Daniel Greenfield
January 08, 2022 @ Sultan Knish Blog
There is both bad news and good news for Planned Parenthood these days.
Even while abortion made a brief stop once again at the Supreme Court,
its numbers are dropping.
A few years ago, abortion hit its
lowest rate since it was legalized. The drop in abortion rates parallels
the fall in birth rates. Both stem from a decline in pregnancies.
America isn’t becoming more moral, only more lonely.
A
recent New York Times headline declared, “The Married Will Soon Be the
Minority”. But it’s not just the married, but anyone in a relationship
or who is connected to other people.
Marriage
rates hit an all-time low around the same time, with the single
population rising sharply. But the singles weren’t just postponing
marriage in favor of extended relationships, because there was also a
sharp drop in the rates of physical intimacy between men and women.
Americans
were becoming more lonely even before the pandemic. The arrival of the
pandemic divided families, cut off grandparents from grandchildren,
parents from adult children, children from other children, and made the
country an even more lonely and isolated place.
Over the pandemic year, the nation’s population grew
by only 0.1%. According to the Census Bureau, that was “the lowest rate since the nation’s founding.” Its estimate also showed
that for the first time "net international migration... has exceeded natural increase for a given year."
America’s
population has been declining for a while, but the pandemic was
particularly catastrophic with international migration easily topping
excess births at 244,622 to 148,043.
The demographic snapshot of a
society coming apart, the familial, civic, and cultural bonds between
Americans dissolving even as growth comes from mass migration is a
familiar story from Europe. Internally and externally, we are becoming a
society in name only, linked by the legal technicalities of a vast
bureaucracy and a disposable multinational consumer culture.
To
understand the wave of wokeness and other political cults consuming our
civic culture, we need only observe that a third of Americans now have
no religion: a number that has doubled in under 15 years. Growing
numbers have no family, no children, and little more than their jobs.
And
that is why we have open borders. Someone has to fill all those jobs.
Generations of Republican leaders defined America as a place where
people came to work. Every illegal alien at the border was evidence that
our way of life worked at least insofar as economics went. Likewise it
appeared that our culture worked because it was so popular around the
world.
Cold War logic reduced America to a marketplace. If the
country passed the rigorous test of the market, then the rest was bound
to fall into place. But after the Cold War came and went, mass migration
and mass culture continued to hollow out the country. Free enterprise
is vital to a free society, but it isn’t, for most people, the thing
that gives them meaning and purpose.
A nation cannot exist as
nothing more than a series of workplaces and stores in which tokens
earned at the former are then spent at the latter. Mistaking the
economic machinery for a nation is the fallacy of assuming that man is
nothing more than the sum of his biological systems.
What happens
to a society whose people have no reason to go on beyond their set
routines interspersed with bouts of hedonism? What happens to a nation
that loses its soul?
Europe had answered that question a
generation or two before we did. Unfortunately we did not pay attention
to the answer. America lasted longer because we retained our convictions
of exceptionalism, our faith and our family ties longer than Europe
did. But with every passing year the cities of the New World with their
hipster elites and multicultural labor forces, and subsidized dying
rural areas, resemble the decadence of the Old World that their
ancestors once escaped.
The restrictions of the pandemic made
sense to those elites in exactly the way that it infuriated the rural
and working classes. Lockdowns, remote meetings, and masks allowed the
elites to retreat further behind a digital iron curtain, serviced by
unobtrusive servants, real and virtual, AI and gig workers, freed from
having to even leave their apartments to enjoy the pleasures of life.
It never occurred to them, and still doesn’t, that most people don’t want to live that way.
Beyond the now famous population crash in New York and California, and the population rise in Texas and Florida, is the fact
that the highest
percentage population growth took place in Idaho, followed by Utah and
Montana, while the largest percentage losses were suffered by Washington
D.C., New York, and Illinois. Some of those numbers can be explained by
people from the latter places making their way to the former. But that
does not explain all of it.
Americans are experiencing an
internal migration and counter-migration, traveling to city-states like
New York City and Los Angeles County for economic purposes, and leaving
them in pursuit of meaningful connections and a different way of life.
It’s why one of the underreported stories in the nation’s demographics
has been the black population leaving New York City for the South.
Behind
the statistics, the columns of black numbers on white paper, is a
spiritual crisis that is much more difficult to fit between the narrow
lines of government statistical forms.
A nation needs vertical
and horizontal connections, people to other people, and to something
above them, a sense of awe and destiny, and without them it withers and
dies. The pandemic reaffirmed to many elites their conviction that there
are no meaningful connections, that other people are threats and
irritants, and that man is just an intelligent ape existing on the
random sufferance of a cruel universe that can blot all of us out in a
single instant.
It is not at all irrational for anyone living
with the conviction of fragility and meaninglessness to panic at the
pandemic, global warming, or the threat of nuclear war. If the only
order in the universe comes from the arrangement of its underlying
forces, then doom is only a matter of time. And the only way to contain
the catastrophe is by imposing a totalitarian order.
There is
little room in this gloomy universe for the future. That’s why the
hipster elites, in between Uber trips to bars and eateries, avoid human
connections, escape into digital carpe diems, and reject the idea of
having children because they don’t expect mankind to survive global
warming, or of whatever crisis comes next to justify their lack of faith
in the future.
Their needs, for clean floors, for customer
service, or takeout, can be met by a disposable labor force in America
or in China. Natural population growth just hastens the apocalypse
anyway.
Against this tide of elite despair which permeates the
culture that they produce and that has been all but written into law,
some cultural resistance continues. Every child born is itself a form of
resistance to this elite vision of a cold universe and its even colder
technocratic counterparts on this world which would raise children in
digital wombs to grow up to be the last of their kind.
In this
generation, for the first time in our nation’s history, most Americans
have abandoned hope that the future will be better. The low birth rates,
the lack of relationships, and the social collapse are all the fruits
of the same poisoned tree. Defeating that defeatism will not be easy and
our leaders have offered little more than shopworn cliches as the
nation’s culture declined.
But despair is not inevitable. It’s the vacuum that forms when there is nothing left to believe in.
Globalization
atomizes us. It breaks us up into discrete and isolated groups in the
name of diversity, in the name of progress, and in the name of making us
more manageable. Fragmented people have less to aspire to beyond their
creature comforts. They are easier to soothe with an expansion of the
welfare state, a new hate object and smartphone model.
The
alternative is to rebuild those connections that make life meaningful,
national and familial, and without which nations turn childless and are
easily swamped by mass migration.
The Left didn’t just open up
the borders around the body of our nation, it hollowed out its soul. A
lonely nation of isolates wrapped in their digital cocoons is easy prey
for technocratic globalism.
These latest numbers are a warning
sign that America is much closer to becoming Europe than we thought. To
defeat the threat of demographic replacement and illegal migration, we
have to build walls not only around our borders, but around our culture,
our communities and our families. We have to not only fight against
what we don’t want, but to fight for what we do.
Tags:
America,
future of the west,
recent,
society
About Daniel Greenfield
Daniel Greenfield is a journalist investigating Islamic terrorism and
the Left. He is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz
Freedom Center