US Fertility Rate Hits 35-Year High, Environmentalists Are Unhappy



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Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "Sound of Trumpet"
Date: 23 Dec 2007 06:49:38 PM
Object: US Fertility Rate Hits 35-Year High, Environmentalists Are Unhappy
http://www.prolifeblogs.com/articles/archives/2007/12/us_fertility_ra.php
December 21, 2007
US Fertility Rate Hits 35-Year High and Environmentalists are Unhappy
About It
The fertility rate, which is the average number of children a woman
would have during her childbearing years, hit a 35 year high of 2.1.
The overall rate hit a high in 1957, and then dropped thereafter,
possibly due to the news and development of the pill.
How could the pill have made an impact on the fertility rate, when it
wasn't approved for use as a contraceptive until 1960?
While the pill wasn't officially approved for use as a contraceptive
until 1960, it was approved for use in controlling menstrual disorders
in 1957. By late 1959, and prior to approval for use as a
contraceptive, at least half a million women were using the pill - far
more than were believed to suffer from such disorders. [1]
But the news of the development of the pill in 1956 may have had a
significant impact on the public's idea of the desired number of
children as well. And while the pill wouldn't be accessible until
1957, the condom industry was flourishing.
Due to limited data, it is not known just how much either the pill or
condoms may have affected this rate, or if they actually affected it
at all prior to the 1960s, but nevertheless it is reasonable to
suspect that they helped keep it down for the past 35 years.
The new high of 2.1 children puts the U.S. fertility rate back at the
minimum replacement level - and environmentalists aren't happy about
it.
In a Washington Post article on the news, environmentalists expressed
their concern:
But not everyone sees that as encouraging, given that the United
States remains a leading consumer of increasingly scarce natural
resources.
"The world is now consuming resources faster than the Earth can
sustain over the longer term," said Lester Brown of the Earth Policy
Institute. "Forests are shrinking. Fisheries are collapsing. Water
tables are falling. Large parts of the world's grasslands are
deteriorating. The U.S. is already disproportionately responsible for
that because of our very high consumption levels."
The increase certainly can't be good news for environmentalists.
I'm sure that University of Western Australia's Professor Barry
Walters, a clinical associate professor of obstetrics, who in the
December edition of the Medical Journal of Australia, proposed that
couples who have more than two children should pay an annual carbon
tax, is not happy about it. And Toni Vernelli, who aborted her child
out of concern for the planet, probably won't jump for joy about the
increase.
As environmentalists increasingly focus on population levels, expect
more attempts to reduce the fertility rate through abortion and/or
contraception.
What a brave new world we live in, where the weakest among us are
targeted in misguided efforts to protect the environment.
------------------------------------------------------------
Sources
[1] Tone, A, (2001). Devices & Desires, A History of Contraception In
America (1st ed.) New York: Hill and Wang, p. 226.
.

 

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