by Andrew Hamilton
The white racial predicament, now so extreme—fundamentally, looming
extinction or genocide—can be studied from countless angles. The issue
is so multifaceted that it is easiest to break the main problem into
smaller, discrete components, holding fixed and temporarily ignoring numerous crucial elements that in real life cannot be readily ignored.One
facet of the overriding problem is sub-replacement fertility: the
failure of whites worldwide to replace their population by having at
least 2.1 children per couple.
The result is a white population
declining both in absolute numbers and relative to other races, many of
which are growing in size. This is happening at ferocious speed, far
more rapidly than most white nationalists grasp.
Note also that
the offspring of the many whites who now intermarry, or reproduce
interracially outside of marriage, do not augment the white birthrate,
but detract from it; such children are non-white. And this is not a marginal problem.
Under present conditions, such hybrids must be uncompromisingly deflected away from the white population and gene pool. Hybrid individuals are unacceptable as group members.
At
the most fundamental level, white racialism is a straightforward
exercise in conservation biology. Whites, or a remnant of them, must physically survive as a racially-conscious, culturally coherent breeding population or group of genetically similar breeding populations.
The Option of Increasing Family Size
There are many obstacles to having more than two children. The power structure is deeply anti-family and anti-white.
Institutionalized
hatred, discrimination, interracial wealth transfers, prevailing
ideology, and a monolithic, viciously racist media, educational, and
legal system strongly militate against the white family.
Additionally,
we suffer from serious ideological and moral malaise. It will do no
good to generate large white families that develop into carbon copies of
conformist, immoral Romneys, Bushes, Clintons, Kennedys, or
Rockefellers committed to Jewish supremacy, totalitarianism, and the
genocide of the white race.
Indeed, for all intents and purposes
it is safe to say that the white family no longer really exists. For
thousands of years our race sustained itself, and expanded, thanks to
the settled institutions of marriage and the stable family structure.
Both have been effectively eradicated within the past few decades.
But we must isolate, forget about, ignore, all of this for purposes of the discussion that follows.
Instead, we will simply assume that white couples can marry (more than once if necessary), or maintain a de facto relationship outside of marriage, and produce and raise offspring.
Such
children may not have the opportunity to attend college due to economic
constraints, racial discrimination, or other reasons, but responsible,
determined white adults can still have more than two children.
In other words, white couples retain the option of having more children despite all of the obstacles thrown in their path. We can isolate this aspect of the racial problem and analyze it.
We
shall therefore adopt a mindset that values and encourages abundance
rather than scarcity of white children, regardless of the difficulties
involved. Having children has always entailed risk and uncertainty, and
required faith on the part of couples that things will ultimately work
out.
A philosophical and practical guide to such an approach to
family and fertility has been developed by a small community of
fundamentalist Christians, often loose-knit, such as the Quiverfull Movement (at the link scroll down to that subhead).
Here I will simply provide a general overview of the lifetime fertility window, which is narrower than generally understood.
Despite
the Left’s vaunted commitment to “sex education,” there is widespread
ignorance about basic aspects of sex, family life, and reproduction.
People may be more ignorant today than they ever were.
Male Fertility
Men
and women have a lifetime fertility window during which they can
reproduce. In general, they cannot reproduce before puberty or too long
after middle age, although men have a significantly wider fertility
window than do women.
Puberty is the stage of becoming
physiologically capable of sexual reproduction, marked by genital
maturation, development of secondary sex characteristics, and, in girls,
the first occurrence of menstruation.
Puberty begins somewhat later and lasts longer in boys than it does in girls. It is initiated in males around age 10 or 11.
Historically,
tribal societies often maintained specific puberty rites for boys, with
an arbitrary age chosen for initiation into adulthood. As one text
noted, “With the exception of the bar mitzvah among Jews, our society
does not have formal puberty rites for boys.” (I recall reading,
however, that on the American frontier boys were traditionally presented
their first rifle at the age of 13 by their fathers.)
Men do not
have a fertility cycle as women do. Sperm are produced throughout their
reproductive years, and a healthy man is consistently fertile at all
times. In lower animals, there are exceptions to continuous male
fertility.
There is no male equivalent of menopause, either, in
which the female’s ovaries (organs that produce eggs, as well as the
hormones estrogen and progesterone) essentially shut down at a fairly
specific point in life.
There are well-documented reports of
90-year-old men having fathered children, and viable sperm have been
found in the ejaculations of even older men.
But in recent decades
increasing attention has been given to certain negative changes in male
fertility or physiological conditions (notably, erectile dysfunction or
ED, also known as impotence) closely associated with reproductive
capacity.
For example, it now appears that children sired by older men may be at somewhat greater risk for abnormalities.
Also, we are told that ED, which appears to be on the rise, is a common age-related phenomenon.
