Quote:
Originally Posted by kool maudit
Having a kid makes me more acutely aware of the ambient, zero-population-growth messaging.
People can do as they like. But one argument that really gets me is the one where "I don't want my child to grow up in this world".
As readers of the foreign affairs thread know, I'm bearish. I think this decade hosts either a broad European war or a global one, and economic decline is a certainty.
Likely everyone, though, I'm the product of an unbroken line of ancestors, a line that goes back into creatures that weren't even human. And much more recently, I am pretty sure that at least a significant part of them lived lives like:
- Highland Scottish pig thief
- Victorian East London industrial worker
- Cornish serf
- Roman-era murder victim
and on down into proto-human lives that pretty much resemble those of Sasquatch.
So it's like... it's fine. I'm glad to be here. I'm grateful to all of them. I don't know what's coming but my line has likely had worse.
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This is an interesting take and one that I've had to consider as well. In the worst part of the pandemic my family doctor with young kids a few years older than mine literally asked me if I regretted having children after a doomsday talk about the pandemic and Climate Change. Thankfully he seems to be in a better mental space these days.
In any case it made me consider that question. And my answer was similar to yours. There's no perfect stable time to have kids. 9/11 freaked everyone out and we thought World War was upon us. My dad told me about the Cold War growing up and the fear of nuclear annihilation. I was born in the pit of recession in AB during the energy crisis of the 80's when you could buy a defaulted mortgage for $1.
In spite of all the difficulties I don't regret having kids for a second. I can't imagine my sons not being here. No matter how challenging the future, humanity will adapt and they will have lives that are worth living. Life, although imperfect, is worth fighting for.