Danny Shine
2.4K posts

Danny Shine
@megashine
For years now, Danny has been engaging in cultural hijacking using his megaphone on the streets. https://t.co/VQOJrAGPlN
London Katılım Mart 2009
418 Takip Edilen2.9K Takipçiler

@cremieuxrecueil Actually, sex causes autism. All diseases are caused by parents having sex and creating a new body that is vulnerable to disease and death. The only sure way to make sure that your child doesnt experience autism is to not have kids
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Quick update on the "autism epidemic":
- Tylenol does not cause autism
- Vaccines do not cause autism
- Autism hasn't actually increased
The entirety of the "rise" in autism is due to diagnostic drift rather than an increase in the population's liability to have autism.

Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil
Today we got TWO massive new replication studies on the association between acetaminophen usage during pregnancy and autism. So, what did they find? In Taiwan, there was a relationship between families, but nothing within families. That is, Tylenol does not cause autism.
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Danny Shine retweetledi

@DrNeilStone 3 billion..yes BILLION people never had a Covid vaccine
If Covid was anywhere NEAR as fatal as vaxxers would have you believe, we should have had a mass global population die off by now
We have not
They are lying
Have a lovely day
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Danny Shine retweetledi

@DrPlantel If you are exploiting people with cancer by selling them slow fixes that only increase the length of time of their suffering and physical torture, you are also a special kind of scum on this earth.
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@DrPlantel Does that apply to big pharmas' (MAL)treatment as well? I ask this as a man diagnosed with ATC in March '25, given 'a few weeks to live' by a drug dealer (MD) declined chemo and radiotherapy and did my own thing (involving many practices) and I'm in good health.
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@Grazy_Guru Wow. What a fabulous paper. Superb. Couldn't have put it better myself.
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Danny Shine retweetledi

