Global News Podcast - The Global Story: Pronatalism - Make America procreate again?
Episode Date: March 30, 2025Malcolm and Simone Collins hope to have 10 children to help avoid what they see as a pending demographic collapse. They tell Lucy Hockings that as pronatalists they want to promote the dangers of fall...ing fertility rates and encourage other people to have more children.
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Today we're bringing you a conversation I have with a family called the Collinsers, who join me from their farmhouse in Pennsylvania.
By any measure, they already have a large family.
We are a family of six with a five-year-old, a three-year-old, a two-year-old and an almost
one-year-old and another baby on the way.
But they want many more.
That's because the Collins' have a unique approach to family.
They're pronatalists.
I would love to have as many children as I can physically have.
So basically until my uterus is removed in a C-section that goes a little wrong.
For them, it's a solution for what they see as a demographic collapse facing countries
like the US.
And whereas many people will see their approach as extreme, there's increasing evidence that
their ideas have traction at the heart of the Trump administration.
We want more babies to be born in America.
We want more babies.
We need them.
We need them.
They say their aims are a pragmatic solution to a pending catastrophe.
But is there a darker side to their mission to make America procreate again?
I'm Lucy Hockings.
From the BBC World Service, this is the Global Story.
I can speak to our Washington correspondent, Nomiya Iqbal.
Hi, Nomiya.
Hey, Lucy, how are you?
Hey, good. You're with us today because a little earlier, I had a conversation with
a couple, Malcolm and Simone Collins, and we really want your help in putting that conversation
into some context.
Great. Let's do it.
Simone, can you just describe to me where you live with your family and what your family
looks like?
Our house is surrounded by a beautiful field that has fireflies in the summer and it's
adjacent to the Valley Forge National Park, which is quite a large park in our area.
While our oldest is in kindergarten, our youngest are either with me or with neighbors who live
right next to us. How would you actually define pronatialism?
Pronatialism is about bringing attention to falling fertility rates and the geopolitical
and economic and social consequences of this and looking for realistic and non-coercive solutions.
So if this is a solution, Simone, pronatialism,
what is the main problem that you would say you're worried about?
With demographic collapse, I'm worried not about the elite tech people that are often attributed with championing this cause, but rather the most vulnerable people in society.
Like with climate change, demographic collapse disproportionately affects the people who are most dependent on social services, on governments working, on medical assistance from governments. And when you run out of taxpayers
who can fund those programs, including pensions,
infrastructure development, police, fire security,
things like that, you have huge swaths of people
who are not only vulnerable,
who not only don't have enough money for food
or medical care, but who will likely die.
So this is a very serious and very scary issue.
And if governments can't figure out how to continue to support the vulnerable people in their societies
when they run out of a taxpaying base due to so many old people, we are in
really big trouble.
So Nomi, Malcolm and Simone were explaining to me a couple of the ideas that seem very important in their lives, but can you help us understand how their definitions fit into a wider view?
They gave us the definition of pronatalism, but it's actually more of an umbrella term,
isn't it, for quite a broad range of beliefs?
It is. So a general definition would be it's any attitude or any policy that's pro-birth that basically encourages reproduction.
So any view that basically considers parenthood as the most amazing thing that you can do,
the most powerful, incredible role. And so basically, pronatalists think that people
should have more babies. Others go further. They think it should be state-sponsored. And
then you have this kind of crossover with those who are anti-abortion and they believe in total abortion bans.
What seems to unite all pro-natalist phenomena is this concern with population decline and
Malcolm and Simone talked about this a lot, this idea of demographic collapse. What exactly
is that and are they right to be concerned?
Well it means that there is a decline in birth rates and that is true.
So for a country in the developed world like the US to increase or maintain its population,
it needs a birth rate of 2.1 children per woman on average and that's known as the replacement rate.
So here in the US, the fertility rate fell in 2023 to 1.62.
