Brian Stepaside

1K posts

Brian Stepaside

Brian Stepaside

@brian_stepaside

Dublin City, Ireland Katılım Mayıs 2013
75 Takip Edilen41 Takipçiler
Brian Stepaside
Brian Stepaside@brian_stepaside·
@StevieJPTX The guy is nowhere near good enough. Cowboys going nowhere with this lad throwing.
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Brian Stepaside
Brian Stepaside@brian_stepaside·
@ZzVvbbbbn The left are untouchable in Ireland. They’d have Stalin back in the morning !
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ZZ Flop ✡️🇮🇪
ZZ Flop ✡️🇮🇪@ZzVvbbbbn·
On the Path to Power podcast, Matt Cooper tries to make a big thing about Nick Delehanty being privately educated. The leaders of all five of Ireland's left-wing parties were also privately educated. But strangely that has never been an issue for Matt
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David Quinn
David Quinn@DavQuinn·
@MoreBirths But their whole philosophy of life is so personal autonomy-focused, they might have to ditch that first.
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More Births
More Births@MoreBirths·
A year ago, I wrote an essay, "Why Progressives Need to Care About Demographic Decline" which went viral. With millions focusing on this chart, I think it is worth sharing again! I think birthrates will start turning around when progressives get serious about the problem. 👇
More Births tweet media
More Births@MoreBirths

