Modern Wisdom - #868 - Mads Larsen - The Hidden Truth About Our Collapsing Birth Rates
Episode Date: November 23, 2024Mads Larsen is an author and journalist whose research focuses on the history of human mating ideologies. The truth can be a tough pill to swallow, but when it comes to saving humanity, even the harde...st truth is better than the softest lie. So why is Mads facing outrage for speaking a truth that could save a country? Expect to learn why Mads was cancelled for talking about Norway's declining birth rates, the key reasons why people aren’t having more kids, the underlying psychology behind modern mating, the potential interventions to fix this and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get a 25% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get a Free Gift, 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get up to 80% off everything sitewide at https://gym.sh/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM10) Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello everybody, welcome back to the show. My guest today is Mads Larsen.
He's an author and journalist whose research focuses on the history of human mating ideologies.
The truth can be a tough pill to swallow, but when it comes to saving humanity,
even the hardest truth is better than the softest lie.
So why is Mads facing outrage for speaking a truth that could save his country?
Expect to learn why Mads was canceled for talking about Norway's declining
birth rates, the key reasons why people aren't having more kids, the underlying
psychology behind modern mating, the potential interventions to fix this.
And much more.
Really dancing a tight rope today.
It is not easy to have this discussion about this topic and it come across in a balanced
way, but I really appreciate Mads for sort of putting both feet into the landmine field
and seeing if he can dance his way through.
It's fascinating and I am still perplexed as to why more people aren't paying attention
to it because sooner or later, everybody is going to be on the receiving end of this effect.
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gentlemen please welcome Mads Larsson You managed to get yourself in trouble.
Well I tried to get my country of Norway to start taking the fertility crisis seriously.
And as we've seen in many nations, people are unwilling to do that.
And yeah, that motivated some attacks along that way.
How did all of this start?
It started with an article that me and Leif Kinnair, a professional evolutionist
in psychology wrote earlier this year where we conceptualized and theorized the concept
of involuntary single women, in-syncs.
And then I did some interviews about that and people weren't happy.
They felt that talking about involuntary single women was misogynistic and they didn't
want to connect that to declining fertility.
What's the line between talking about involuntarily single women and misogyny?
Well, one of the main drivers of low fertility is that people are having
too hard of a time to find partners.
So women either do not find a partner with whom they can have children or they find one too late so
that the reproductive window is shortened. This means that women aren't having the children they
would like to have. In Norway, women would like to have 2.4 children and they're having 1.4.
The dysfunctional dating market is an important contributor to this fertility crisis.
Okay.
And how's that misogynistic?
Um, that is a bit of a puzzle that I think I have eventually managed to
solve through going through this process.
Um, many felt that, uh, if you, uh, bring the attention to how the
dating market works for women, you are somehow
blaming women for low fertility.
As an evolutionary scholar, I would never think of assigning blame to any groups.
We are born into this environment with a certain nature and that plays out differently in different
environments.
And now we've created an environment where it has become very difficult for women to
find partners.
What are the specifics of the mating psychology that are going on that are contributing to making this
environment difficult for women in that regard?
Well, we are the first societies in human history that have individual partner choice. No other society have done that before. It's always been
different extents of various degrees of arranged marriage. So when we opened this up in the 1960s,
we talked about this last year, how the six million year build up to today's mating regime.
And when we opened these mating markets up, what has happened is actually quite predictable as a
consequence of the difference between women's promiscuous attraction system
and pair bonding attraction systems. And the regular fertility researchers do not understand
these mechanisms. For everyone, it's just a big puzzle while we're no longer partnering up
and creating children. But from an evolutionary perspective, it's quite predictable.
Explain that. Think deeper for me.
It's quite predictable. Explain that.
Think deeper for me.
Well, as we talked about the last time, six million years ago with our last common ancestor
with chimpanzees, we made it promiscuously, which is what most animals do.
So there, women or females are incentivized to be very choosy.
They're supposed to give mating opportunities predominantly to the most successful males because that is the most effective way of distributing beneficial genes to the
population. And then because of the development of our species around four million years ago,
we evolved a different attraction system, pair bonding attraction system. And that's more,
say, egalitarian because then you want paternal investment from the
male and then a woman will typically then pair bond with a male of similar partner value.
So you have a promiscuous system, mating opportunities going mostly to the most attractive males,
and in a pair bonding attraction system, it spreads more evenly. But we didn't become
a pure pair bonding species. We have a mixed system. But we didn't become a pure pair bonding
species. We have a mixed system. We both have a promiscuous attraction system and a pair bonding
attraction system. And for every human community that has existed, a fundamental challenge has been
how to reconcile women's different preferences according to those attraction systems in a way
that allows functional mating. Now men are different. Their promiscuous attraction
system is very inclusive. Most men would sleep with most women, while most women would sleep
only with a small proportion of men. So what happened when we tried to introduce this system
for the first time with the second sexual revolution in the 18th century, things went
very poorly because we
didn't have contraceptives and we were so poor that breaking up was very hard and women weren't
independent, they were dependent on men. So you had a very high rise in illegitimacy because women
competed for the most attractive males and when they became pregnant, a lot of the time the man
just moved on, which wasn't allowed a century earlier. So then we had a pullback with
romanticism and we went back to reconnecting the population to pair bonding again, but then in the
1960s with birth control and post-World War II prosperity, we were able to implement this system.
And then because of this gap between women's promiscuous and pair bonding attraction systems,
we've seen an increasing stratification among men men where some men at the top get an increasing amount of mating
opportunities and then while men at the bottom are being excluded from mating, both long-term
and short-term, that means relationships and uncommitted sex respectively. And if people
can't find somebody to partner with, if they can't pair bond, it's just much less likely that they will reproduce.
So as the single rate has skyrocketed over the past four or five decades, you
also see an increase in low fertility.
What are the stats that convinced you this was an important area to look at,
both from a birth rate
standpoint, but then also from a relationship satisfaction, singleton
a standpoint as well.
Well, so we know already the fertility radius of 1.4 and, uh, experts haven't
wanted to portray this negatively.
They've said that, well, it's low, but the population is going to continue to increase.
People have an impression that centuries ahead, this will have drastic consequences.
But the fact is that with a fertility rate of 1.4, you lose one-third of your generational
size per generation.
So in only three generations, we will have lost 70% of the children.
And that is if we in Norway are able to keep a fertility rate of 1.4.
The leading experts in this field predict that the rates will just continue to decline
as they have for a long time now, not so long in Norway, but in other nations.
It seems to be a self-reinforcing process where as people get used to there being fewer
children even though they want more, for each generation people want less children.
So if our fertility rate keeps
falling, for instance, down to South Korea's level of 0.7, then in three generations, 100
people in generational sizes reduced to just four and in the next generation, one, which
means countries will be empty. And that is a very real existential threat that experts
and populations have not so far wanted to take seriously.
That's what I tried earlier this year by spurring this debate in Norway.
People weren't ready for it, but it is moving along and people are contributing.
With time, I think people will accept that this is an existential threat, perhaps the
greatest challenge of our era.
Then we perhaps can start experimenting with ways to, uh, to
find a way to motivate people to reproduce again.
Yeah.
I mean, I've been harping on about this, what to me felt like kind of late, uh,
but to the internet and maybe wider society was still outside of the
Overton window as an early adopter.
But yeah, I, I, you'll be maybe the fifth, sixth, seventh conversation that I've had on something
to do with birth rates, declining fertility.