That's a record low. And
then last year it was 1.78. So it climbed up, but that's still low, especially if you
think back to 1960, it was 3.65. And so if you're a pronatalist, generally speaking,
your argument, well, certainly on the extreme end, I would say, of that movement, your argument
would go something like this. Birth rates are falling. If we don't take dramatic action, we're going to witness the extinction
of entire societies. The economy will collapse. Entire races and countries will be wiped out
because of lower fertility rates.
Nomi, I've been speaking to quite a few people and asking them what their thoughts are around
pro-natalism and I'm surprised how many people haven't actually heard of it. How long has it been
around for?
I mean, it's not a new concept. If you read the Bible, you've got, you know, be fruitful
and multiply. And then there are lots of other religious traditions and they go all the way
back to, I think it's Louis 14th France. They had a policy in France of encouraging large families
back in 1666. There was basically this edict offering tax privileges to fathers of 10 or
more children. And that was aimed at increasing the population, strengthening the nation.
You had Soviet Russia as well. They wanted to respond to population losses during and
after World War II. The goal was increase the birth rates, bolster the workforce.
And then even here in the US in 1920s America, women had the right to vote.
They could go to work.
And so there were lots of concerns about what that meant in regards to having babies.
And now we've seen this resurgence, guess of pronatalism because you do have
this modern tech look to it don't you? You have many in Silicon Valley who have taken
a big interest in pronatalism.
Simone, you're outlining a really big problem as you see it, but part of your solution is
intensely personal in that you're having lots of children.
Malcolm, how many would you like to have?
Oh, well, that's not really my choice as the husband.
So I'll shoot that to Simone.
I would love to have as many children as I can physically have. So basically until
my uterus is removed in a c-section that goes a little wrong or I am unable to carry more
pregnancies, I will keep having children, 10, 14, however many I can have. So literally, Simone,
you are putting yourself at risk, your life at risk for this. That's correct. Yes.
Does that frighten you?
I'm really not afraid of losing my life in a pregnancy or compromising my health.
This is something that throughout history has been something that women have gladly taken on.
Basically, in the past, women died in childbirth at around the same rate that men died in battle. And yet you hear plenty of stories throughout history of both men and women being very excited to further their values to support their families and their countries by doing these things, respectively.
You must worry for her as well though, Malcolm. This is your wife endangering her life in order to have children. People have asked me, they go, oh, you know, would you stop her from doing this? Right. And I'm like,
well, but then that's stopping one of my kids from coming into existence. Like, and I've interacted
with my kids, I love my kids. And I appreciate what she goes through and the risk she puts
herself through and her body through. I also understand that if I tell her to stop,
I'm functionally erasing all future kids we have from existence.
Like if an intruder had your wife and your kid at gunpoint,
and they're like, choose, everybody
knows the right choice in that situation.
It's just that the way our society views kids right now,
we assign no value to the life of a child that isn't born or conceived yet.
But Malcolm, I know for both of you it's not just a question of how many children you have.
It's kind of the other qualities that that child also has too. And you use a lot of data
and you make other considerations when it comes to having a child. Can you talk us through that data?
So one thing that we do with our embryos is called polygenic risk score selection PGTP,
which is a more advanced version of the typical pre-implantation genetic testing done by many
couples who do IVF already. This has been done for over 10 years. This is just a more
advanced and detailed version of it. This allows us to look at which embryos have higher
risks of things like cancer, which we're very concerned about, and then have the higher cancer risk children later, with hopes that
once they're adults, they're more likely to have access to screening and cures that will
save their lives. Now, PGTP also enables families to test for things like height and intelligence,
which are considered very controversial terms. But when you look
at parents' interest in giving their children the best advantages possible, their willingness
to pay for things like test prep courses and send them to all these special tutoring sessions,
we really have trouble seeing a big difference between looking at an embryo's odds of having
high educational attainment or high earnings versus trying to
intervene after they are born. What about after the children are born and the names that you choose
to give your children? Because you obviously, your approach isn't just before they're born,
it's after as well. We want to give our children very strong signals in many ways throughout their
lives that we have high expectations for them that they belong
to a culture that expects them to contribute to a better future and to the betterment of humanity.
