06:28
Der Europarat auf Irrwegen. Der Europarat auf Irrwegen: nach einem „Recht auf Abtreibung" soll ein „Recht auf „Homo-Ehe" kommen. Kommentar von Mathias von Gersdorff, Leiter von „Kinder in Gefahr" -- …Mehr
Der Europarat auf Irrwegen.

Der Europarat auf Irrwegen: nach einem „Recht auf Abtreibung" soll ein „Recht auf „Homo-Ehe" kommen.

Kommentar von Mathias von Gersdorff, Leiter von „Kinder in Gefahr" -- DVCK e.V.
Iacobus
...welche Kreise hinter Abtreibung, Geburtenkontrolle, Homo-"Ehe", Chimären usw. stehen sieht man hier:
de.gloria.tv
de.gloria.tvMehr
...welche Kreise hinter Abtreibung, Geburtenkontrolle, Homo-"Ehe", Chimären usw. stehen sieht man hier:

de.gloria.tv

de.gloria.tv
Iacobus
'Eco-warrior' Prince Philip attacks big families
www.timesonline.co.uk/…/article3908588.…
***
Time Magazine: "Want to wreck the environment? Have a baby." - Prince Philip Concurs
LONDON, May 13, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A feature in the current issue of Time Magazine asks a rhetorical question, "What's an an environmentally conscious parent to do?" Time's Pamela Paul gives the response most …Mehr
'Eco-warrior' Prince Philip attacks big families

www.timesonline.co.uk/…/article3908588.…

***

Time Magazine: "Want to wreck the environment? Have a baby." - Prince Philip Concurs

LONDON, May 13, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A feature in the current issue of Time Magazine asks a rhetorical question, "What's an an environmentally conscious parent to do?" Time's Pamela Paul gives the response most frequently pushed by radical environmentalists, saying the answer is 'don't have children'. In a television interview this week, the Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Philip, concurs, saying the recent increase in global food prices is due to too many children. At the same time, the Italian Prime Minister is seeking ways to turn around his country's disastrously low birth rate that currently stands at well below replacement level.

"Want to wreck the environment?" the Time feature starts, "Have a baby."

"Each bundle of joy gobbles up more of the planet's food, clogs garbage dumps with diapers, churns through plastic toys and winds up a gas-guzzling, resource-consuming grown-up like the rest of us. Still, babies are awfully cute. Given that most people still intend to procreate, what's an environmentally conscious parent to do?"

The Duke of Edinburgh followed the same environmentalist playlist when he said this week that the only way to save the planet is for people to stop having babies.

Prince Philip told a television interviewer this week that the solution to the burgeoning global food crisis is simply to have fewer mouths to feed. The prince, who has four children, said, "Food prices are going up. Everyone thinks it's to do with not enough food, but it's really that demand is too great - too many people."

In recent months, food prices have risen dramatically around the world and economists are struggling to identify the reason. Most have said it is the result of rising oil prices which have affected the cost fertilizers, food transport, and industrial agriculture.

The prince admitted that implementation of a massive population control movement might be a problem for governments. "Basically, it's a little embarrassing for everybody. No one quite knows how to handle it. Nobody wants their family life to be interfered with by the government."

Indeed, the only governments to try a systematic programme of population control are known to be among the world's most oppressive regimes. The communist government of China has had its One Child policy in place since 1979 when it was put in place ostensibly to alleviate social and environmental problems. The result has been social unrest, arrests of pregnant women and forced abortions and state-sponsored infanticide.

It has also caused a massive and likely incurable imbalance in the population's sex ratio in favour of boys and resulted in a dramatic aging of the population. The Chinese government, while maintaining the One Child policy, is now struggling to find answers to the problem of millions of elderly with few children grown to adulthood to care for them.

Ironically, Prince Philip's wish has already come true. Currently the British birth rate stands at approximately 1.66 births per woman, well below the 2.1 level at which a population is sustained naturally.

www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/may/08051307.html