And, um, I'm going to keep on fucking banging this drum because we can think
about how much public attention has been galvanized towards climate change,
worthy cause, something that people probably should be concerned about, but not trying to destroy the
ecosystem, so on and so forth.
Yeah.
It's not going to happen in 75 years.
There are more pressing concerns.
And my biggest learning when I started digging deep into X risks were that you
should be triaging your efforts onto the ones that are more global, more catastrophic and sooner. I mean, maybe, maybe you could look at misaligned AI, nanotechnology, and
engineered pandemics, but even those, you don't have a particularly good
prediction mechanism.
We know how many one year olds were born last year.
We know how many of them are in the same age group.
We know how many of them are in the same age group.
We know how many of them are in the same age group. We know how many one-year-olds were born last year.
We know how many there are in Norway, in the UK, in America, in Australia.
We know that number demography is destiny as it's called.
So if we know that we have a guarantee.
And one thing that some people may be thinking is why is a declining birth rate a bad thing?
I think this is one of the sort of key areas of ignorance that a lot of people have if they haven't thought about it.
So, well, the world's overpopulated in any case, or, or maybe that just means more room, or maybe that means more jobs, or maybe that means it's easy to get into good
schools or something like that.
So can you just give the overview of what a declining population means
downstream from that for the people that are alive to see it?
Yeah, absolutely.
A few weeks ago in Norway, we had this big controversy because up north,
they had to shut down a school and people were very unhappy. If every generation, you
lose a third of your generational size, there's going to be a lot of schools shut down. And
then when they grow up, there won't be enough people to step into the jobs that exist. And this across time will age the
population drastically. You can imagine if, look at a situation like South Korea's, where in three
generations you'll go from 100 to four people. Who's going to keep society running? You're just
going to have a bunch of really, really old people, and this will also change
cultural psychology. We've been very fortunate since World War II with the growing economy.
When we have to fight, when we have negative growth or stall growth, we're going to be fighting over a shrinking pie, and our species tends to get quite unpleasant in those situations.
tends to get quite unpleasant in those situations. Also, you would think this has some interesting connections on several levels with the climate crisis. One thing is that people assume that
this will be a slow decrease and that having fewer people will be good for the climate.
In a way, that is true. That is one factor, but if we're going to solve the climate crisis,
we're going to have to make a lot of progress between now and say 2050 when we're supposed
to reach net zero, and it's possible to do that.
But if we have to channel more and more of our resources toward taking care of the elderly
and we see societies start solely disintegrating and becoming we'll have more and more ghost towns
and the cultural psychology turns uncooperative, I don't think we're going to be able to make those
technological steps to allocate those resources that we need in order to get there. So I think
solving the climate crisis and other challenges that we have in the decade ahead, it's just going to be a lot harder if we have collapsing population numbers. And also, because of the climate crisis, people
are less willing to engage low fertility because they assume that it will be beneficial. So,
some people are so used to the challenge of overpopulation, which we talked about for
generations, so that switching your mind and thinking about a brand new problem that goes
against the previous concern, it's just really difficult.
But if we don't have these discussions now, things do not look good.
We're going to have to start experimenting and see what we can do soon because I'm pretty
sure very few people would want to live in societies where
there are less and less young people and where we eventually disappear.
And that is where we're headed now.
This isn't some temporary thing.
This is a really large trend and experts think it will only get worse.
So at some point we have to take this seriously and see what we might be able to do about it.
So at some point we have to take this seriously and see what we might be able to do about it.
Yeah, maybe not the best thing for us to bond over, but the UK's recent census data came out and said that we were at, I think 1.44 compared with Norway's 1.4. So just for clarity to run
those numbers again, because it's very difficult to work out what 1.4. Yeah.
Multiply by 1.4, multiply by 1.4 when you need to, or 2.1.
Um, that means that last year there were 591,072 births in England and Wales in 2023.
That's the lowest number since records began, the lowest number that
has ever been recorded 1.44.
That means that a hundred people in Britain today will have 52 grandchildren
between them and only 37 great grandchildren.
So in a hundred years time, you're talking about 63% of the
population being wiped out every hundred Norwegians, 30 great
grandchildren, and for every 100 South Koreans,
four.
Yeah, those are terrifying numbers in that we're not sounding the alarm and refusing
to talk about it.
It makes you feel like you're in that movie, don't look up.
The asteroid is heading straight for us, but out of misplaced concerns, political concerns, confusion, we're not willing
to accept the facts the way they are. And I've experienced that in Norway over the past months.
I've talked to quite a few of the leading experts and people that research fertility,
people that work on this in the government, and they all have this unified approach to this, that we can't portray
this as a negative thing.
This is what they research.
This is all they do, and they are concerned, but they're afraid that if they tell people
how serious this is, somehow the politicians won't take them seriously. They
will think they're alarmist. This could affect their career and their funds. And they're hoping,
like the current strategy among commentators in the media and among researchers, is that somehow,
those children that weren't born when women were in their early 20s and late 20s and early 30s
will now over the next 10 years be born when women are in their late 30s and their early 20s and late 20s and early 30s will now over the next 10 years be born
when women are in their late 30s and their early 40s.
So there's no data that supports that this will happen, but the researchers are assuming
that if we just wait 10 years, perhaps the fertility rate in best-case scenario will
go up to 1.7 because women around 40 will start having so many children that it really boosts the
fertility rate.
And that could happen.
It's not impossible, but it's a really puzzling strategy after we waited now for 15 years
while this has plummeted that we should wait 10 more years before we portray this negatively
because the rate could go up over the next 10 years. It seems strange to me that somebody doing research
into the literal future of the human species,
forget the kind of projected future of the environment
that the potential human progeny will inhabit climate.
This is the number of people
that are going to be around in future.
It seems odd to me that when you're able to throw soup over a Van Gogh or
glue yourself to the M25 in protest of big oil or whatever.
And, and, you know, even the more sort of down to earth data sciencey people,
Hannah Richie from our world in data, uh, who specializes in climate science,
been on the show, you know, she's, she doesn't pull any punches when she's people, Hannah Richie from Our World in Data, who specializes in climate science,
been on the show, you know, she's, she doesn't pull any punches when she's
talking about the climate, you know, she's really, and she's as, as sciencey
and evidencey as it's possible to be.
Seems odd to me that these researchers would think that they wouldn't be taken
seriously if they gave what are, to be honest, much more easily verifiable pieces of data that will occur
in a much shorter time about something that's a pretty big threat to human civilization.
Yeah, no, I mean, we will get there. South Korea, the government there is pretty clear.
They said not too long ago that this is the point of no return.
If we don't get the fertility rate up now, we're going to
disappear. We're not there yet. This is a process. Finland is a little bit ahead of Norway, a colleague
of mine. She's been running the debate there for three years. And three years ago, they had the
same anger and attacks on people who said that this was a really serious problem. But after a
process of a few years, the population and politicians have
gotten to where they're now taking this seriously and they're going to start experimenting to see
what they can do. And also here in Norway, the politicians are beginning to take this seriously.
Strangely, they're taking it more seriously than the researchers that have the data and work on
this. So we just established a national birthrate committee that
will study this and see what kind of solutions they may suggest that I don't have too high hopes to
anything substantial coming from there. They're probably going to try to throw a little money on
the problem when we know from other countries that that doesn't work. Giving money to parents to
have children, it doesn't have any effect. In those
instances, there are certain ways you can boost the numbers a little bit, but then suddenly you're
paying a million dollars or $2 million per extra child, so it's just not feasible. But the
researchers that are doing this and those that are working on it in the government, they have what I think at least are misplaced
fairs.