Why Progressives Need to Care About Demographic Decline In recent years, concern about birthrates and the need for more children has come to be seen as a conservative issue. Most on the left are much less worried about population decline. They point out that even though fertility has fallen, global population continues to rise. Most progressives reason that an end to population growth will give the planet a breather and represents a positive turn toward sustainability. Shouldn't we celebrate falling birthrates as a victory for women’s rights? In any case, we aren't about to run out of people. Yet a shrinking and aging world is not what most people think it will be. The places in the world that have depopulated and grown old do not match the progressive vision of fewer, but healthier and more thriving people. They do not fit anyone’s idea of sustainability. Instead, places losing people are depressed areas of decay and blight. Without the vibrancy of youth or an underlying sense of progress, the world will be sadder and drearier, and a whole lot poorer. Stabilization? Don’t we wish! In 1968 when Paul Ehrlich published The Population Bomb, the total fertility rate was 6.51 births per woman in China, 5.76 births per woman in India and 5.2 births per woman in Brazil. If those rates continued indefinitely, we would have big problems. Whatever the carrying capacity of Earth (and the fact that the world is better fed than ever shows that it is a lot higher than Ehrlich thought) it certainly isn’t infinite. From that perspective, falling birthrates seem like a good thing. Unfortunately, the data show we have blown past 'balanced' birthrates in most countries and now things are crashing. Demographers sort of assumed that falling birth rates would settle down to around replacement and then hover there. That hasn’t happened. Almost no country that fell below replacement is managing a ‘soft landing’. The fertility rate is now 1.9 births per woman in India, 1.57 births per woman in Brazil and just 1.02 births per woman in China, and still falling fast in all of these countries. Meanwhile very old countries like Germany, Japan and Spain, which fell below replacement many decades ago and have been trying to recover, just keep declining. Germany’s fertility is just 1.35 births per woman, less than 2/3 of replacement, while Japan is at just 1.20 and Spain’s fertility is a mere 1.13. Countries that fell below replacement aren’t steadying, they just keep crashing. America’s fertility is only 1.6 births per woman, just 75% to 80% of replacement and far below the 2.7 children American women say they want (according to a 2023 Gallup poll). America makes up the difference with immigration, but soon all but the poorest and least-educated countries will face a demographic shortfall. The pool of skilled potential immigrants from around the world is drying up. Meanwhile, the United Nations’ projections that everyone relies on are perennially much too high, based on the false hope that fertility rates will instantly stabilize after a precipitous fall. Every year, fertility instead continues its trend downward. For example, here is Argentina, according to the UN: Somehow Argentina’s crashing birthrates will magically stabilize in an instant, the UN optimistically projects. (Spoiler, Argentina’s fertility rate for the first half of 2024 was just 1.28, already well below the latest UN projections and still falling.) It takes a population pyramid to see what is really happening A big part of the problem is that we think about population wrong. We see total population at or near its highest levels and think that surely the problem must be too many people rather than too few. But total population is a poor metric for what is unfolding. Consider South Korea. Korea is facing steep decline with a fertility rate that is just 1/3 of replacement. There are so few Korean children being born that for every 100 Koreans there will be just four Koreans three generations out. But if you look just at total population, the problem is completely hidden from view. It’s hard to have progress if the world is declining Almost all of us share something foundational in our worldview, and that is the idea of progress, however you define it. We have come to take for granted that the future will be better than the past. Life expectancies will keep increasing. Technology will keep improving. Science will advance and conditions will continue to improve. Based on that, we assume that the mantra “it gets better” will continue to hold true. We expect that human rights will keep expanding and progress as we have known it will continue. All that progress has come on the back of large populations in countries that embrace new knowledge and invest to develop new technology. Yet those countries are the very ones that are disappearing the fastest. Consider that the parts of the world that are below replacement account for more than 90% of global GDP, and more than 95% of patents and scientific publishing. As the population of technologically and scientifically advanced countries is set to dwindle, many imagine that things will be fine because some poor countries still have a lot of children. But some of those countries are not even interested in carrying progress forward. Consider Afghanistan. Afghanistan’s recipe for fertility is to reject modernity, even to the point that girls are banned from education past the sixth grade. The education of boys is hardly better. The system that gives Afghanistan its high birthrate bears almost no relation to the scientifically advancing world that most of us want for the future. If progress is the goal, we are unlikely to get it by looking to the least progressive countries for our demographic salvation. What population decline really looks like There is a happy vision that many have of a future world of declining population. There will be fewer of us, people think, but we will be more technologically advanced, healthier and richer. What? Are we forgetting what declining places are really like? Think of Detroit, rural West Virginia and rural Japan. Detroit is pictured below. How is this a happy ending for the environment? Oh, and by the way, the people in these depopulating regions aren’t doing well at all. The locales in America that are losing population have some of the worst social indicators of well-being, with deaths of despair being the most tragic metric. Needless to say, these are rarely nice places to visit. Buildings that are unoccupied decay, rust and slowly fall down. The sense of missing people is sad. These are economically depressed places too, with many businesses closed and sales dwindling in the others because of too few customers. What happens to real estate prices in areas that are depopulating? In Detroit, rural West Virginia, and rural Japan the answer is the same. When sellers vastly exceed buyers in a town that is losing people, many properties cannot catch a bid at any price, and so they go all the way to zero. Investing to maintain real estate that nobody will buy or rent is a guaranteed way to lose money, and so a great deal of property in such places is just left to decay. Meanwhile, the recent population trend of Detroit, rural West Virginia, and rural Japan is the future almost everywhere else. Do we think this will be fine? In fact, almost all investment is based on the assumption of growth. Who would invest in a store, factory or company if every year sales will be less than the year before? We haven’t even begun to talk about the impact of declining demographics on things like pensions and social benefits programs. But we already know the answer. Detroit went bankrupt. Japan is struggling under a mountain of debt. West Virginia gets by because of spending from the Federal government. When social safety nets go bust, the results are catastrophic for regular people. In Russia in the 1990s, life expectancy plunged when safety nets disappeared. If America or another developed country goes bankrupt or can no longer afford social spending due to population decline and aging, the human cost will be staggering. The arc of history is moving toward pronatalism. Do progressives just plan to just cede one of the most important issues of the future to the right? Demographic decline is not a made-up problem but a looming calamity that anyone who understands arithmetic and compounding should be able to understand. A post of mine from this Wednesday, which went viral and was retweeted by @ElonMusk included a New York Times chart showing that births plunged by an average of 5% around the world between 2022 and 2023. If GDP numbers where down 5% year over year, we would be talking about little else, and yet births keep dropping, every year. The world of the future will be pulled hard in a pro-natal direction. Just as tragedy and continued demographic threat has turned Israel toward pronatalism, so the severe stress that is coming will bend the United States and most countries in that direction. Do progressives just plan to deny the crisis until it is plain to all, and leave the issue to conservatives? Do progressives believe that the right would do a better job with this than they would? Does history suggest that? A lot of conservatives heed the advice of Napoleon: “Never interfere with your enemy when he is making a mistake” and revel in the very low birthrates of those on the political left. That is shortsighted and will leave us all worse off. We will not remember well those who ignore this growing problem, or treat it like a political football, on either side. Progressives are supposed to have a positive vision for the future The depressing view of the antinatalism sub on Reddit (221K members, nearly all on the left), is that humanity should simply wind down because life is not worth living. That nihilistic outlook is surprisingly prevalent on the left today. Why aren't such ideas being forcefully rejected? By every objective measure, life is better today than it was for most of human history and nearly everyone is glad to be alive. Progressives of the past would not understand people like this at all. The left of the past always had a positive vision of a bright human future, even when their policy prescriptions weren’t so great. Just look at every political poster ever. This strange despair about the future, so prevalent on the left today, would be out of place in any other era. Those who care about the long run will surely have to turn toward pronatalism in some form. Because of how far birthrates have fallen, the status quo can’t hold. Given that, wouldn’t it better to lead on this than to follow? The most effective solutions are cultural, and in culture, progressives have real power Is the left powerless on falling birthrates? Hardly! Remember that it was progressives who took the lead when it seemed that overpopulation was looming and have been quite successful (much too successful in fact) in using culture, persuasion, technology and education to shift birthrates lower. That power has not gone away. There is a lot of low hanging fruit to lift birthrates if the willpower is there: · Educate young people (especially in high-school health class) on the fertility window and the commonness of unplanned childlessness. Lack of planning and awareness early on is the biggest reason people fail to have the children they desire. Since the average woman will have fewer children than she wanted, just helping young people to know the terrain will go a long way toward solving the problem. · Shorten education tracks, created with men in mind, to accommodate the timescales of women who hope to have families. · Talk up marriage, the preferred vehicle for having a family for people across the spectrum. · Reject environmental or other doomerism that leads anti-natal sentiment. · Simply explain that low birthrates are a problem and that our society needs more children to thrive. Most people want to do good in the world and are already looking for how. ‘Have and raise children’ may be the best answer today. (As Israel, France and the Republic of Georgia have all found, simple pronatal messages can remarkably effective.) Shares are greatly appreciated!

