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The Global Fertility Rate Is Dropping Dramatically As The Effects Of Abortion And Man-Made Global Pandemics Creating A ‘Demographic Winter’

  • Writer: prophecyheadlines
    prophecyheadlines
  • May 14, 2024
  • 3 min read

The world is at a startling demographic milestone. Sometime soon, the global fertility rate will drop below the point needed to keep population constant. It may have already happened.



Years ago, we told you about something called The Georgia Guidestones, stone tablets that were mysteriously set up and graven with what appeared to be the constitution of the coming kingdom of Antichrist.


At the height of the pandemic in 2022, The Georgia Guidestones were just as mysteriously demolished in the middle of the night. You might say that whoever did that was getting rid of the evidence of the depopulation agenda espoused by the global elites.


Eugenicist Bill Gates is very happy about today’s news of a rapidly-declining global population, something he’s spent billions to help create.


“In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not.” Matthew 2:18 (KJB)


Between 1973 and 20121, abortion in America reduced our population by an eye-popping 63,459,781 souls!


We are 20% smaller than we would have been had those babies been allowed to be born.


This sad fact has been repeated around the world thanks to the Gospel of Bill Gates promoting his Hitlerian eugenic ideas. Take Social Security for example. All the money paid into it has long-since been taken and spent by past corrupt administrations, and the only thing keeping it alive is the new money from workers coming in.


But when you reduce the number of workers, everything else drops as well. The global elites have already built their bunkers in which they hope to ‘ride out the apocalypse’, but far from keeping them safe, it will be their last step on a path that ends in the pit of Hell.


Suddenly There Aren’t Enough Babies. The Whole World Is Alarmed.


FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Fertility is falling almost everywhere, for women across all levels of income, education and labor-force participation.


The falling birthrates come with huge implications for the way people live, how economies grow and the standings of the world’s superpowers. In high-income nations, fertility fell below replacement in the 1970s, and took a leg down during the pandemic.


It’s dropping in developing countries, too. India surpassed China as the most populous country last year, yet its fertility is now below replacement.


“The demographic winter is coming,” said Jesús Fernández-Villaverde, an economist specializing in demographics at the University of Pennsylvania.


​Many government leaders see this as a matter of national urgency.


They worry about shrinking workforces, slowing economic growth and underfunded pensions; and the vitality of a society with ever-fewer children. Smaller populations come with diminished global clout, raising questions in the U.S., China and Russia about their long-term standings as superpowers.


Donald Trump, this year’s presumptive Republican presidential nominee, has called collapsing fertility a bigger threat to Western civilization than Russia.


A year ago Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida declared that the collapse of the country’s birthrate left it “standing on the verge of whether we can continue to function as a society.” Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has prioritized raising the country’s “demographic GDP.”


Governments have rolled out programs to stop the decline—but so far they’ve barely made a dent.


In 2017, when the global fertility rate—a snapshot of how many babies a woman is expected to have over her lifetime—was 2.5, the United Nations thought it would slip to 2.4 in the late 2020s.


Yet by 2021, the U.N. concluded, it was already down to 2.3—close to what demographers consider the global replacement rate of about 2.2.


The replacement rate, which keeps population stable over time, is 2.1 in rich countries, and slightly higher in developing countries, where fewer girls than boys are born and more mothers die during their childbearing years.


With no reversal in birthrates in sight, the attendant economic pressures are intensifying.


Since the pandemic, labor shortages have become endemic throughout developed countries. That will only worsen in coming years as the postcrisis fall in birthrates yields an ever-shrinking inflow of young workers, placing more strain on healthcare and retirement systems.


Neil Howe, a demographer at Hedgeye Risk Management, has pointed to a recent World Bank report suggesting that worsening demographics could make this a second consecutive “lost decade” for global economic growth. READ MORE


 
 
 

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