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  • Demography's destiny

    Sioux Falls Argus Leader, SD
    Friday, September 21, 2007

    Demography's destiny

    Population shifts are certain to change the balance of
    power in the world

    By Patrick Buchanan Jr.
    Creators Syndicate
    Comment Print Email PUBLISHED: September 21, 2007

    In Russia's Ulanovsk region, Sept. 12 is Conception Day.

    Workers are given the day off and encouraged to go home and do their
    best to conceive a new Russian. The hope is to have a bumper crop of
    babies on Russia's national holiday, nine months off.

    Conception Day has occasioned much mirth and ribald humor. But for
    Mother Russia, the issue of her children is no laughing matter.


    Two decades ago, the Soviet Union was three times the size of any of
    the other giant nations - the United States, Canada, China, Brazil -
    and the third most populous, with almost 300 million people. Came then
    the great crackup of 1990-91.

    The Baltic republics - Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia - broke free
    first. Next were Belarus, Ukraine and Moldova in the west; Georgia,
    Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Caucasus; and Turkmenistan, Tajikistan,
    Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan in Central Asia. These
    amputations removed a third of the territory and half the population
    of the Soviet Union. Yet the remnant, Russia, remained twice as large
    as any other nation and still boasted a population of 150 million.

    Since the 1990s, however, Russia has been losing population at a rate
    of 750,000 a year - not to emigration, but to death. By one count, the
    Russian population is down to 143 million. President Putin has
    predicted that only 124 million Russians will be alive in 2015. In
    2000, the United Nations projected that, at its present birth rate, by
    2050 Russia's population would fall to 114 million.

    In a 2005 study, the United Nations estimated that, together, Ukraine
    and Russia will lose 50 million people - 25 percent of their combined
    populations - by midcentury. The Slavs are dying out, and the
    geostrategic implications are enormous. In a few decades, Turkey,
    which seeks entry into the European Union, will become Europe's most
    populous nation. Like Xerxes' bridge of boats across the Hellespont,
    Turkey will be the Asian land bridge into Europe, the Bridge of The
    Prophet into the homeland of the Christians.

    As critical, the vast majority of Russians live west of the Urals
    while east of Novosibirsk (New Siberia City), all the way to
    Kamchatka, the tiny Russian population is departing or dying out. Yet
    in timber, oil and minerals, this is the most resource-rich region on
    earth. And south of Siberia lies the most populous and resource-hungry
    nation on earth. American children born today might have Chinese for
    neighbors across the Bering Strait from Alaska.

    Nor is it only the Slavic peoples who are expiring. So, too, are the
    native-born populations of Western and Southern Europe as the empty
    nurseries of Europa fill with bawling Muslim babies.

    Americans of European ancestry also are declining as a share of the
    U.S. population, down from almost 90 percent in 1960 to 66 percent
    today. Anglos, as they are called now, are now minorities in our two
    largest states, Texas and California, and, by 2040, will be a minority
    in the nation that people of British and European stock built. Last
    month, the Census Bureau projected the U.S. population would grow by
    167 million by 2060, to 468 million.

    And immigrants and their children will constitute 105 million of that
    167 million. That would be triple the 37.5 million legal and illegal
    immigrants here today, which is itself the largest cohort of
    foreigners any nation has ever taken in. With the 45 million
    Hispanics here to rise to 102 million by 2050, the Southwest is likely
    to look and sound more like Mexico than America. Indeed, culturally,
    linguistically and ethnically, it will be a part of Mexico.

    Like Russians, Americans of European ancestry are failing to
    reproduce. Yet a closer look reveals that population growth remains
    healthy among the religiously devout - evangelical Christians,
    Catholic traditionalists, Muslims and Mormons. Among the secularists,
    however, birth rates are far below zero population growth - and the
    possibility of extinction looms.

    One recent study found that the Jewish population in the United States
    fell by 6 percent in the 1990s, from 5.5 million to 5.2
    million. Orthodox Jews, however, are known for families of five, eight
    or 10 children. "And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be
    fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and have dominion
    ... over every living creature." So reads Genesis. And so European Man
    once preached and practiced. But having lost his empires along with
    his faith, European Man no longer sees himself as commissioned by God.

    Indeed, he no longer believes in God. Among our best and brightest are
    many whose purpose is to enjoy life to the fullest and to end it, when
    the time comes, as painlessly as possible. Which seems to suit the
    rest of the world - China, India, Islam, Africa, Latin America - just
    fine, as all look forward to a magnificent inheritance.

    If demography is destiny, the West is finished.

    And, if so, does it really matter all that much who rules in Baghdad?
    To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, visit the Creators Syndicate
    Web page at www.creators.com.
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