking. It really depends on immigration policy. If we Americans allow browns to fill the demographic void, then America won't be white any longer.

For the record, I think that both the Japanese and American nations will reassert themselves. It's happening now in America, with Mormons as you mentioned and Catholic homeschoolers with extremely large families. The demographic changes will happen very rapidly even on an historical scale - within the span of a long lifetime.

My prediction is that America will be a much whiter and Christian country in 2050 than it is today. It all depends on us. Will those of us who care about the European, Christian and English-speaking identity of the American nation care enough to have another baby?

I think we will.

The future belongs to the fertile.

edward gibbon
04-23-05, 09:43
in any case japan's islands are among the most crowded in the world - a lessening of crowding there is not going to be a disaster. what is important is quality of life, not how many people you can pack like sardines onto a rocky isle. have you ever seen how crowded japan is?I was stationed in Japan for 20 months and lived there for another 20 months after I got out of the army. Outside the Kanto plain, Tokyo to Osaka, and a few other areas Japan is relatively unpopulated. The Japanese have stated they cannot live in the mountains because of the snow and the steep slopes. Yet a Swiss told me that though Japanese, when polled, have always placed Switzerland as the place they would like to live, refused to emulate the Swiss style of living. The Swiss informed me that the mountains of Japan would be sites of many villages if the Swiss lived there. In the past in Japan this was true, but many of the villages are now deserted. The young Japanese have flocked to the city.

Happy Hacker
04-23-05, 10:35
Japanese are to Asians what Germans are to Europeans. They are just a small subset of their race. There far more than a billion mongol in China alone. The mongol race is in no danger. Even Japan is very densely populated. Unlike the dying whites, there is no nation of a billion whites. Unlike the dying whites, Japan can reverse course anytime needed. But, whites are sealing their fate through massive immigration.

Would you be worried about the fate of Germany if there were 130 million Germans. And, the people in the nation of Germany were 99% German, with the vast majority of non-Germans still being white Europeans? Also, unlike Germany, Japan's birthrate is still higher than their death rate.

Don't cry for Japan. They're in no danger.

SteamshipTime
04-23-05, 10:39
Japan strikes me as an odd place, but I know of two US expatriates there who love it, and say they will never leave. They like it because the people are so polite and there is a strong sense of community. Crime rates are very low.

Moral: Homogenous nations work best.

SteamshipTime
04-23-05, 10:44
The Swiss informed me that the mountains of Japan would be sites of many villages if the Swiss lived there. In the past in Japan this was true, but many of the villages are now deserted. The young Japanese have flocked to the city.
Hmm. I'd like my own little mountain village.

grep14w
04-23-05, 14:18
Japanese are to Asians what Germans are to Europeans. They are just a small subset of their race. There far more than a billion mongol in China alone. Japanese aren't pure mongoloid. They like to think of themselves as a distinct race, so even Koreans are not welcome, but in fact Japan is an interesting mix of mostly mongoloid and some caucasoid. They have a small but strong caucasoid (via Ainu) and, if memory serves, "polynesianoid" strain (also caucasoid, but different group). They're a mix. There are some Japanese who look distinctly caucasian (rare, but they exist). I knew a half Japanese girl in college and I never would have guessed she wasn't 100% white if she had not told me. Not my girlfriend but I would not have minded too much if she had been - very cute, straight black hair, pale white skin, etc.; kind of a "goth" sex kitten look. I had thought maybe she was Irish or other old white western European, pre-Indo-Aryan stock.

The mongol race is in no danger. Even Japan is very densely populated. Unlike the dying whites, there is no nation of a billion whites. Unlike the dying whites, Japan can reverse course anytime needed. But, whites are sealing their fate through massive immigration.This is the key. Japan isn't trying to replace its unborn babies with foreigners. We are. Hence, we are breeding ourselves out of existence. The Japanese are not. If they needed more population growth, they could easily increase their numbers by fiddling with their economic incentives. They just don't really need population growth that much, and, in fact, neither do we, as we would realize if we got ourselves free from the grip of the "growth at all costs" kind of economic dogma that currently has a stranglehold over the Western mind.

Would you be worried about the fate of Germany if there were 130 million Germans. And, the people in the nation of Germany were 99% German, with the vast majority of non-Germans still being white Europeans? Also, unlike Germany, Japan's birthrate is still higher than their death rate.

Don't cry for Japan. They're in no danger.Agreed.

toddbrendanfahey
04-24-05, 07:08
"Japan is packed with married women chasing after younger guys to have a bit of a fling on the side, according to Spa! (4/12)."

...as is South Korea. Lucky me. :thumbsup:

Stuka
04-24-05, 09:19
"Japan is packed with married women chasing after younger guys to have a bit of a fling on the side, according to Spa! (4/12)."

...as is South Korea. Lucky me. :thumbsup:
That is, if you like Asian women. :yucky:

toddbrendanfahey
04-26-05, 06:52
That I do. :thumbsup:

                                                                                 

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