I was in a debate last week with someone from the birthrate committee and someone from the
Ministry of Finance.
And the woman from the Ministry of Finance started by showing the audience a kind of frivolous equation. She was showing that having more children would be
negative for the national economy because in Norway, we are a very generous welfare state,
and we have oil money. Every group in the population is a net negative. So she was making
that kind of jokingly saying, well, at least children aren't
profitable for us. And then later in the debate, because I was so curious and I've been curious for
so long why they're not portraying this with the seriousness that it requires. They all have this
attitude that, okay, let's talk about it, but not negatively. And then when I pushed her on it and I
asked her just to amuse me, could you say, could
you confirm to the audience that 1.4 means that we lose a third of the generation?
And she did that.
She finally did that.
Yes, that is true.
But you can't portray this so negatively because then you will empower the political forces
on the right.
So there's this belief that if we talk about low fertility, there are going
to be these people on the right that will deprive women of their reproductive rights,
and we will be taken back to the dark ages. And at least in Norway, the risk of that is
infinitesimally small. Even our right-wing party are from an international perspective, feminist social democrats. So I don't
think us having this discussion and taking things seriously is going to turn us into the handmaid's
tale. But this is a common assumption. Also, some of them, they're afraid that they will be
perceived as racist, that if we are concerned about Western countries having low fertility,
That if we are concerned about Western countries having low fertility, uh, that would be inappropriate because there are so many people in Africa.
So they have all these strange, um, strange.
That is, that, that is Olympic level mental gymnastics to say, if we care
about our country, that somehow throws into harsh light people of a different
skin color in a different country.
I mean, I've been banging the drum from my conversation with Stephen J.
Shaw, who wrote, did this amazing documentary called birth gap, uh, South
Korea's his pet project, like who's, who's campaigning for the South Koreans
that are going to buy their great, great grandchildren have one person for every
hundred South Koreans that there are now.
There's entire schools that are empty in Korea at the moment.
Yeah.
And, uh, uh, does it not count?
It only counts if it's the dark, the darker skin people.
It doesn't matter if it's the ones from the East.
I wouldn't take the content that seriously.
This is the beginning of a debate that is very
confusing. And at that phase of the debate, personal attacks, anger, those kinds of accusations tend
to be quite common. So over the last months, I've been called a misogynist, a fascist because I bring up this problem people assume I want
the government to force women to have sex with and have children with incels.
And yeah, so those accusations of racism or wanting to empower the far right. It's just the, the confusing beginning phase of a really important debate.
And that will only last for so long.
Once we, once people work their way through that and throw out those
accusations that I don't know if they're that serious when, when they
accuse people of being racist.
I very much applaud your patience with this, but I find it, I find it so difficult.
You know, I, my default is never to throw a label at somebody like that.
I don't, none of my friends do that.
None of the people that I respect or care about do that either.
And I just find it, I find it very trying to imagine the psychology of somebody who defaults to that.
The defaults like this, it's so boring as well.
It's so fucking predictable.
Like these, these bigotry, well, like just, it's like the bigotry dartboard and you just
close your eyes and throw a dart and whichever one it lands on, you know, it could have,
honestly, you could have told me that this would have been transphobia.
And I would have said, yep, could have picked that one as well.
Like it's just so obvious to me.
And it doesn't, it doesn't take the best of what your interlocutor is
trying to propose to you.
It takes what your mental model of the worst of it, and then just
tries to run away with that.
So, I mean, fair play for keeping your cool with regards to it.
Do you see, you know, you, you do seem quite even keeled as best I can tell.
Do you kind of see your role at the moment as being like the Vanguard of this
political talking point, you're kind of through the breach first and you're going
to take some arrows and maybe that's a price that's worth paying.
Is that kind of how you're perceiving it?
Well, people are people and in the cultural moment that we live now, both
kinds of accusations are the weapons available.
Um, so when I presented, uh, my research for the Norwegian, uh, fertility
institute a few weeks ago, And they had been so amazed at
how I this summer had been able to elevate this debate about low fertility to the national level
and trigger a really theory debate on it. They had tried to do that for years, but they weren't
successful. And the reason why they weren't successful is because they didn't portray this as the problem, that is as serious as it is.
While I said that this was an existential threat and that we need to look at how mating markets work, why is modern dating so dysfunctional?
And then I described using the evolutionary sciences, what it is about female and male mating psychology that in our
current environment creates a stratification that contributes to single them that then results in
no fertility. So the way I see this, there's several bottlenecks in the pipeline between
being single and having a child, and then I describe the different hindrances along that pipeline.
And of course, especially in a culture like the Norwegian one, a very social democratic culture,
and the evolutionary sciences are not broadly embraced to say it mildly.
I saw in one of the articles that it referred to it as a controversial wing of psychology,
or a controversial subset of psychology
that you come from. Yeah. And when we published the Insing article in Evolutionary Behavioral
Sciences, one of the newspaper commentators referred to this as the online publication,
the Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences. So yeah, it's been strange and also the attacks of, I would say over the last few weeks,
people in newspapers and commentators, experts, even the leader of the birthrate committee, have disproven my positions, about 10 or 20 of them. But the weird part is when they write
these articles to disprove my positions, not a single time have they argued against the position I actually have.
It's been exclusively strawman, which is a little bit predictable too, and it's okay. I just want
this debate to get started, and now it has started. If that means that I have to just endure
all those weird attacks and personal attacks and being discredited, well, hopefully I'll be able to be in this for the long haul.
And I hope to contribute more productively with time, but right now the
debate is going and for that, I'm thankful.
Let's get back to the underlying dynamics that are driving this sort of decline in
birthright, because it's something that we are seeing across the world for, as I'm
sure that the researchers that you were world for, as I'm sure
that the researchers that you were talking with recently know, the birth
rates, especially in sort of South, the South areas of Africa, fittingly, I
think Chad has the highest birth rate in the world, which is kind of on brand
given the name.
Every 15 years, every 15 years, the birth rate decreases by one child
per mother in African countries too.
So it's from eight to seven to six, around about every 15 years or so, at
least this was when I looked at the data about 18 months ago, um, it may have sped
up, it may have slowed down, but my point being, this is a global situation.
I think everywhere except for Israel, basically, they've managed, everybody is, is dealing
with this.
And this was really interesting in telling to me when I looked at the news article from
the UK that came out, because you had some very country specific reasons given by people in the
comments, they were saying migrants, Islam, taxation, cost of living, the COVID jab.
Who would want to bring a human into this cruel rotten world?
Tap water.
This is good.
The country's too full and this is good.
The world is too overpopulated.
And I was thinking, well, some of the stuff is kind of universal, right?
But a lot of that migrants, Islam, taxation, cost of living COVID jab, uh, you
know, this is very specific to the country.
And yet we're seeing birth rates across the world change.
So can you just square, square the circle of the dynamics for me of what is
universally happening that's causing this to occur because presumably the intersexual
dynamics and the sex ratios in different countries are all at different levels.
And yet we seem to have this sort of universal degradation of birth rate.
Yeah.
So let's line this up along these bottlenecks that I talked about. So I like to view this as something that happens in three steps.
First you have to be able to find a partner.
You have to date, you have to find someone, you have to read that you're a couple.
