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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 27, 2023

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I would reform the education system to strongly encourage people who are smarter and more capable to have more children. And for people in general who are capable and responsible to not fail at the task, which should be the majority, to have children.

I strongly doubt that you can do this, short of sterilization by IQ score. Any benefits to having kids will wind up as the underclass neglecting an extra kid and pocketing the money.

This is anachronistic when we live in an age where even many under-achieving demographics have bellow replacement fertility rate.

You only need smarter people to have more children. It has happened historically too you know. I outright say encourage those capable to have more children. You know that we can socially shame or even punish people who are absentee parents.

Indeed, the sacrifices relating to being a parent, in an environment where it is more encouraged and more seen as the default, could lead to people who are more capable taking such role.

Especially taking in mind my suggestion for pushing back on higher education for the 20s and all other things I suggested.

And yes designing bonuses that do target in some way capabilities might be a way to do this too.

You seem to be responding to a scenario of just giving everyone as much "gibs" possible to have children which isn't what I argue for.

It is impossible to do the things you don't even try to do and where the prevailing sentiment is fear, uncertainty, and doubt. Isn't this culture of naysaying towards strong attempts for pro natalism in itself part of the reason why this isn't happening? We have no choice but to try such measures.

Do you have any alternative?

Also, my view is that extreme supposedly based suggestions or implementations are the enemy of doing "based" things in an ethical manner. This extreme suggestion ends in the comfortable place for our dominant ideology, which is to do nothing. Plus I don't actually want to do the unnecessarily extreme option. Compare the modern success in eliminating certain genetic diseases with family planning policies with the also historical event of certain regimes previously in the 20th century that murdered people who had genetic diseases. If we compare the two and also compare doing nothing, the family planning policies that strongly reduced genetic diseases of thalassemia and tay sachs disease were the best option by far over two really bad alternatives. And family planing worked because people listened to the advice and modified their breeding accordingly. The mentality of the naysayer would have had as believe that such policies would be impossible.

We don't need to sterilize the underclass to do my suggestion.

If you're already at the point where you can actually get the education system/government to agree to this as a goal, actually implementing it would be child's play. You've already blown up the existing orthodoxy completely to get here after all, there's nothing stopping you from just putting minimum parental IQ levels for the bonuses. If someone from the underclass can actually qualify for a subsidy accurately and competently designed to encourage people with good genes to procreate, that's a net benefit.