We also want a culture that differentiates them from the rest of society because we found that
what we call the urban monoculture, basically the predominant culture in most developed countries
and most urban areas, is very toxic. As we can see through declining birth rates, it is a sterilizing culture.
So we give our children names like Octavian and Torsten, Titan and industry to show them,
among many other things, that they are different and they are not like these other people,
because we want to protect them from something we find to be very harmful.
Nomi, the Collins has talked about the qualities that they want their children to have. So
it's not just about having lots of babies, it's the kind of babies, the qualities that
these children have. Is that also quite common among pronatalists?
It's interesting, isn't it? The pronatalists, many of them don't want to just increase the
birth rate, some want to sort of optim optimize the children being born. You get those who are pro-family and pro-naclist. I think that's probably how
I would try and separate the two. And not everyone who is pro-having kids probably tests
their embryos to the extent that the Collins family do or even can afford to do it. So
you do get families who do the common testing to make sure their unborn child is healthy, not at risk of any hereditary diseases. But whilst
the numbers doing what the Collins family is doing is much smaller, I think there is
actually a huge push by the Silicon Valley tech world, prominent figures in the tech
industry. They're not just passive observers observers but they're almost becoming like active participants in this so-called
reproductive revolution. They're investing so much money, like millions and millions
in startups focused on
fertility and genetic technologies to try and encourage
so-called super babies. And of course that is just
ethically hugely controversial.
So far Nomiya we've looked at how pronatalism is influencing the Collins's approach to their
own family and how they're raising their children. But next I'm going to ask them about how they
think that should apply to families across the US. Sing. Join us each week for a closer look at the lives of some of the world's billionaires. From Minecraft creator Marcus Person to basketball star LeBron James.
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With me is Nomiah Ekbal and I've also been speaking to pro-natalists Malcolm and Simone
Collins.
So we've talked about your personal lives and how you're raising your family. But pro-natalism is
a part of a movement that you want to start as well. How are you planning to scale up this
approach that you yourselves are taking and make it something bigger?
That's not our goal at all is to scale this up. We are one experiment to get through the crucible
of fertility collapse. Right now-
You're encouraging others to do it though, Malcolm. This is something you'd like other people to do.
No, I'm encouraging others to find new and their own way of fertility collapse. Right now- You're encouraging others to do it though, Malcolm. This is something you'd like other
people to do.
No, I'm encouraging others to find new and their own way of doing this. I would be disheartened
if people tried to copy exactly what my wife are doing, because what my wife and I are
doing with our family is an experiment, and it's an experiment that might fail. And what
the Pernadalist movement really is, is it's a collection of people running with their families, their own experiment about how they might modify older traditions or older ways
of living or come up with entirely new ways of living.
And it's one of the reasons why internally the movement is so diverse.
You know, we're about to go to NatalCon, and when I go there, I am meeting and friendly
with people of radically different traditions,
whether they are a traditional Catholic or a transhumanist Mormon or people like techno
Puritans like us. And that's one of the most exciting things about the movement.
Can I ask you about some of the other solutions that people have to falling fertility, that
economic policies, for instance, should just be better. Subsidized
childcare, tax breaks, housing that's more affordable.
There's a really big difference between family-friendly policy, that is to say, things
that parents would love to see, and policies that will actually help families have more
children and encourage families to have more children. It has been pretty clearly shown that sending people free childcare or giving them very
generous maternity leave or giving them payments for having children will not meaningfully increase
birth rates. Hungary has spent 5 to 6% of its GDP on really expensive programs encouraging parents
to have children that really just aren't moving the needle enough. So Malcolm, what about just straight immigration? Bring in more people to America.
The most persistent and durable trend tied to falling fertility rates is the more income a group has within a country,
or the more income a country has, the lower its fertility rate on average.
Why is it the less money you have, the more kids you have?