That has become increasingly challenging.
The next step is that you have to decide to have children and there there are different
hindrances and then you have to be able to make children. And there, there are different hindrances. And then you have to be able to make one. Now, the latter one, it seems not to be that big of a deal. As you're aware, sperm quality has
decreased 40% among men. But according to the experts, it's still more than good enough for
making children. So it's not that we're not able to. Now, then there are some problems for women
because they postpone having children, but their fecundity has not decreased in all likelihood at the earlier ages.
So the latter bottle seems not to be a real issue.
Just to step in there, you mentioned at the early ages, but obviously if the first and the second one, finding a partner, getting a partner, then push you into the third one.
The third one can then become, right.
I've jumped ahead.
Absolutely.
But yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, absolutely.
So the, but the issue that there hasn't been changes in fecundity.
Fecundity seems to be the same or better than before.
So it's not that we're not able to have children, but yeah, when women start very late, then it becomes more problematic.
But that is not more problematic than it used to be.
It's just that women are starting later. So then we have to look
at the world. So where in the world where birth rates or people are still reproducing and growing
are in countries where female equality is not a very high value. And this is an important factor.
This is a result of the empowerment and liberation and equality afforded to women in the process
that has been ongoing in the West Sin for like 800 years.
And here it's very important for me to state that I am an enormous supporter of equality
for women.
I am such a big supporter of that, that I would like also women in the future to have
the same rights and opportunities that women have today.
If we continue down the path we are now and just self-eradicate, those populations that
are left are not champions of women's freedoms.
So when we go into this and we talk about what has happened with women over the past say, particularly 150 years, that explains much of the first
bottleneck.
But describing these mechanisms and this process doesn't mean that I'm against it.
I'm just describing these are the mechanisms that are at play.
This is how human nature plays out in certain environments.
And I wish it wasn't
that way, but it really seems to be that way. So this is what I will be describing. So what we
talked about last year is that our lineage over the, yeah, it's interesting to look at the last
6 million years. We became as pair bonding species around 4 million years ago. Women only evolved an attraction
to men that motivated sufficient pair bonding and reproduction in really impoverished environments.
So men, as we talked about, because their promiscuous attraction system is so generous,
they're a lot more willing to have sex with women and engage with women than many
different kinds of women than what women are. So if a man activates her pair bonding attraction
system, that can be a man with similar mate value as she has. They fall in love, they have sex,
they have a child. But if you have an environment like you have now that
appeals predominantly to or to a great extent to the promiscuous attraction system, which is what
Tinder does, et cetera, then women will be a lot more selective. So we have a few things that have
happened here. Women have been empowered to have their own jobs, make their own money, be free,
and importantly, to choose their own partners, make their own money, be free, and importantly,
to choose their own partners for the first time in human history.
The result of that has been that the better women are doing, the more they exclude the
lowest value men from their potential pool of partners.
And with prosperity and with a promiscuous mating regime like we have now or that is a lot more promiscuous
than before, female mating psychology seems to channel the attention to higher value men
to avoid the deception of similar value men.
That's something that happens when there's high promiscuity. While lower value men in an
environment like we have today, even though they are receiving less mating attraction and having
less opportunities and we see their number of sex partners going down, they will have increased
expectations of promiscuity. So you get more and more dysfunction the further away from this third sexual revolution
of the 1960s we get. This is only getting worse. So the problem with creating relationships now,
and this has been something that's been in the debate in Norway to an enormous extent,
what very many women have said in this debate, I don't know how representative this is, but their main point, talking point is that men aren't good enough.
And if men do not become better, women simply don't want to partner with them and certainly not have children.
What do you think they mean when they say better?
It's, it's quite predictable.
Women, of course, because they have a, because of our evolutionary past, they have a lower desire for partner variety,
while men, because by having permissive sex, they would leave a larger genetic lethacy,
they have a higher desire for partner variety. So one study showed that Norwegian women want
five lifetime sex partners and Norwegian men want 25. So this is a question of how markets work.
When you have a high demand
of female sexuality and a low supply, women will have the power on the short-term mating market.
So as we know, if you as a woman go on Tinder now, you will get access to thousands and tens
of thousands of men and you will have men that have much higher mate value, give you a lot of
attention and try really hard to get a date with you and then get you to bed.
So when you have that kind of enormous choice, that kind of power, it's very natural that you
increase your standards. Now, if women understand better, and I do understand it, many understand
it very well and some understand it to some extent, but this isn't a cultural script that
we're raised with. We're not offered this information when we grow up. It's just not a part of our culture because this mating regime is so new,
but it's a big difference between a short and long term mating market. So if many women confuse the
power they have on the short term mating market with the long term mating market where men and
women are more equal. So their experiences on the short-term mating market motivates women
to increase their partner demands, which they can do on the short-term mating market. There's no
limits to how many attractive men they can have there. But if they want a boyfriend, then they
have to go on dates with men that have similar mating value with them because in monogamous
regime, our species mates assortatively. People with similar value find each other. And this makes it harder and harder for women to find partners. And the
funny thing in the debate that's been in Norway is that so many said that, oh my God, those men
need to stop telling women to lower their standards. The problem isn't that we have high demands and
then they go and list 10 things that men have to do to get better. So this environment that we live
in now, it just motivates women to, number one, they don't need men anymore. They used to need men
and those emotions that attraction women have for men evolved in a much more impoverished environment where having a man could be of existential importance.
And now they don't need him. Women can have wonderful lives without men.
For many women, the type of men that they would have access to simply isn't good enough to justify
not longer being single. And on an individual level, that is perfectly fine and I support it 100%. So what
women are doing on the short and long term mating market, I have no issue on that. As individuals,
I lay no blame. But our society will disappear if we don't do anything about this. And the thing is,
this is a brand new system that no human community has succeeded with. We've been doing this for 50 years. And these processes, these changing between different mating regimes typically can take centuries.
Some of them, the older ones took much longer even. So that we, after 50 years, haven't found
a way to reconcile individual and social needs, it's no wonder. But now that we see the effect
that our inability to find partners leads to self-revocation,
we need to talk about it.
We need to agree that this is a problem and that it's an existential problem and we have
to start experimenting, not by forcing women to marry in-selves, but to try to find if
we can create new dating arenas, if we can increase the knowledge around this, if we
can change people approach to dating and mating,
then I am naively positive. I've studied human or hominin mating over 6 million years. We face tremendous challenges and our ancestors solved every single one of them. And the 21st
century's reproductive crisis is not the biggest one. I think we can make changes.
And these fertility researchers that I've talked with,
they don't have much of an historical perspective.
They look at today and they see this is a problem,
they don't understand why it's happening.
And then they give up and a lot of them say,
we just need to embrace low fertility.
We've solved problems like this so many times. Yeah, go ahead.
How do you know that it's women's standards being too high and not the standard of men decreasing?
Because it's relative. I mean, men are men and women are women.
because it's relative. I mean, men are men and women are women. Going out and saying
men, you have to get better. I mean, who would go out and say Somalis need to get better or people with Down syndrome have to get better? We don't talk like that to groups. We don't say they're
not good enough and tell them to better themselves. One, because it's inhumane, and two, it doesn't work. You can't
tell groups to pull themselves together. So yeah, maybe men have gotten worse and worse, maybe women
have gotten better and better, but I think it's more. It's a change in that women… We had
patriarchal societies where women were subservient and dependent on men. If they didn't find a partner,
they would be sanctioned socially hard. They would live in poverty many times.
