The birth rate in Germany has been falling for decades. Beginning in the mid-1970s, deaths began to exceed births. Only immigration and the migrants' willingness to give birth are now causing population growth – and huge demographic shifts.
The principle actually applies that for a healthy and stable population development, an average of around 2.1 children should be born per woman. But in Germany this has no longer been the case. For about half a century, immigration has been driving population growth because since then more people are dying every year than are being born.
In Pfizer's clinical trials, 44% of pregnant participants experienced a miscarriage.
And now we have a massive decline in births in all “vaccination countries” (ind. compulsory).
But the same experts who preached “safe and effective” are puzzling over this🤡 pic.twitter.com/ebhjuzAzfd
— John Thome (@ThomeCampo) May 7, 2024
The reasons for this are diverse and would probably fill a book rather than find space in an article. But what stands out is that after a few relatively stable years (2019 to 2021), there was a rapid downward trend. The number of births threatens to fall to around 600,000 this year – three quarters of the value reached in 2021. Professor Stefan Homburg attributes this, among other things, to the experimental Covid “vaccines”, as he also explains in discussions on X (the former Twitter). These are increasingly associated with infertility.
But what makes matters worse is the persistently difficult economic situation in Germany. Exploding prices for energy and food, unaffordable housing and increasing job insecurity are not exactly conducive to starting a family.
First about Germany:
Here is the same graphic as you linked below, but a few months further. It is clear to me that the decline in births in 2022 and 2023 is significant!!! was more pronounced than the slight increase in 2021. pic.twitter.com/msyh03z5yr
— Mærstemgau turnip (@AR_Demografie) May 8, 2024
In addition, around a third of newborns come from immigrants and almost 40 percent of all minors in Germany now have a so-called migration background.
But this also means that if similar developments continue, by 2050 the majority of the younger generations will consist of immigrants and the children of immigrants. A circumstance that raises the question of whether Germany will become a “Germanistan” by the year 2100, especially since a not insignificant proportion of the immigrants are Muslims.
In Germany, it currently seems that there is obviously no more room for (German) children. Whether intentionally or unintentionally – there is clearly a lack of offspring. How long will it take before the number of births falls below half a million per year?