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Helen Duignan
Helen Duignan@HelenDuignan2·
Irish Times refers to the male Minneapolis crazed child killer as “she”. Coz you know…. Girls are notorious for being obsessed with guns, violence & child murder. 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀 EVEN Pat Kenny on @NewstalkFM this morning had the sense to refer to him with the correct pronouns. And that’s saying something. #HowLowCanYouGo #Minneapolis irishtimes.com/world/us/2025/…
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John McGuirk
John McGuirk@john_mcguirk·
Before his first game Ruben Amorim said "you are going to see an idea". Well, we've seen it now, and it's fair to say it's not the greatest idea in the history of football.
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Dan O'Brien
Dan O'Brien@danobrien20·
Brilliant piece by Matthew Syed in today's London Times. It has enormous relevance in the Irish political context. One quibble. What he describes as 'hyperliberalism' is really illiberalism. My definition of woke/illiberal left ideology in a column last year. thetimes.com/comment/column…
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Brian Stepaside
Brian Stepaside@brian_stepaside·
@OdohertyI64991 @DavQuinn The most scared I’ve ever been matching a movie (The Omen scariest movie) the tapping on the window was the clincher.
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Ian O'Doherty
Ian O'Doherty@OdohertyI64991·
@DavQuinn I'll always love Salem's Lot because...this youtu.be/w1unHCE_Npw?si… Scared the absolute shite out of me. My old man looked over and realised that I had gone completely white and stopped breathing. I was 10. I've spent my life looking for the same scare. Never found it.
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Football Tweet ⚽
Football Tweet ⚽@Footballtweet·
Roy Keane getting emotional when he sees a picture of his mum and dad. 🥹 The way Ian Wright handles it. 🔝 What a lovely moment between two legends of the game. ❤️ 🎥 @WeAreTheOverlap
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Pat
Pat@Pat98113180·
@danobrien20 Ireland is the worst worst run country in the entire world.
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Dan O'Brien
Dan O'Brien@danobrien20·
Ireland, like the rest of Europe, is weak and facing side-lining and threats in a new era of great power assertiveness. Ireland's political class has proved itself, so far, to be bad even by the standards of our peers at identifying and prioritising vital national interests in this changing environment. Another president who tries run a parallel foreign policy is the last thing that it is needed. My latest column discusses.
Dan O'Brien@danobrien20

