• @x4740N
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    11
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    It’s fucked that there’s even a “replacement level” in the first place

    That’s so fucking dystopian

    Edit: typo

      • akiЯa
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        21 year ago

        if you can have a baby by buying bottom shelve food products for the last week of a month, what happens if you get twins

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        -11 year ago

        I’m trying to think of a real world example of government breeding growth that’s gone wrong, but I can’t think of any.

        There’s plenty of examples of breeding control that have gone horrific of course. I just can’t think of the opposite example.

          • @x4740N
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            21 year ago

            That Wikipedia article link reminds me of the fucked up thing nestle did with baby formula

            • @FearTheCron
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              21 year ago

              For sure. Somehow Nestle still pisses me off more though. Corporations that get too powerful are the real danger to us today in my opinion. But they draw a lot of parallels with the old corrupt communist regimes.

        • @Daddydead
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          21 year ago

          The US seems to be trying a bad option. Rather than offer actual support, they are trying to force it through the guise of morality

        • @x4740N
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          21 year ago

          The phrase “breeding control” makes me so fucking uncomfortable

    • @solstice
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      131 year ago

      …It’s a really super basic entry level concept in understanding demographics and populations, plus economics, human geography, migration trends, society in general, etc. There’s nothing dystopian about it. (Arguably, the fact that people instantly think such studies are dystopic is itself dystopic.)

    • @grissee
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      61 year ago

      it’s pretty simple actually, 2.1, a pair to make baby + 0.1 for unforeseen circumstance

      • @DrTeeth
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        31 year ago

        Royal families have a similar system, though for different motives. it’s called “An heir and a spare”.