@megashine, Thanks for letting me join listen and even join in at times yesterday. I hope I captured your work correctly. It will be interesting to learn.
Mapped by a lost Soul. (Wink.)
Danny Shine.
Towards a Compassionate Anti-Natalism: Ideological Territorialism, Conceptual Bereavement, and the Inner Child Paradigm
Abstract
Radical extinctionist movements, such as the recently emerged Pro-Extinction initiative, share with traditional anti-natalism a profound recognition of universal suffering across sentient life. However, their confrontational rhetoric—framed in martial and abolitionist terms—risks alienating the very populations they seek to persuade.
This paper critiques such approaches as manifestations of ideological territorialism and proposes an alternative strategy grounded in psychological insight. Central to this strategy is the concept of conceptual bereavement: the visceral grief pronatalists experience when confronted with the prospect of non-procreation, as it equates to the “death” of an already-imagined child.
In response, the paper advances a positive reframing: “Why breed when you have already an inner child to feed and raise?” By prioritising inward-directed healing and re-parenting of the self, this approach seeks to eliminate the perceived loss, foster genuine paradigm shifts, and ultimately reduce procreation without coercion or violence.
Drawing on historical parallels and practical examples, the argument contends that authentic reduction of suffering begins with repairing one’s own damaged inner child rather than external activism or extinctionist “war.”
Keywords: anti-natalism, extinctionism, conceptual bereavement, inner child, ideological territorialism, psychological persuasion, suffering reduction
1. Introduction
The anti-natalist position—that bringing new sentient beings into existence is morally problematic due to the inevitability of suffering—has long existed in philosophical discourse. In recent years, it has fractured into diverse subgroups, including more radical extinctionist variants that advocate not merely voluntary non-procreation but the eventual or active cessation of all life to eliminate suffering entirely.
One such emerging group, the Pro-Extinction movement (proextinction.com), exemplifies this trend: a small but passionate collective that acknowledges immense human and animal suffering and promotes total extinction as the only consistent solution.
proextinction.com +1
While sharing the core ethical concern with suffering, this paper argues that the movement’s approach—characterised by abolitionist zeal and implicit threats of future conflict—repeats historical errors seen in passionate but ultimately ineffective social reform efforts. Instead, a more effective path lies in psychological and introspective strategies that address the deep emotional resistance to anti-natalist ideas.
2. Ideological Territorialism and the Risks of Confrontational Strategies
Social and philosophical movements frequently fragment as they gain visibility, with subgroups claiming ownership of the “true” interpretation. Anti-natalism is no exception; once released into the cultural sphere, it dilutes as competing versions emerge, ultimately leaving the pronatalist majority largely untouched.
The Pro-Extinction manifesto and rhetoric illustrate what may be termed ideological territorialism (or tribalism): an immediate framing of the issue as a war between enlightened extinctionists and the pronatalist “enemy.” This stance adopts a martial posture—“destroy the system,” prepare for conflict if necessary—echoing the language of historical abolitionists such as William Wilberforce or John Brown, or even religious reformers like Jesus overturning the tables in the temple.
Such territorialism, while born of sincere passion and moral clarity, is strategically immature. It positions pronatalists as adversaries to be defeated rather than individuals embedded in powerful biological and cultural imperatives. Historical precedents warn against this: John Brown’s violent raid failed to rally significant support from the very slaves he sought to liberate; his small group was overwhelmed. Similarly, confrontational extremism rarely achieves mass traction when opposing a near-universal human drive (reproduction is estimated to be desired or enacted by roughly 99.9% of the population in pronatalist societies).
Moreover, explicit calls for “war” or elimination of dissenters (even if framed hypothetically) evoke comparisons to totalitarian ideologies, undermining credibility. As one discussant notes, even if the movement grew to millions, its adversarial framing would likely provoke defensive backlash rather than conversion. Effective change requires persuasion through ideology’s intrinsic power, not coercion.
3. Conceptual Bereavement: Understanding Emotional Resistance
A key psychological barrier to anti-natalist ideas is what this analysis terms conceptual bereavement. Pronatalists do not merely hold an abstract preference for children; they already experience the prospective child as their beloved offspring. The imagined child exists vividly in their emotional landscape—complete with oxytocin-driven bonding responses—long before conception.
When confronted with “do not procreate,” individuals undergo a profound sense of loss akin to bereavement. The response is often visceral: “Then what? What would we do with ourselves?” This leaves a felt void, as though the speaker is “killing” an already-present child. Mirror neurons and emotional simulation make this grief as real as the death of an actual child; the distinction between endogenous (imagined) and exogenous (born) offspring collapses subjectively.
This phenomenon explains why purely negative messaging (“stop breeding”) fails. It triggers defensive anger and existential emptiness rather than reflection. Pronatalists are not simply “selfish” or ignorant; they are responding to a deep, evolutionarily coded attachment. Any viable strategy must therefore remove the perception of loss.
4. The Inner Child Paradigm: A Positive Reframing
The proposed alternative reframes the discourse seductively rather than destructively:
“Why breed when you’ve already got an inner child to feed and raise?”
Every individual possesses an endogenous or inner child—the internal voice, the seat of emotions, urges, insecurities, and needs for nurture. This inner child manifests in daily internal dialogue (“You can’t do that,” cravings, self-criticism), emotional tantrums, and unfulfilled longings. It is the most intimate relationship possible: one eats with it, thinks with it, and lives in constant companionship.
Once recognised and nurtured, the inner child satisfies the parental impulse without requiring an external child. There is no bereavement because nothing is lost; the “child” is already present and demanding attention. This inward turn transforms anti-natalism from prohibition into liberation: individuals discover they already possess what they seek.
Practical cultivation of the inner child includes:
Internal dialogue and re-parenting: Addressing cravings or fears compassionately, as a loving adult would speak to a child (e.g., during disciplined eating: “I understand you want the sugar hit, but daddy loves you and won’t let that harm us”).
Self-soothing practices: Physical gestures such as self-hugs, affirmations (“Little [name], it’s all right”).
Shadow work and meditation: Tracking urges, the inner critic, and repressed emotions—practices akin to early Buddhist training that foster intimacy with the self rather than external distraction.
Psychedelic or entheogenic support (when approached mindfully) to amplify inward inquiry.
This approach counters the modern world’s bias toward external consumption, conquest (e.g., space exploration), and distraction, which postpones genuine self-repair.
5. The Roots of Universal Damage and the Path to Societal Health
Humanity’s pronatalist default stems from widespread psychological damage. Parents, themselves unhealed victims of their own upbringing, often “send children out to play” to gain respite, preventing the development of inner-child awareness. The result is a society of damaged adults: addicts, violent actors, political extremists, and even figures driven by unprocessed trauma (e.g., serial offenders whose early damage twisted natural curiosities into pathology).
A victim cannot effectively raise another without transmitting the “disease.” Teen suicide epidemics, endless wars, and escapist fantasies (technological or cosmic) all reflect unaddressed inner wounds. Healing one’s inner child expands empathy: contact with personal suffering heightens sensitivity to others’, turning the dial of compassion outward to encompass global and animal suffering.
Thus, anti-natalism becomes not merely ethical abstention but a call to radical self-repair. Resources and time devoted to raising another child are better spent on this essential inner work. Procreation in such a damaged state is both decadent and irresponsible; a healthy society emerges only when individuals complete their own parenting duties first.
6. Conclusion
The Pro-Extinction movement’s recognition of suffering is commendable, yet its territorial, war-like strategy is unlikely to succeed against entrenched biological and emotional realities. By contrast, a psychologically attuned anti-natalism—centred on conceptual bereavement and the inner child paradigm—offers a compassionate, persuasive alternative. It meets pronatalists where they are, reframes non-procreation as gain rather than loss, and grounds ethics in personal healing.
This inward revolution does not require mass conversion through force but cultivates voluntary shifts through repeated, gentle exposure to the truth: you already have a child on board. In doing so, it may quietly reduce new suffering while building a more empathetic, self-aware populace. Future research could empirically test these concepts through qualitative studies of pronatalist responses or interventions promoting inner-child practices.
References (selected)
Benatar, D. (2006). Better Never to Have Been: The Harm of Coming into Existence. Oxford University Press.
Pro-Extinction Movement materials (proextinction.com).
Historical analyses of abolitionism and social movements.
Psychological literature on attachment, inner child work, and shadow integration (e.g., Jungian and mindfulness traditions).
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Danny Shine retweetledi

@justsomecanuk Why shouldn't anyone be able to end their lives for whatever reason they see fit? Who owns our lives from the time we're born? For whose moral comfort are we obligated to suffer through an unwanted life?
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join us shortly.....Why did you have kids? Why did your parents have you? Why will/won't you... youtube.com/live/oEx6qWAb2… via @YouTube

YouTube
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Danny Shine retweetledi

…having a kid in this economy would be irresponsible of me. i love my life child free with no parenting woes.
⛧@RainClips__
Why does this generation seem to be so against having kids?
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Danny Shine retweetledi
Danny Shine retweetledi

@M4THm4t1C @hieireen My bff from high school has been ecstatically happily married for 35 years and she is child free by choice. Husband is an anesthesiologist. She is a successful attorney. She does more good things for the world than you do
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Danny Shine retweetledi
Danny Shine retweetledi
Danny Shine retweetledi