Now that we've created these wonderful new societies, that innate biological attraction
that women had to men that motivated sufficient reproduction in the past, it's no longer strong enough. Life is too good.
And given that we have to look for new solutions.
I can see why somebody that wanted to find potential holes or headlines to pick
in your argument would be replete with options because a mean
characterization of some of the points that you're putting
forward would be something like, so the argument is women should get into
relationships with guys who either aren't good enough or that they don't
fundamentally like that bringing back a patriarchal or enforced monogamy style,
socially enforced monogamy, not handmade sale, socially enforced monogamy style, socially enforced monogamy, not handmade sale, uh, socially enforced monogamy style, uh, society is better that, uh, equality
and women's financial and socioeconomic independence is, uh, anathema, uh, to,
um, having a, a flourishing society.
Therefore all of the things that we have done should be rolled back.
And the more that we rolled them back, the more that we then get the birth
rate to be able to flourish again.
So, uh, I mean, we've spoken about this.
I've spoken about this hundreds of times, uh, but it's a difficult circle
to square, to say that something which was good and that everybody is in support
of women getting their socioeconomic independence, women having equal access to the things that they should, women not being under the boot of their father or their brother or stuff like that.
Like these things are good in a developed society.
And yet they can also have this externality, which is, well, it's misaligned with mating psychology and downstream from that.
What you end up with is this really difficult situation. And to the women that are listening to, especially the ones that are struggling to find a guy that they think is good enough, you know, there's no, I, and this
is where we get into interventions a little bit later on, but I think it's very
difficult to say, Hey girls, lower your standards.
Like, what does that mean?
What does that mean in the same way as telling guys that you're not
going to be successful in your career? I think it's very difficult to say, Hey girls, lower your standards. Like what does that mean?
What does that mean in the same way as telling guys that you need to do better?
Like, what does that mean?
Especially at a group level, you know, the individual level, what you're asking is.
Kind of like a, uh, what's it called?
A tragedy of the commons type thing, a God's eye view, uh, coordination, you,
individual man, you should work harder so that you can help the birthright or you
individual woman, you should lower your standards so that you can help the birthright.
It's like, not for you.
You take a personal, uh, cost, you pay a personal cost in order to supply a public benefit.
And, uh, yeah, it's, it's, it's fascinating.
It's okay.
We've got a couple of other things here.
When women say men do better and they've got a list of a list of things, what are
the main areas, because presumably one of the places that we should be looking at
for intervention is how do we make men more attractive to women in this new
environment that has to be one of the routes that you lay out, it would be
stupid to not give that information out to guys because there will be a subset
of men that go, Hey, just give me the cheek.
What is it they're looking for again?
And if you just give me that and I'll just like tick, tick, tick, tick, tick.
And I'll be sweet.
So what are the areas that women say men are lacking in? Well, these lists that that has spread,
they're not terribly insightful or helpful, I think, but it reflects the experiences that women
have had with men. Don't be so interested in hunting and fishing and cars. Don't talk about yourself. Give me the right emotional support.
Don't brag about things. It's this minutia that they say that men in general suffer from.
And it's not men in general. There's a normal distribution among men. You have a few men
at the top that are phenomenal and a few men at the top that are phenomenal
and a few men at the bottom that are terrible, and then you have just a bunch of normal guys.
Women are right. In today's environment, men aren't good enough for women. But then we
have to ask, what are we going to do about that? I don't know a single person. I don't
even know if I've met a single person who wants to go back to the dark ages and put women under the boot of the patriarchy. But if we really love female freedoms
as highly as many proclaim, and I certainly do, then we owe ourselves to start experimenting and
trying new things to see if we can have societies that exist in the future where women also are free. I mean, the stakes couldn't be higher. So this misplaced fair that if we talk about low fertility,
women will suddenly live in oppressive patriarchy the day after tomorrow or 10 years down the line or 50 years down the line.
I mean, I understand the fair because nobody wants to go back. Women don't want to be unfree again.
But what I've done in my research in other projects also, I've studied the cultural changes over the last thousand years to see what is it that made modernity emerge. And we never go
backwards. We have these really deep cultural changes intermittently, and they're terrible and we're living through one now.
In those cases, we have to start entertaining new thoughts, new norms, and new values.
Different communities should try different solutions based on what is salient to them, based on their cultural legacy. I think Norway is in a unique position here. We've been
And I think Norway is in a unique position here. We've been spearheading gender relations for 150 years. We've been in the forefront of female equality. And in Scandinavia, we have really
good culture for this. We have cohesive populations. We have a lively national debate.
We're willing to find an experiment with new things and find solutions. And I think we can
do it here also. And I think all nations
should do that, build on their cultural legacies and try new things. And I mean, in Norway, it
would be so anathema for us. I think the risk of us going back to the dark ages is very small,
but I'd be willing to suggest a suicide pact on this. I mean, we're stirring towards self eradication. Let's just agree, and I understand women's fair of this.
So let's agree.
Female freedoms at the level of 2024 can never be threatened.
Let's have that as our starting point.
Let's experiment with new ways of dating and mating, but never ever
anything that would involve jeopardizing women's freedoms.
And if those means that we come up with
are unable to help us increase fertility, then we'll die together. We'll disappear. We'll just
dwindle until there's no one left. And that will be the Norwegian way. And then I'm sure some other
countries in the world will experiment with more handmaid's tale-like means for raising fertility,
but that won't be us.
And that is, that is the key to success. We have all these different communities, all these different cultural legacies
that make different means sail into us.
We need to start experimenting.
We need to do something because we're all disappearing in this part of the world.
Yeah.
I, um, just to kind of play the other side and so much of what I was learning
about over the last few years to do with, you know, the increasing socioeconomic
success of women over the last 50 years, particularly the tall girl problem.
As I've come to say that if you stand on the top of your own status hierarchy,
it's very difficult to find someone above and across on the other one.
And, um, yeah, you know, 50 years ago when title nine came in and the gap between
women and men in university was smaller than the gap between men and women.
Now men are now further behind in terms of their university, uh, attendance
than women were when title nine, a policy that was brought in to precisely help
raise up what was at the time an underperforming minority, right?
Or an underperforming group, perhaps not a minority.
And I'm just trying to think about like where that energy is
to help raise up underperforming men.
You know, if we do have, if this is true, let's say,
let's take the sort of public proclaimments as accurate
that men are not being of a high enough standard
in order for women to date them.
That would be like saying, well,
women aren't of a high enough intellect
in order to get to go to university.
Well, what do you do?
You help, you spend billions and billions in taxpayer funded money
to create councils and research initiatives and social change campaigns.
And you help to change norms and you raise up the group, which is falling behind.
But even more so in this one, the dearth of appropriate and eligible male
partners directly impacts
the wellbeing of the life of the single women who don't have anybody to date.
You know, you could say that kind of in a roundabout way, more smart people,
including women going to university makes for a smarter and more prosperous
world because there's like people doing innovation and stuff like that.
It's a much less direct route, right? Then if you spend a lot of money helping men to become better, which I'm sure that
the men aren't going to have a problem with it's like, Hey man, like his free gym
membership and mindfulness training and blah, blah, blah, or looking at the
socioeconomic problems, which is, well, why aren't men flourishing?
Why aren't they going to university?
Why is it two women for every one man doing a four year US college degree?