Less
than 1 percent of the male population under 30 years of age is affected
by ED, 3 percent under 45 years, 7 percent between 45 and 55, 25
percent at age 65, and up to 75 percent over the age of 80.
Is the
seemingly greater prevalence than in the past due primarily to “greater
awareness” (public discussion), or are some new cultural or
environmental factors at work, analogous to the “obesity epidemic” or,
among boys, attention deficit disorder?
Very recent medical reports suggest that ED is often symptomatic of underlying cardiovascular disease.
Female Fertility
Puberty for most girls occurs between the ages of 9 and 12, while menarche (the first menstrual period) usually occurs between the ages of 11 and 14.
For the first few years after the menarche, the girl’s menstrual periods are irregular, and ovulation
(the ripening and discharge of an egg from an ovary for possible
fertilization) does not occur in every cycle. For some time after the
first period, then, a girl is relatively infertile, yet still capable of
becoming pregnant.
A number of rare diseases can cause precocious
sexual development, and pregnancies in girls with these disorders have
occurred as young as 5 or 6.
One of the youngest documented pregnancies
occurred in Peru in 1939, when a girl aged 5 years 7 months gave birth
by Cesarean section to a 6.5 pound baby boy. The girl had menstruated
regularly since the age of 3, and became pregnant when she was 4 years
and 10 months old.
In some cultures, menarche is treated as the
time when a girl becomes a woman; in such societies, girls often marry
after their first menstruation.
In European law, legal puberty was the earliest age at which one could consent and enter into a binding marriage.
At English common law, children became marriageable at the onset of legal puberty—age 12 for girls and 14 for boys.
At French civil law, a marriage could not be contracted before the end of legal puberty—age 15 for girls and 18 for boys.
Demographic
historian Ole J. Benedictow maintains that different civilizations and
different historical periods within specific civilizations are
characterized by their own unique demographic systems. It is a mistake
to assume, as many scholars do, that the demographic structures of any
given historical period can be projected across the dividing lines of
other historical periods, or across the societal dividing lines of
different civilizations. (Ole J. Benedictow, The Black Death, 1346-1353: The Complete History, 2004, p. 248)
In
European history Benedictow distinguishes between a “medieval
demographic system,” for example, and an “Early Modern demographic
system.”
Among other things, the medieval system displayed higher
mortality and higher fertility—”turnover rates,” “higher rates of
inflows and outflows of members of populations”—than did the succeeding
period. Fewer medieval women remained unmarried (celibate), and they had
a significantly lower age at marriage than did Early Modern women.
Empirical
evidence ranging from Italy in the south to England in the west and
Iceland and Sweden in the north shows that medieval women generally
married at ages 14-20, in contrast to a higher average age at marriage
of 25 during the Early Modern period.
As an aside, in 1726
Benjamin Franklin’s younger sister Jane was betrothed in Boston at the
age of 14, the marriage to take place some months thereafter.
Under
medieval medical conditions, low age at marriage for women combined
with higher fertility meant more pregnancies and more female deaths:
“Women did not live longer lives than men in pre-modern Europe, but
rather somewhat shorter lives,” Benedictow writes.
According to a
1972 textbook, an “unexplained observation” is that the average age of
menarche in modern Western countries was at that time gradually
declining: in 1860 a girl usually had her first period between ages 16
and 17, while in 1960 it occurred between ages 12 and 13.
Menstruation
(periodic uterine bleeding) occurs only in female humans, apes, and
some monkeys. An ovarian or estrus cycle occurs in other mammals but is
not accompanied by bleeding. The length of the ovarian cycle varies by
species: in humans it is approximately 28 days, in chimpanzees 36 days,
cows 20 days, sheep 16 and mice 5 days. Cats and dogs ordinarily ovulate
just twice a year.
Every month, one ovary releases an egg (a process known as ovulation), which travels through a fallopian tube toward the uterus.
If
the egg is fertilized by a sperm, it implants in the lining of the
uterus, where it becomes first an embryo (at which point a woman is
officially pregnant), and then a fetus. If unfertilized, it will be shed
during menstruation.
In light of the vigorous promotion by schools and professional sports
of strenuous athletic activities for girls and women, it should be
noted that young females who engage in excessive exercise or train or
compete intensively are at risk of developing a condition known as the
female athlete triad. This is a cluster of three disorders: eating
disorders, infrequent or absent menstrual periods due to inadequate
production of the female hormone estrogen, and bone thinning
(osteoporosis).
