"Feminismus bedeutet Tod"
Was nach einem sehr drastisch formulierten Internet-Posting in der Männerszene klingen mag, ist in Wahrheit die Aussage eines britischen Bevölkerungsforschers:
Joseph D'Agostino, vice president for communications at the Population Research Institute, sees feminism's influence on nations' birth rates. He notes that modern societies now are organized around economic production, not the production of the next generation of human beings. The result? D'Agostino says feminism "destroys" every single society it touches.
"It is the most socially destructive movement perhaps in the history of the world -- and I mean that in the scientific sense," he emphasizes. "Every single culture, every single nation that's adopted feminism [as a dominant philosophy] is now dying out. Feminism means death."
D'Agostino asserts that feminism has coerced women into going into the workplace in order to maintain middle-class lifestyles. As a result, he says some countries are now offering incentives and even outright cash for women to have children so a society can survive.
"I think that indicates that feminism has already really spiritually killed your society," he says, adding that every single society or subculture in the world that has adopted feminism now has a below-replacement birth rate. "If you now have to pay women to have children, you've really reached the point of no return and it's just not going to work. In fact, lots of countries now are paying women to have children ...."
Evidently that approach is not working. According to the Institute spokesman, none of those countries have been able to get their birth rates back up to replacement levels.
D'Agostino says while Islamic Jihad and "global warming" are often presented as the most dangerous threats to the Western world today, they pale in comparison to the demographic crisis -- because without people, nothing else matters.
Wenn eine vielgelesene deutsche Zeitung oder Zeitschrift diesen Text übersetzen und veröffentlichen würde, hätten wir nächstes Jahr die gesamte Eva-Herman-Debatte noch mal von vorne.
Labels: Feminismus, Lebensplanung, Rollenmodelle
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