Why do women out earn men between 21 and 29 by over a thousand pounds a year, the
age during which the socioeconomic success of your partner is probably going to be
more indicative of your mating success when men and women are more likely to be
available and trying to find potential partners where their fecundity is highest.
So you're going to be able to get the best bang for your buck, so to speak out of your
mating efforts at stage two of the bottleneck that we'll get onto.
I just get the sense that there really is very little sort of charitability being paid.
You know, even the word incel, William Costello, Andrew Thomas was on very recently talking
about it.
The word incel just sort of conjures up all manner of, of, of,
maybe it needs to be rebranded.
You know, unfortunately it's a very great term that was used and sort
of spread too widely as a meme, but like, who wants that?
Who wants there to be people who wants to do a thing and can't do the thing
and sort of clawing and desperate and, and, and trying and trying and don't get that.
Like that's not, it'll be like saying like, uh, in, in intellect or something,
Oh, involuntarily stupid or something.
That's the reason that women aren't going to universe.
It's like, no, no one said that.
No one thought that.
But because we are dealing with men who traditionally have been in a
preferential position in
society, and because we're talking about women's bodies, which is a very, uh,
fraught topic that nobody wants to come in and feel like they're
starting to mandate anything.
Uh, yeah.
You know, if you talk about situations that sort of raise up men and men's
standards, that feels like kind of manipulating the market in a way, like men, no men should raise themselves up.
They should try, they should want to do it.
It's the, if you loved me, you'd know why I'm mad at you kind of argument.
And then on the other side, if you say, well, what about women's standards being too high?
They go, well, what are you saying?
You want me to get into a relationship with somebody that I don't like, that I don't love, that isn't good enough for me?
We've spent all of this time building up our socioeconomic success, finally
getting egalitarian access to all of the things that we need.
And you're telling me that now I have to row back my financial independence to
like some weird old and worldly 1900s, 1800s, Victorian England version of
mating mentality just so that I can feel remotely satisfied with a partner that
I don't think meets my standard.
And that's not going to happen.
So, I mean, this is like a, I mean, you seem to think it's a tractable problem,
but to me it's a, like a, you know, spaghetti junction of cables that every
time you try and pull on them, but today there's between the two of us, there's
been like 20 absolutely unspeakable things that one of us has said, right?
Like that this area of discussion is so non-typically done in a manner that
isn't used as a cudgel to hit people over the head with, or to try and get
some sort of nefarious campaign across that you don't.
Nobody uses what's called the Oxford manner, right? The ability, the ability to play gracefully with ideas.
That's not allowed.
Um, but yeah, anyway, just to kind of fight the other side of this.
When women had a problem, we said, what can we do to fix society?
But now that men have a problem, we say, what is it that men are doing
where they can't fix themselves?
Yeah, we don't tell, but that's certainly not in Scandinavia.
That's not what we tell poor people.
You just pull yourself up by the bootstraps.
That more of an American strategy.
But what you said about the incel term is very interesting.
Unfortunately, that coin was termed, or at least it spread into the mainstream
with these terrorist attacks in the 2010s.
And what this has cost, it's very unfortunate. I mean, incels, it's
arguably the most or one of the most marginalized groups in society. On some level, it is the most
marginalized group. These are men that are being deprived of life opportunities. You're just
suffering in solitude. And I wrote one op-ed in Norway where I said, there's a reason why you don't know the
name of the single Norwegian incel.
I speak up about these matters and I'm in a position to endure the hatred and the attacks
that come and they have become increasingly grave.
Can you imagine what happened if a regular guy, an incel, spoke up and said,
I have never had any mating opportunities.
Let me tell you how this destroys my life.
First, he wouldn't be met with compassion.
He'd be villainized. He'd be seen as a misogynist and a potential terrorist.
So we've created the culture where these men that are the most marginalized
and you could say oppressed
aren't even allowed to speak up about how terrible their lives have become.
So we don't hear anyone bear witness to this marginalization.
Women spoke up loudly and proudly about what the patriarchy were doing to them, and they
succeeded with liberating themselves from that.
It's very difficult to see in the short to mid-range how
these men can be a part of the public conversation because the costs that we impose on them are so
enormous. And to that other thing you said about how can we raise up men, well, that's what you
could call one of the Scandinavian paradoxes. In raising up women,
as I again, a thing that I mentioned to you last year, the Norwegian welfare state, men pay more
into it in taxes than they receive from it. Women receive more than $1.2 million from the
welfare state over their lifetime than they pay in taxes. And $1.2 million,
that's still pretty good money. And I think that is one of the linchpins of our society.
The reason why normally according to the UN almost every year is the best society living in the world
is precisely because we transfer these resources from men to women.
And there's a variety of reasons why that creates a better society.
But then a negative aspect of that is that men lose these resources and women gain them,
which is good for society, good for the women and the children they bear, but it makes men
relatively less attractive because, number one, women to a much lesser extent need
the resources of a partner, and men have lost these resources that in previous times would make
them more attractive to women. And that's a very bad externality. So we created perhaps the greatest
society in human history. And because of the way we did that, we're now staring towards self-eradication
because we created society where men actually aren't good enough to entice
women's attraction systems so that women are, are want to have sex with them and
pair bond with them and have children with them.
And, uh, that is unfortunate.
And like you said, that is a spaghetti.
What about the second bottleneck?
Let's say that we've managed to weave our way through the first one.
We've managed to find a partner.
We're happy with them.
We're ready to settle down, get married.
And, and, and the question comes up, are we going to make babies?
Yeah.
So that has to do about culture and ideology.
This is what recovered the last time over over, over an hour.
And, uh, I recently published a book called stories of love from Vikings to
Tinder, where I take the reader through a 800 year journey of Western ideologies
of love to show how we ended up where we are today and how that explains our
dating dysfunction and the demographic collapse.
up where we are today and how that explains our dating dysfunction and the demographic collapse.
So we now live in a world with the mating ideology that's called confluent love. Confluence means to come together. So we're supposed to come together and as long as that's beneficial, we're supposed
to stay together when it's not, move on. So we have serial pair bonding interspersed with
opportunistic short-term relationships. So we sleep around when we're single and preferably not when we're hitched up and then relationships
last for as long as they last.
And the values of this mating regime is convenience, reward, and individualistic self-realization.
So we're supposed to do whatever works for us as individuals.
And to modern ideology, that makes a lot of sense.
We wanted to do that for a good while, but we weren't prosperous enough, but now we
are and now we've implemented this regime symbolically from 1968.
Before that, to give an example of another ideology of love, from the early 1800s until
1986, we had the ideology of romantic love,
where cultures imposed on people, they indoctrinated them, they acculturated them,
socialized them, however you want to put it, into thinking that a man and a woman as individuals,
they're only half a person. So, you're supposed to find that other soul that matches yours and
then you're supposed to merge in a pair bond underpinned by very strong true love and this love lasts a lifetime. And then you self-realize
as a couple through the breadwinner housewife model. So from our perspective, that sounds a
little bit silly, but imposing those beliefs on people, pushed them together and made them have children
to a sufficient extent.
Well, you could say maybe to a too high extent because the population growth during that
period was enormous.
So in that second bottle, when it comes to having children in earlier times, in all earlier
times, I'm sure there were exceptions here and there, but maybe those weren't too functional, societies imposed on people that they had to pair bond and have
children. If not, you would be sanctioned, ostracized, or maybe you'd be a monk or go to war
or work the fields. And we don't do that anymore. And here's an important part, contraception.
