Consider This from NPR - They want America to have more babies. Is this their moment?

Episode Date: April 7, 2025

Billionaire Elon Musk told Fox News recently that falling birth rates keep him up at night. It's a drum he's been beating for years.Musk is one of the world's most visible individuals to elevate this ...point of view. Vice President JD Vance also talks about wanting to increase birthrates in the U-S. But it's not just them. There are discussions across the political spectrum about birth rate decline and what it means for the economy. One response to this decline is a cause that's been taken up by the right, and it has a name – Pronatalism. Many of its advocates met up recently in Austin, Texas, at "Natal Con." Pronatalists think they have a friendly audience in the White House. How do they want to use it?For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 E.A. Elon Musk is not shy about declaring when he feels civilization is at risk. Last month he said the fate of civilization depended on the outcome of an election for one seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court. I feel like this is one of those things that may not seem that it's going to affect the entire destiny of humanity, but I think it will. Another existential risk according to Musk, artificial intelligence. Only 20% chance of annihilation. That's a lot better than I thought.
Starting point is 00:00:26 That's him on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast earlier this year. But Musk has said the biggest danger civilization faces by far is falling birth rates. In a recent Fox News interview, he said it keeps him up at night. The birth rate is very low in almost every country. And unless that changes, civilization will disappear. And Musk isn't the only one in the Trump administration focused on this issue. Please help me welcome your Vice President of the United States, J.D. Vance. In one of his earliest speeches as Vice President, J.D. Vance addressed the March for Life, the annual anti-abortion rights rally in Washington. So let me say very simply, I want more babies in the United States of America.
Starting point is 00:01:10 Musk and Vance are two of the most high-profile Americans pushing this point of view, but they're not alone. The birthrate decline and its potential economic consequences are a growing policy concern on the political right and the left. And on the right, some of the people worried about this have coalesced around an ideological movement called pro-natalism. Some of its advocates recently gathered at a conference organized by a man named Kevin Dolan. An NPR was there. And we have a powerful opportunity this year in particular to have conversations that can become the executive orders, the white papers, the grant proposals,
Starting point is 00:01:45 that can change the course of nations in the 2030s. Consider this. Pro-Natalists think they have a friendly audience in the White House. How do they want to use it? From NPR, I'm Ari Shapiro. From NPR, I'm Ari Shapiro. Spend some quality time with people like Billie Eilish, Questlove, Ariana Grande, Stephen Colbert, and so many more. We ask questions you won't hear asked anywhere else. Listen to the Fresh Air podcast from NPR and WHYY. Shortwave thinks of science as an invisible force, showing up in your everyday life. Powering the food you
Starting point is 00:02:46 eat, the medicine you use, the tech in your pocket. Science is approachable because it's already part of your life. Come explore these connections on the shortwave podcast from NPR. This moment feels ripe with opportunity for people who want Americans to have more kids. In Elon Musk and JD Vance, they see key White House figures interested in their cause. That was the backdrop for their gathering in Austin, Texas. It's called NatalCon. NPR's Lisa Hagan was there
Starting point is 00:03:25 and has this story of what she found. Simone Collins in her thick-rimmed round glasses is one of the more visible faces of pronatalism. On purpose. My whole entire Etsy get up right now, it's intentionally cringe. She's here at NatalCon in her signature look, which she describes as techn-pure-tan.
Starting point is 00:03:45 There should obviously be more cybernetics in my outfit, but we are combining chunky hipster glasses and a lot of modern equipment with a bonnet and linen clothing. Think Thanksgiving Pilgrim in a school play with a baby strapped to her back. You'll get to do that soon. That's one-year-old industry Americas. Indy's three older siblings are home with neighbors in Pennsylvania. Simone and her husband Malcolm are expecting a fifth child this year, and she's said that she's willing to die in childbirth to have as many kids as possible.
Starting point is 00:04:18 I would rather not do that, but historically, women died in childbirth at roughly similar rates to the rates at which men died protecting their land or country. The Collins' have made themselves available for profiles in pretty much every major news outlet you can think of. The number one goal we have is to make everyone universally aware of demographic collapse as a catastrophic issue. Our big focus is primarily on just signaling that this is a culture that
Starting point is 00:04:46 values family and kids and secondarily taking a regulatory foot off the neck of parents. Simone and her husband are big fans of Elon Musk. He's famous, he's got 13 kids, and he also tends to talk about falling birth rates in catastrophic terms. Nothing seems to be turning that around. Humanity is dying. That's him on Fox News recently. Musk and the Collinss are seen as members of the tech camp of pronatalist advocacy. Venture capitalism, technology like IVF and AI are key parts of their recipe for maximizing human potential via more babies. The Collinses are also very
