Thawing out from a

It seems ridiculous to have to point out something so obvious, but a society that ceases to reproduce is on the road to extinction.

“How can a declining population maintain a nation’s infrastructure?” Carlson asks. “Who will man Europe’s factories, farms and armies? Who will pay the taxes for essential social services? A birth dearth provides far more challenges than a population explosion.”

No wonder governments are beginning to take notice -- and take action. Russian President Vladimir Putin, for example, has adopted a policy that offers a $110-monthly stipend to families that have a second child. According to Don Feder, director of communications for the World Congress, “Stay-at-home moms would receive 40 percent of their former salary, and families with two children would get a direct payment of $9,000.” Other countries are offering financial incentives for couples to have more children.

It’s an open question whether this strategy will work, especially when you consider how long we’ve been listening to the selfish, anti-population propaganda of the “population bomb” crowd. Our modern world seems so steeped in narcissism and so averse to welcoming new life that it likely will take more than money to stem the tide.

But despair solves nothing, which is why the World Congress of Families is bringing many of the best pro-family minds together -- to chart a path out of what Don Feder has called “the depths of demographic winter.” Among them will be The Heritage Foundation’s own Pat Fagan, whose pro-family research has illuminated the debate for a decade -- and helped many people to better understand the irreplaceable role the traditional family plays in our society.

If you’d like to help spread the pro-family message, I urge you to take some time to acquaint yourself with the principles espoused by the World Congress. Check out Allan Carlson’s book “The ‘American Way’: Family and Community in the Shaping of the American Identity.” He opens with an interesting overview of President Theodore Roosevelt’s pro-family policies. It’s a subject the president was refreshingly blunt about:

“I do not wish to see this country a country of selfish prosperity where those who enjoy the material prosperity think only of the selfish gratification of their own desires and are content to import from abroad not only their art, not only their literature, but even their babies.”

If Europe is ever to pull itself back from the brink -- and if the United States hopes to avoid a similar fate -- we need to realize that true prosperity can’t exist without families. Indeed, a world without babies is flirting with the most serious form of poverty there is.