Almost no foreigners could name the presidents of big European countries like Germany and Italy, never mind of smaller ones like Austria or Portugal. Like those countries, the Irish presidency is not designed to be an international figure but a largely ceremonial domestic one.

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Brian Stepaside
Brian Stepaside@brian_stepaside·
@declanganley Is it any wonder the West is collapsing when people are being replaced by pooches !
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Declan Ganley
Declan Ganley@declanganley·
Ireland has had an Army since before the foundation of the state, right up until the current day. If someone is running to be the commander in chief of our Army, they should have the decency to acknowledge it exists and honour those that serve in it today and have served in it back for generations. For too long the Irish Army's legitimacy was challenged and traduced from certain quarters. I served in the the Irish Army Reserve for the best part of twenty years, it exists, Ireland does have an Army and one with a very proud tradition. Our Army deserves vastly better treatment than it gets from establishment Ireland and to have as its commander in chief accept its existence, its legitimacy and someone who holds the institution in the high regard and respect that it merits. @defenceforces
RGill@robggill

Catherine Connolly certainly is not fit for the constitutional role of Supreme Commander of Defence Forces, considering she thinks we don't have an Army. Maybe visit the memorial to lost Defence Forces Personnel in Merrion Sq, Catherine.

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Brian Stepaside
Brian Stepaside@brian_stepaside·
@DavQuinn Sure you know yourself David. Not Catholic so nothing to see here.
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Brian Stepaside
Brian Stepaside@brian_stepaside·
@adrianweckler Listening to the media you would think there was no issue with EV charging. All part of the climate change cult.
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Brian Stepaside
Brian Stepaside@brian_stepaside·
@robertburke84 They are so far up their own arses they can’t see what hypocrites they are
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Robert Burke
Robert Burke@robertburke84·
Correct me if I’m wrong, but didn’t many of the same group of people sign a letter earlier this year with the heading “We stand for freedom of expression”? That didn’t last long. irishexaminer.com/news/arid-4168…
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Brian Stepaside
Brian Stepaside@brian_stepaside·
@DavQuinn Too much like hard work having children for the current generation. Would get in the way of the multiple yearly hols.
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Elaine Mullally ☘️
Elaine Mullally ☘️@mullallyelaine·
When I ran in the general election last November my top 3 priorities were, housing, cost of living and immigration, yet people voted for the parties, I’ve no idea why ?
Elaine Mullally ☘️ tweet media
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gript
gript@griptmedia·
KEVIN MYERS: "Nothing sums up the strutting blowhards of Ireland's ruling class better than their brain-dead idea that a modern economy can be literally powered by the forces generated by hot air." gript.ie/myers-ireland-…
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Brian Stepaside
Brian Stepaside@brian_stepaside·
@DavQuinn @TheSundayIndo Exactly David. It sounds crazy that it needs to be said that nobody is more concerned regarding children’s welfare and their upbringing than their parents.
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