We didn't evolve to have this incredible desire to be parents.
We have a desire for it, but as we see now, it's not strong enough for our current environment.
Evolution works in a way that it implants proxies for it. You're sexually attracted to someone.
You do these things and then in some, at least a sufficient reproduction. But now that we've
detached copulation from reproduction through effective contraceptives, those adaptations that
we evolved for the previous mating regimes don't work as well. And we also have this ideology where
having children has become quite voluntary. I mean, there's still some pressure, but you'll define
without. In some milliers, it's even seen as heroic not to have children. You have environmentalists
that think having children is wrong. You have all kinds of different anti-natalist beliefs.
And this reduces the pressure that in previous times pushed people toward reproduction. So that's
when people do manage
to pair bond and they have to decide whether children are, you have those ideological differences
from earlier times and then you have other environmental pressures such as the costliness
of having children, the difficulties, the time pressure, etc. So you have all these factors to
play in there and what politicians and fertility researchers
are drawn to are those more mundane environmental factors. So Norway probably has the best
social regime in the world for having children. We give incredible benefits to parents and children.
There's probably never existed an environment in the history of humanity where it's more
beneficial to have children than in
normal and still we're not doing it. So what this birth rate committee is probably going to do is
suggest we throw another $100 there, another $1,000 there, but we know from research that that's not
going to work. So if we're going to work on this second bottleneck, it's about cultural change and
evolving towards a new ideology of love. And that sounds very
inappropriate for modern minds. We're supposed to leave individuals alone. A lot of people have
said in the debate in order that it's inappropriate for politicians to engage, but I mean, if we're
staring towards self-eradication, nothing is more important than the question of existence versus
non-existence. So we really should be open to experimenting and trying to question even our most sacred values.
In a lot of the studies, I think that I've seen lots of the survey data, GSS data, and a few others come back.
And some of the highest rated reasons for why people haven't had kids is not ready yet, still working on
myself, don't have the money and insufficiently financially secure.
What do you make of the sort of cost of living and self actualization ideologies
sort of slash thought pattern when it comes to its contribution? Cause at least in terms of self reports, uh, haven't found somebody I'm
sufficiently attracted to.
Wow.
Didn't mean to do that.
I haven't found somebody that I'm sufficiently attracted to, um, to be
able to have a partner with is very low down the list, very low.
Yeah.
Yep.
Uh, well, we don't know.
That is the thing about this. Very low. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, well, we don't know.
That is the thing about this.
We experts actually do not know what the precise factors are that
I've created the situation.
They don't understand why people aren't had.
They know some may, they know that urbanization is a factor, uh, individualization,
but how they play in, how much they affect things. It's still a puzzle and especially what are these factors could be a minimal policy what is it we have to do.
What kind of society do we have to move towards to make people again having children is very under researched.
That is among other things i'm part of a group of researchers that are applying for funds now, and we want to actually find this out.
We want to study female and male reproductive psychology and see what are the actual factors, not what people say are the factors,
but through longitudinal studies to uncover what the actual elements are that motivate or demotivate reproduction. Especially within
evolution of psychology, this has been so under-researched over the last few decades.
There's been so many valuable contributions on dating and relationships and parental investment,
partner preferences, sex, everything within mating except its ultimate function, which is to reproduce.
That's been enormously under-researched, which is puzzling.
And now it's become existentially important to understand these mechanisms.
I suppose you hinted at it before, the difference between proximate and ultimate reasons,
you know, proximate reason, sex feels good, ultimate reason reason it makes babies.
Looking at the ultimate justification, it's a much more direct intervention to just get straight to the proximate because you know exactly how that works.
You can manipulate it more directly getting in and sort of the ultimate is
usually the unspoken thing.
It's the thing behind the thing.
But I do wonder, I was having a conversation with a friend, uh, who was
telling me that he held his sister's newborn baby for the first time.
And this is the first member of his kin.
That's been like newborns, first family newborn.
He held it in his hands.
And as, as he was doing it immediately immediately he had these sort of classic visions of a
warrior man going to protect this child.
And it's not his child, but he's pretty close, right?
You know, he's an uncle.
And, uh, we had a conversation, I think there's an odd, maybe sort of mimetic
child desire that goes on that increasingly atomized, uh,
non pangenerational living where people are in their own houses, they move away
from home at 18, they don't get to see their brothers and sisters and potentially
their children quite so much anymore.
Everyone's in their own silo.
On top of that, a declining birth rate means that there are fewer children
around to show people who don't yet have children, that children are a thing
that you can have, how much have you considered this? This kind of,
one of the big impacts of being around children is that it perhaps encourages you to have children
and by that having fewer children big gets reduction in the incentive to, or the drive to have children.
or the drive to have children. Yeah, that's why the leading research believe that this unfortunately is a self-reinforcing
process. Like I mentioned, Norwegian women want to have 2.4 children, but they have 1.4. Now that
it's fell to 1.4, the next generation will probably want to have quite a bit fewer than 2.4. And we've
seen this through the generations. So we're not able to fulfill our fertility ideals. And this
puts us in a spiral that just entails us as society circling the drain until there's no one left.
Unless we're able to turn this around. Yeah. The fertility ideal as well as a moving target.
Yeah. No, that's why I mentioned at the beginning of our conversation, how
unfortunate it is that the main Norwegian researchers around this, they're just
waiting for women around 40 to have an unprecedented number of baby, because I
mean, the leading international experts are pretty uniform.
They're not all agree, but they're pretty uniform.
This isn't turning around. It's, it's, They say that it's more likely that it continues to decline than that
it tapers off or goes up again. So if we don't turn this around, likely it will only get worse.
And this circling of the drain is just going to go faster and faster until our societies collapse.
Didn't someone say that the best you can do for the fertility rate is to just resign and relax?
Yeah, that was the commentator in Norway's biggest newspaper.
She thought 1.4 was just, that was just a number that captured the moment.
And she also, so she talked to these experts and they said, yeah,
I know Norwegian women will start having babies soon in their 40s.
So this is, this is going to go up again.
So yeah, she, she actually wrote that the best thing we could do for the, to
increase the fricative rate is to resign and relax.
And if we do that, we disappear.
And then Norway's ex sexiest woman of the year said that men were whining.
And then a gay guy said that men are trying to cry their way into women's pants.
Yeah, there's been, and I'm grateful that they chime in.
I haven't responded to almost any of them.
I'm just glad that people are participating in this debate. And if they want
to smear men or want to attack my credentials or my intentions or call me a fascist, that's just how
these debates work. And hopefully, this is the first phase of the debate. And then if we're able
to get past it, we can agree that this is an existential challenge.
And after that, we can start talking about experiments and then executing them.
And maybe we can have more research on this and we can have a national movement to try
to turn this around.
Like I said, I think especially Scandinavian nations are the best situated nations for
doing something about this.
We should spare this. We should spare this.
We should be in the forefront.
We're so rich and wealthy and we have such good national conversations
and we're so far ahead in general.
We've been doing this for so long.
Why can't we like cease?
This is the biggest problem we've faced, at least in a very long time.
Let's try to solve it.
Let's not resign and give up.
What happened at your university when they found out that you
were researching fertility rates?
Well, there too, I am very understanding.
I was working at a center of environmentalists and they need to have their profile.
And I respect that.
And when they found out that I was going to research declining populations from a negative
perspective, they didn't want to have anything to do with it.
But I found a different university that I'm applying for research funds from.