According to Mark Perloe, M.D., an Atlanta infertility specialist:
A
woman reaches her peak fertility at age 18 or 19, with little change
until the mid-20s. As she approaches age 30, her hormone levels start to
decline and her fertility also begins a slow decline, with a more rapid
decline after age 35. Menopause, which occurs in the late 40s to early
50s in most women, marks the end of a woman’s natural ability to bear
children. A man’s fertility decline is not as rapid and has no clear-cut
end point, but a man of 50 has lower hormone levels and is likely less
fertile than he was at age 25 or 30. (“Infertility,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2005)
A
Mayo Clinic guide states that female fertility rates “remain relatively
stable until the early 30s, and then they decrease to very low levels
by the early 40s.” Broken down further by the same source (Robert V.
Johnson, M.D., Editor-in-Chief, Mayo Clinic Complete Book of Pregnancy & Baby’s First Year, New York: William Morrow, 1994, p. 5):
- Ages 18-24: peak female fertility
- Ages 30-35: fertility is 15%-20% less than maximum
- Ages 35-39: fertility is 25%-50% below maximum
- Ages 40-45: fertility falls to 95% below maximum
“Ultimately,
age is still the most important factor when it comes to fertility
prediction,” Perloe says. “If you’re in your early 40s, the odds are
against getting pregnant without help, no matter what the tests say. The
odds are much better in your late 30s or younger.”
Widespread Ignorance About the Biological Clock
Surprisingly,
many women have no idea how rapidly fertility declines with age. By the
time a woman hits 44, it is almost nonexistent.
According to Dr.
Roger Pierson, a Canadian fertility specialist, “Everybody in the
reproductive world is shocked at how much ignorance there is. Women get
their information from the rather dubious magazines that tend to lurk
around the checkout counters of grocery stores.”
In 2009, Britain’s Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) went so far as to issue a public warning that women should become mothers by the age of 35 or risk infertility, miscarriage, or health problems:
Our
statement has been prompted by concern among obstetricians and
gynaecologists because we are seeing more and more [older] women who are
confronting the heartbreak of infertility and miscarriage. Every week
in my clinic I see women who say ‘if only I had known this, I could have
planned for this. I wouldn’t have postponed my plans for pregnancy’.”
The college fears too many women still do not understand that their
fertility declines after 35.
A University of Calgary
professor added: “Women have been given the impression that biology
doesn’t matter and they can do whatever they like.”
The Window Shuts
Menopause,
also known as “change of life,” is the end of menstruation due to
physiological processes associated with aging. It usually occurs between
ages 45 and 50.
Several years before menopause, menstrual periods
become irregular, leading to an interval of alternating fertility and
infertility analogous to the stage after menarche.
Periods
ultimately cease permanently at the average age of 51. Doctors consider
menopause to be complete when a woman has gone one year without a
period.
With an average life expectancy of 81, a woman can expect to live more than one third of her life after menopause.
Pregnancy beyond 47 is extremely rare, although it has been medically documented as late as 61.
Fertility
treatments may extend the reproductive window slightly, but are
extremely expensive and subject to age cut-offs. In Canada, fertility
specialists generally will not accept women past their mid-40s.
At
age 40, even with in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment, the success
rate is only around 40%, whether a woman uses her own eggs or the eggs
of a donor.
There are outliers, of course. In 2006 a Spanish woman just shy of her 67th birthday gave birth to twin boys
weighing 3.5 pounds each by caesarean section after lying to a
California fertility clinic about her age in order to obtain in vitro
fertilization treatment. She was forced to sell her apartment in order
to pay for the expensive procedure. She died in 2009, leaving her
2-year-old sons orphans.
Don’t Give Up
Despite such difficulties, the UK’s Royal College of Midwives defends women’s right to have children as late as their 40s:
We
support women in their choice to have a baby in their late 30s and 40s,
although pregnancy complications can be more common in older women.
They have higher rates of induction of labour and Caesarean births,
which present greater risks to both mother and baby. Despite this, we
support a woman’s decision to choose when to embark upon a pregnancy.
Under
present conditions, we should not dismiss such liberal attitudes out of
hand. Rather than advice to delay pregnancy and childbirth, they should
be viewed as a positive determination to keep options open as long as
possible. Of course, earlier is better.
The Mayo Clinic guide offers the following advice:
Women
in their 30s and 40s sometimes wonder if they’ve waited too long to
have a baby or if their chances of having a healthy baby are reduced.
Even though achieving pregnancy can be more difficult in an older woman,
the overall outcomes are excellent. There are some concerns about
higher risks of having a baby with low birth weight, premature labor, or
a child with chromosome abnormalities such as Down syndrome. In
general, however, women in their 30s who start pregnancy in good health
are likely to have a healthy, normal pregnancy. (Mayo Clinic Complete Book of Pregnancy & Baby’s First Year, p. 5)
An online female commenter contributed this useful perspective about relative versus absolute risk:
[Take]
a 34-year-old childless woman, who seriously wonders if the risk of
Down syndrome makes it immoral to have a baby past 35. Now 1 in 378 [the
risk after age 35] is 2-3X bigger than 1 in 952 [the risk at age 30],
but still it’s 0.26%! It’s not something to forego motherhood over. If
you focus on the relative risk, you fail to notice that the absolute
risk is still tiny.