It's about not being willing to sacrifice your current lifestyle to have more kids. To the
question of just strict immigration, this is a purely predatory policy. If we look right now
at Latin America, we are across Latin America seeing a fertility rate collapse much sharper and
much steeper than what Europe has gone through or what the United States has gone through with Latin America collectively falling below
repopulation rate all the way back in 2019. So if you're talking about solving it with immigration
in the United States, you're literally just victimizing other countries that take the time
to train and educate and spend tax dollars on people when they're in the parasitic phase of life.
And then we get them during their productive phase of life.
Yeah, it might be all well and good for us, but it's hurting them.
Simone, a really important point that I think listeners would want me to put to you is that
when you describe pronatalism, a lot of people are going to think it sounds a lot like eugenics.
What's the difference?
The difference between eugenics and what we practice, which we call polygenics, comes
down to consent and individual choice. Eugenics, by definition, involves basically establishing
these are good traits in genes, these are bad traits in genes, and on a population level,
we are going to try to maximize the good genes and minimize the bad genes. So one trait that may be very disadvantageous today could be
the lifesaver of tomorrow, depending on how conditions change. As a result, it's really
important to have a diverse population and to allow families to select for traits that they
think are important. And that's what we're all about. For example, even though we could theoretically
with polygenic risk score testing,
screen autism out of our children,
like many parents want to do, we don't.
Because we actually think that there are a lot of benefits
to certain types of autism, which are within our family.
So the big difference comes down to coercion.
Is a society on the whole being forced to do or not do this thing with regard to how they have children?
And about the importance of diversity and traits and understanding that there is no such thing as a universally good or bad trait.
I asked the Collins's something I think they're asked a lot, Nomi, about the children that they're having, the quality of the children. When they are accused of or compared to eugenicists who only want certain
races or classes to procreate, they say they're different. They say pronatalists are not like
that. But is that true?
I imagine pronatalists would never go around saying, we only want white people to be born.
We only want white children. I think, however, when you look at the movement more closely, A
think, however, when you look at the movement more closely, there is a fine line between
the concern about birth rates in the developed world and the great replacement theory. This
is considered racist. It posits that white Americans and Europeans are being replaced
by non-white immigrants.
I was asking the Collins's immigration why a solution wasn't just to bring in more people
into America.
Many would say that the Collins's do have a point there, but it does leave them open
to this argument that certainly liberals would make, which is if you want to increase birth
rates, if you want to address the decline in population, then why not have
more immigration? Why not bring people over from other countries? It has proven to be
effective. Net immigration is actually the main reason why the U.S. population is currently
growing. But then you do get those who are skeptical about pro-natalists' claims that
this is just about economic reasons. They would say those, certainly, who are sceptical about pro-natalists' claims that this is just about economic reasons,
they would say those certainly who are involved in pretty far right politics are more concerned
about just quite bluntly having white babies and that they want to protect a vision of
a more European culture. I mean the hard policy reality is that raising birth rates enough to address the problems
of population aging and eventual decline is impossible on the time scale required.
Legal immigration, interestingly in this country, is a bipartisan issue.
President Donald Trump has said he wants legal immigration.
Of course, illegal immigration is incredibly contentious.
But, as I say, there are those who would argue
that immigration would be the way to solve declining birth rates.
It would probably be the most effective way of doing it compared to having more babies.
We're speaking to you ahead of the annual Natalism Conference.
You've mentioned it already, Malcolm.
It's happening in Austin this weekend, and you are going to be sharing the stage though with some eugenics
advocates and some people who promote extreme views that you yourself have said you don't agree
with, including I know Kevin Dolan. And he says that eugenics and pro-natalism positions are very
much aligned. Malcolm, are you comfortable when you have to share a platform like that with someone like Kevin?
You know, it's a very different way of seeing the world.
I personally, and as I've said, what I like about the pronatalist movement
is the diversity of views within it.
And that when I go to the pronatalist conference,
I get to hear ideas and perspectives that I don't get to hear anywhere else.
There's been this investigation, Nomi, into the organizer, Kevin Dolan, and they found
his pseudonym Twitter account. And on that he shares homophobic, racist, anti-Semitic
views as well. And you mentioned that great replacement theory. He promotes that conspiracy
theory as well, and said that eugenics and pro-natalism positions
are very much aligned. How do you think Nomi of the Collins' keep a distance between themselves
and these groups when actually they're sharing the same platform with them?