So I'm okay.
But well, it's people don't understand that 1.4 means that our societies will disappear. They don't see
the problems with it and they don't see how this can work against solving the climate crisis.
Collapsing societies aren't going to develop new technology. They're not going to be cooperative.
They're probably not going to recycle too much either. I mean, we want functioning societies,
stable functioning societies for the next generation so we can
fix the climate crisis.
And this is a new situation.
Before this summer, there had hardened maybe one or two op-eds a year in leading newspapers
where people said that we'll be fine, 1.4 isn't a big of a deal.
And one op-ed wrote that this for sure won't be as bad as the Black Death, so we'll be
okay, which is a pretty little bar. One op-ed wrote that this for sure won't be as bad as the black death, so we'll be okay.
Which is a pretty little bar.
So yeah, I understand.
And yeah, especially for environmentalists, it's hard to wrap your head around how a declining
population could be a negative thing.
So I try to be understanding, but yeah, it's, it's, it's, yeah,
it wasn't too cool, but I'll be okay.
I applaud your patience.
I really do.
It's a, you know, when you're, I had this really great conversation with Richard Reeves.
I'll send it to you once we're done.
Cause I think the political psychology side of science communication, activism,
talking about topics that are kind of on the edge of the Overton window.
I think it really might be good framing for you, given that he's the founder
of the American Institute for Boys and Men.
So he's having a similarly unpopular discussion.
And we spoke about that and he had this really interesting insight where he said
that people who talk about unpopular topics and feel scapegoated or castigated
or insulted when they do it, what they do is they become increasingly aggressive with
their tone because they're more and more frustrated that they get sort of labeled as this really nasty thing.
So, you know, you see a lot of, I think men's rights activists, uh, probably a,
uh, a good chunk of them get thrown into this bucket because they've been fighting
about family court or divorce law or, you know, male suicide or whatever it,
whatever it is for, for a long time.
And because they've either been ignored or insulted, what they do is they
just keep ramping the rhetoric up.
I think you could see this with the climate movement too, right?
No, you don't understand if we get past however many parts per million in CO2,
it's going to be a problem.
So I'm going to throw paint over, throw soup over a painting.
I'm going to glue myself to the M25 and I'm going to do, you know, big, big,
it's all bigger, bigger, bigger.
And, um, as Richard said, the problem you have when you do that is that you
become less and less acceptable to be understood, especially in an arena
that's increasingly inflammatory because you are more inflammatory.
The way that you communicate these ideas becomes more aggressive, which is the
exact opposite of the impact that you wanted it to have.
So at the very time when you need to be as peaceful and gentle as possible, you're
putting the strong argument forward, but you're doing it from a place of sort of
rationality and realism as opposed to one of like just steaming in it's all emotion.
Because it's much easier to dismiss the arguments of somebody saying something
you don't want to believe that is already unpopular if they do it laden with emotion.
As opposed to if they come in and they say, Hey, interesting.
I'm just going to put some, some facts forward for you here.
Here's, here's some things that you should consider.
And they go, what a reasonable, nothing that anybody can say is that you haven't
been reasonable with the way that you've put your, your points forward.
And, uh, I, I never thought about that before. It was really interesting.
I've never been an activist really for anything.
I've got interests and stuff, but I've certainly felt that, uh, distaste
sometimes when I've been talking about stuff to do with men's mental health
or whatever, and I, you know, rhetoric does get a little bit more agitated.
It does get a little bit more fiery.
You think, is that actually effective?
What am I doing? Am I using this as a, uh, uh, punching bag opportunity to vent about my own internal
frustration at nobody listening, or am I doing this to try and make as big of an
impact as I can in the world, because those two things often are actually, uh,
counter to each other.
Yeah. No, counter to each other.
Yeah. No, you asked her earlier if, if, if I saw myself as some kind of firebrand,
I, I wish I wasn't in the position. I want to jump over these next two phases and jump to the one where we start researching this and conducting experiments and try to turn things around. I don't enjoy being the object of
hatred and derision and having, well, if at least they attacked something that was actually
my position, but so far it's been exclusively straw man. And of course, it's tiresome.
My department lied to a newspaper that I was no longer connected to them. I have a
contract out the air and they just didn't want to be associated with me. The reason why I'm sitting
here is because my university would no longer let me use the podcast studio, which are just bizarre.
I'm like, just what is this? It's so odd.
That's how these things were.
Yeah, I was at a dinner a couple of weeks ago
with a member of the birth rate committee,
a very reasonable person.
And then he said, they haven't been able
to create debate about this.
And this summer I was able to do that
and that noise will help them.
So now we're working through that phase where people are
just arguing and bickering and saying, this isn't a problem. And hopefully, we can get to the point
where we can have a recent discussion about this. And that's when the birth weight committee will
put forward their findings, however useful or unuseful they are. I don't know, we'll have to see.
But then after that, something else will come.
This isn't a one-year conversation.
We're going to be talking about this for generations unless we're able to turn this around, this
recircle the drain.
It's going to become more and more apparent how devastating, how disastrous the consequences
will be of losing a third of your generation or two thirds of your generational size per
generations.
This discussion is not over.
It has just started.
And thank you for pushing this and not just inviting me, but so many others to talk about
this.
You're one of those who really are spearheading this in the international marketplace of ideas
and that's really valuable.
I appreciate that. Thank you.
Yeah.
It's a, it's an, such an odd type of existential risk because.
You know, some of them wildfires start, you feel the heat, there's black
plumes of smoke in the air or the smog on the ground or, you know, people die
in a pandemic, but demographic
collapse is this sort of really unique class of.
We've never faced this problem before.
Yeah.
No, I mean, send an enemy at us.
Yes.
It's, we're immediately going to know exactly what to do.
Our neighbor comes go to war against us.
We're going to band together.
We're going to forget all the bickering and we're going to unite and we're going to do our best to survive and beat them and murder them
and win. That's in our nature. When we're now self-eradicating, we're just what? We've had low
fertility before, but we never had this kind of increasingly global phenomenon that is that just isn't stopping. It's just it's just a continuing decline.
So our cultural intuitions, our cultural legacies, we have almost nothing to build on.
We have to think anew.
We have to analyze and understand something that is really complex.
And then we have to come up with completely novel solutions, probably.
And that is a hell of a challenge.
We have very little to go on here.
This is a brand new environment.
Well, I know that you've only just published your last book, which was awesome.
But I mean, you've got a hell of a topic for the next one and jumping in with two
feet and doing whatever it is that you need to do.
Dude, I appreciate you.
Uh, I really do.
I very much appreciate you sort of sticking your neck out as we would say in the UK.
And, uh, and, and doing this work, it'll be interesting to see how you and lay from the rest of the guys get on.
I loved when we met at age best last year and it's been, uh, it's interesting
to see where people end up.
So I really hope that you sort of make it through.
If people want to keep up to date with what's happening from your side of the
world, your data, your research and stuff like that, where's best to go?
Well, maybe under the YouTube video, you can put a link to my
stores, all of them, I can see Tinder, it's open access.
So it's free to download.
Uh, if you want to see what I'm published, you can go to my Google
scholar, yeah, thank you.
You can go to my Google scholar page and just type in my name and then
you'll see my publications there.
Also research gate is good.
There are different ways to find it.
Unreal.
Mads, until next time mate.
I'll see you.
Thank you so much, Chris.
It was a pleasure talking to you again.
Take care.