by Anne Roback Morse
Last Tuesday, the Washington Times published an article by Joseph Cotto entitled, “Overpopulation: Should America have a one-child policy?”
Despite the provocative title, the article does not present a
stimulating thought-experiment, but rather a series of half-truths and
inconsistencies with dangerous implications.
Claim 1: Cotto commences his article by
citing Michael Arth, a controversial gubernatorial candidate who
advocated the imposition of birth credits. Arth argued that although
human innovation often “increases under pressure,” the pressure which
inspires it is worse than the innovation itself. The article cites, “One
of the most innovative periods of human history was WWII...However, we
also had the wholesale destruction of cities, untold suffering and the
massacre of at least 60 million people.”
Reply: World War II was indeed a period of
both ingenuity as well as suffering. However, Mr. Joseph Cotto confuses
correlation with causation. Ingenuity and suffering are not
inextricably related. There have been periods of misery without
ingenuity, and periods of ingenuity without suffering. For instance, the
Silicon Valley technology boom of the 1990s did not produce “misery and
sorrow for the sake of innovation.”
Claim 2: “The human misery created by
overpopulation is comparable to war and one of the main reasons for war.
Nazi foreign policy, for example, was based on the need for
'Lebensraum,' living space that would support Germany’s growing
population.”
Reply: Joseph Cotto again presents another
half-truth. Yes, Hitler touted “overpopulation” as a justification for
his aggressive and expansionist foreign policy. Germany was not actually
overpopulated at the time, however, but Hitler used the spectre of
overpopulation to provide a justification for his horrific human rights
abuses and eugenic policies. Such has been the historical use of the
myth of overpopulation: from China’s forced abortions to the
sterilization of Ethiopian immigrants in Israel, it has been wielded as a
weapon of control.
Claim 3: “We are far exceeding the carrying capacity of the planet.”
Reply: The world currently produces enough
food to feed 10 billion people, and there are only 7 billion of people.
That is, with 7 billion human minds at work, we produce enough food for
10 billion human bodies. Imagine how much food we could produce with 10
billion minds! According to the World Education Service, “World
agriculture produces 17% more calories per person today than it did 30
years ago.. . . This is enough to provide everyone in the world with at
least 2,720 kilocalories (kcal) per person per day.”
Claim 4: “The U.S. population grew by
22.5% from 1990-2010. That is the highest growth rate in the
industrialized world. By comparison. . . Japan only grew by 4.7% in the
same period.”
Reply: Yes, the U.S. population grew at a
rate of about 1% per year during the twenty year period between 1990 and
2010. However, the U.S. does not have the highest growth rate in the
industrialized world. Australia, Albania, Greenland, Iceland, Ireland,
and New Zealand all have higher rates of natural population increase
(growth without immigration or emigration). Quick! Impose a one-child
policy. . . Iceland is about to be over-populated!
A further word about Japan: Japan has had below-replacement
fertility since 1955, and now that their larger, higher fertility
generations are dying from old age, Japan is shrinking. Japan has had
negative growth rate since 2009, and their population is already
shrinking by over 100,000 people per year. As the Japanese population
continues to age, they will shrink faster and faster each year.
Academics at Tohoku University have created a clock counting down to the day when Japan will have one only child: Japan is not a model for demographic health.
Claim 5: “The Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
of American women has been at or below the replacement level (2.1) for 4
decades. This means that if the net immigration were zero, or even
below a few hundred annually, the US population would stop growing in a
matter of decades. What keeps our population growing very rapidly and
unsustainably is net immigration.”
Reply: Mr. Joseph Cotto is correct on this
point. American fertility has been at or below replacement level since
1970, and without immigration, the US population would soon shrink.
Immigration has accounted for anywhere from one-half to one-quarter of
American population growth for decades, and this doesn’t even account
for the higher fertility of immigrants. In addition to bolstering the
U.S. population, first-generation immigrants have higher fertility rates
than natural-born citizens.
If Mr. Cotto were really concerned with the
“overpopulation” of the U.S., then arguing for stringent
anti-immigration laws would be a simpler solution than his proposed
“birth license plan.” In fact, Joseph Cotto quotes the executive
director of Californians for Population Stabilization (CAPS) in his
article as “the foremost group addressing overpopulation,” who, without
debate, are passionately anti-immigration. According to the CAPS
website, the U.S. should stop immigration by “saying ‘NO’ to amnesties”
and “end ‘birthright citizenship.’”
We at PRI do not argue for expelling those with higher
fertility, denying entrance to those who need amnesty, nor for
preventing the reproduction of those whom the government deems “unfit.”
Historically, such ideologies have been responsible for more
atrocities than betterments. Nor is the historical scoreboard the mere
result of badly implemented policies; any policy rooted in lies and
distortions can never produce good fruit. We at PRI fight against
coercive population control, because we believe in human dignity and
ingenuity.Holt-Giménez, Eric, et al. "We Already Grow Enough Food for 10 Billion People… and Still Can't End Hunger." Journal of Sustainable Agriculture 36.6 (2012): 595-598.
U.S. Census Bureau
United Nations World Population Prospects
U.S. Census Bureau
The pro-life Population Research Institute is dedicated to ending human rights abuses committed in the name of "family planning," and to ending counter-productive social and economic paradigms premised on the myth of "overpopulation." Find us at pop.org.
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