Well, the way they keep the distance is just by saying, don't they, that we don't agree
with them. We agree with the actual movement of pro-natalism. We agree with the concept
of increasing birth rates,
but we don't share that view.
That's why you do get critics of the pronatalist movement
who say, well, if you want to advance this movement,
if you believe that this is the right way
to increase birth rates,
then you've got to look at who else is joining you
with that message.
And just also worth saying that critics of pronatalism, they say it
doesn't just overlap with racism.
They also are concerned about misogyny.
They think that the sort of the pronatalist movement, certainly again, the
more extreme parts of it view women as breeding machines whose job is to
repopulate the earth.
When Donald Trump entered the White House for a second time this year, Nomiya, his two
top officials in his new administration, JD Vance, the vice president, and Elon Musk,
are both men who have been very supportive of pro-natalism in the past.
Have they actually used their platforms though to push pro-natalist ideas?
Well, Elon Musk is constantly accompanied by his child everywhere he goes, whether it's
the Oval Office, whether he's on Air Force One and what have you. And he recently welcomed
his 14th child with another woman. But he is someone that's completely on record for
saying that human population is on the verge of collapse. I mean, he's really sowed panic over it. And he is saying that low birth rates present this huge risk to civilization, much
more than global warming, he claims. You've got JD Vance, the vice president. He has three
children. We know he's had a lot to say about women who don't have babies in the past, calling
them childless cat ladies. Before he was elected, he downplayed it. But
when he gave his first speech as vice president, this was at the March for Life in Washington,
D.C., regularly held every year by those who are anti-abortion and those who call themselves
pro-life. He said that he opposes abortion because, to quote him, he wants more babies
in the United States of America. And then also another key member of Donald Trump's administration is Sean Duffy. He
was confirmed as the transportation secretary. And shortly after that, he circulated an order
telling his department to give preference to communities with marriage and birth rates
higher than the national average when awarding grants.
The cons, as I know, definitely feel like this new Trump administration poses a huge
opportunity for them, given what you've just said, you can see why.
Definitely. And, you know, Donald Trump is also very closely aligned with the tech world.
Fertility generally is becoming this sort of pet project in Silicon Valley.
I think in 2023, there was about $174 million invested in it. You've got Sam Altman, he's the head
of Open AI. He wants to have a big family. He's investing in experimental fertility technology.
It says start up working to make egg cells out of other cells in the body, which basically
means that a woman without viable eggs or even two men could make a baby.
You've got some that are experimenting with using artificial wombs.
And, you know, in some ways this technology forward vision of
pronatalism has become a religion.
And so I can see why families like the Collins would look at the Trump
administration as a real great opportunity for them to push forward
their philosophy.
Nomiya, thanks so much.
Ani, thanks so much, Lucy.
Pronatialism now has two very powerful advocates
right at the heart of government,
NJD Vance, the vice president, and Elon Musk.
Simone, what are your expectations of those two
men in office? Simone McAllister
Elon Musk is a little bit busy with Doge, so I don't expect him to be very involved in
pro-natalist policy, but he's been always a huge advocate of pro-natalist policies,
as well as raising awareness about demographic collapse. We are profoundly grateful for that.
We're thrilled that JD Vance is Vice President and that in his first speech as vice president,
he talked about the importance of America having more babies.
When you look not just at these two men,
but many people within the Trump administration,
you can see that pro-natalism is really permeated
throughout the entire organization from Carolyn Leavitt,
who sometimes brings her infant into work with her,
to just the number of children
that members of the administration have.
We know we're talking five, six, seven. You can see that these are people who just fundamentally
agree that children are good and that the future is important. And we find that to be incredibly
helpful. We have submitted executive order drafts to the administration for low-hanging fruit that
we think could make lives a lot easier for parents and increase the total fertility rate of the United States. We have very high hopes for this administration.
And thanks so much to you for listening. Wherever you're listening in the world, this has been
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