Linking Fertility to Age Structure
Because
fertility is crucially age-dependent, it is important to understand the
implications of an ominously inverted population age structure. The
biological considerations discussed above should be viewed in light of
this all-important fact.
A demographic tool useful for this purpose is the population pyramid.
A
population pyramid is a statistical representation consisting of two
side-by-side bar graphs, one showing the number of males and the other
females in five-year age cohorts.
Population is plotted on the X
(horizontal) axis and age on the Y (vertical) axis. Males are
conventionally shown on the left and females on the right, often in
contrasting colors, and may be measured either by raw numbers or as a
percentage of the total population.
Population pyramids are one of
the most effective ways to graphically depict age and sex distributions
because of the clear images they present.
Although population pyramids are almost always used by demographers to analyze racially mixed geographic populations—such as those of nation states or the world at large, they could readily be adapted to racial analysis.
Even
in the absence of adequate race data, they are quite useful for
conceptualizing what is happening to various races, or what has happened
to them in the past (see, for example the contrasting Finnish
population pyramids below).
So let us imagine graphs that represent not specific countries, but any race inside or outside the First World.
Thus,
within a multiracial country such as the United States, we could, in
theory, construct individual graphs for every race within its borders,
contemporary or historical.
Alternatively, we could construct a graph representing the global
size and age structure of the white (or any other) race. Conceptually,
we thus eliminate national boundaries and substitute races for national
(state) populations.
Here, for example, is the population pyramid of a contemporary black population:

Representative Age Pyramid for a Hypothetical Expanding Nonwhite Race (Angolan age pyramid, 2005)
Because
Angola is overwhelmingly black, this pyramid doubles as both a national
and a racial pyramid. Looking at the age distributions on the left, you
will see that most of the population is young, while the number of aged
is proportionally small.
A substantial proportion of any
population so distributed exists either at reproductive age, or has yet
to enter it. In terms of raw numbers, it is a racially vibrant
population.
Next, look at Finland’s contrasting population pyramids
from 1917 (when the country was all-white) and 2006 (representing a
mixed white/non-white population). These graphically illustrate the
effects of white fertility decline. The radical historical change
depicted may be viewed as roughly representative of what has happened to
every white country in the world.

Finnish Population Pyramids, 1917 v. 2006
In 1917, white Finns were demographically healthy, just like Angolans today.
But
in 2006, the constricted base of the Finnish pyramid signifies greatly
diminished numbers of reproductive young in comparison to old.
White
fertility everywhere is extremely low—indeed, far lower than depicted
due to both higher immigrant reproduction rates (they have higher
fertility than the whites they live among) and substantial interracial
hybridization between whites and non-whites, which is constantly on the
increase.
Finally, here is an example of a hypothetical, inverted
pyramid probably characteristic of the age structure of the white race,
characterized as it is by below replacement fertility—many old and few
young, many deaths and few births signaling demographic collapse.
When
you have an inverted population pyramid like this, only a comparatively
small proportion of the group’s members are even capable of
reproducing. (Match the age cohorts to the fertility windows discussed
above; large segments of the population fall outside the range. Such
people are no longer capable of reproducing.)
Moreover, total
racial numbers, regardless of individual reproductive capacity, keep
declining drastically because the most populous age cohorts are
constantly dying off—literally vanishing—every decade.

Hypothetical Inverted Age Pyramid of the White Race
Note
particularly the declining proportion of whites at or approaching
reproductive age, recalling that many of these fertile individuals, in
today’s climate, will remain childless, have less than two children, or
hybridize with ever-increasing numbers of non-whites continuously being
imported by hostile elites.
Finally, the large, unmixed alien populations in our countries have far higher birth rates than do indigenous whites.
As a consequence of all of this, whites have a numbers problem of staggering proportions. With each passing day it becomes worse.
Time is of the essence, and radical steps are necessary to prevent complete demographic collapse worldwide.
The
inverted age structure and reproductive profile has grave implications
for (a) group survival (b) inter-racial competition for political power,
economic resources, and retention of human rights and (c) the potential
recruitment pool for nationalist movements, organizations, political
parties, or ethnostates.
Collectively, the target audience for
white nationalists every year grows markedly older, numerically smaller,
and less influential, affluent, healthy, vigorous, and politically
assertive.
Darwinian fitness is measured solely in terms of reproductive proficiency. Its guiding principle is “be fruitful and multiply.”
It is therefore essential to distinguish Darwinian fitness from
“fitness” as excellence determined by some subjective standard. Not only
are the two not identical, they may be in direct opposition.
In Darwinian terms, whites currently are not a fit population.
Original Article Here.