Starting point is 00:05:26 interested in genetic engineering. Another pronatalist camp includes the more religiously motivated and believers in strict gender norms. It's referred to as the trads, as in traditional. And generally women should not have careers. They should be socially stigmatized if they have careers. That's Charles Haywood at the first natal con a couple years ago. This year, he's behind the scenes as a sponsor. He made his money as a shampoo magnate. Haywood blames birth rate declines on feminism and the overturning of what he sees as natural hierarchies of gender and race. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and his progeny are probably the single most destructive set
Starting point is 00:06:06 of laws in American history and all should be wiped forever from the history of this nation. So it may seem like a challenge to square a Charles Haywood with a Simone Collins, she's an entrepreneurial woman with a master's degree from Cambridge, but they share a commitment to spaces like Natalcon because they both believe modern culture has stopped prioritizing nuclear families and having kids. Which is not really how most demographers describe what's happening. Katherine Benjamin Guzzo is a University of North Carolina sociologist who runs the Carolina Population Center. The United States has low fertility right now. Up until the Great Recession, we were sort of humming along,
Starting point is 00:06:45 you know, right around two kids per person. Then birth rates began to fall, partly because the US succeeded in reducing teen and unintended births. America was actually a couple decades late to the declining fertility trend. It's something that's been happening at different rates all over the world. And this is true in, you know, Italy, and it's is true in Italy and it's true in Japan and it's true in many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. India has a below replacement fertility rate in some parts.
Starting point is 00:07:12 The theories about why this is happening are pretty complicated, but there's also another trend emerging. We're used to thinking of richer, more educated people having fewer children than the poor and working class. Recent research shows that tendency has actually started to reverse in many countries, including the U.S. Guzzo says surveys show most people want kids. But nowadays in this very competitive world, they have a vision of what being a good parent
Starting point is 00:07:42 means. A stable home, income, a partner, hope about the future. People are not being irrational and selfish when they're deciding not to have children. People are making a series of decisions to not have a child now, maybe in the future. And then that keeps happening because we aren't giving people the societal supports to meet their visions of having a good parent. For her, that should include things like more government funding for health care, affordable
Starting point is 00:08:07 housing, schools, child care, addressing climate change. But many pro-natalists, including Natalcon's organizer Kevin Dolan, see their biggest allies as the folks in the White House right now. Here's Dolan speaking at the conference over lunch. But the topic of demographic decline clearly matters to Elon Musk, J.D. Vance, and many others in the Trump administration, which means that the great ideas developed here can get a hearing that would not have been possible last year. Dolan left his data science job in 2021 after his anonymous Twitter account was exposed.
Starting point is 00:08:39 Among other things, he'd used it to promote the racist notion that white men are superior to other races and women. After getting docs, Dolan continued sharing his thoughts about how society should be ordered on his podcast. We're expected to lie about the existence of these hierarchies all of the time. And if our goal is to rehabilitate hierarchies of nature, then the best place to start is the most fundamental natural hierarchies which are found in the family.
Starting point is 00:09:06 And that brings us back to where we started with selective breeding. Matthew McManus is a lecturer at the University of Michigan and an expert on the modern hard-write writers Dolan takes inspiration from. The idea is essentially that our society has become excessively effeminate, weak, compassionate, and what they want to do is breed or elevate an aristocratic class that's going to be masculine, violent, not necessarily motivated by, let's call it empathy. For these thinkers, restoring this masculine culture
Starting point is 00:09:36 means feminism and multicultural democracy need to be rooted out. Women are to be subordinated to men, largely going to be responsible for managing the household, although with no real particular authority. And of course, they're going to have an awful lot of children. It's not explicit on the natal con stage, but part of Dolan's vision for the conference is to help build this world where men like him can't be doxed because they'll be in power. Dolan says his conference is nonpartisan and he invites speakers who say stuff like
Starting point is 00:10:06 this. We don't really want to market natalism to the progressive feminists. The people maxing out their fertility should be people, ideally, who won't raise their children to be gender neutral furries who want to join Antifa one day. That's a speech from the first natal con. It's a writer who goes by the pseudonym Pichi Kenan. Her work is published by a company that sells books arguing black people are inherently more criminal and less intelligent than white people.
Starting point is 00:10:34 That publisher, Passage Press, sponsored natal con this year, and its founder was a featured speaker. These are some of the elements united under the banner of pronatalism. They don't all agree on how to boost birth rates, but two years after the first natal con, this is a movement that's much closer to power than it used to be. That was NPR's Lisa Hagen.
Starting point is 00:11:00 This episode was produced by Audrey Wynn and Connor Donovan with audio engineering by Zoe Vangenhoven. It was edited by Brett Neely and Courtney Dornan. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan. It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Ari Shapiro.

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