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OPINION

My Generation Cannot Sustain the America Democrats Are Creating

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
My Generation Cannot Sustain the America Democrats Are Creating
AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File

The concept of an “imminent threat” has long been debated in the United States. Policymakers argue over whether Iran or instability in the Middle East meets that threshold. Yet while both parties focus outward, a far more immediate threat continues to be ignored: America’s demographic decline.

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The national birth rate has fallen to approximately 1.56 children per woman, well below the 2.1 replacement level required to sustain population stability. A smaller generation leads to a smaller workforce, and a smaller workforce results in fewer taxpayers.

At the same time, an aging population—significantly larger than Generation Z—places increasing strain on Social Security, Medicare, and other entitlement programs. As these trends converge, the outcome is not merely slower economic growth but a structural imbalance that threatens long-term stability.

The question is not whether demographic decline will reshape the country, but what is driving it.

Economic explanations are often presented as the primary cause. Housing costs, student debt, and inflation all influence whether individuals choose to have children. Those pressures are real, particularly for younger Americans. However, economics alone does not explain the scale or speed of the decline.

By all measurable standards, my generation has greater access to education, career opportunities, and technological advancement than any previous generation. A generation with more opportunities and a higher quality of life is choosing to have fewer children.

Over time, the United States has moved away from treating marriage and family formation as essential institutions. Public opinion reflects that change. Roughly 40 percent of Democrats say marriage is necessary for strong families, compared to approximately 80 percent of Republicans. That divide reflects fundamentally different assumptions about the role of family in maintaining social stability.

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Those assumptions are reinforced by the institutions that shape younger generations. Universities, media organizations, and professional environments increasingly prioritize individual achievement and career advancement. Family formation is often treated as something to be delayed until financial and professional goals are fully secured. That approach produces predictable outcomes: later marriages, fewer marriages, and fewer children.

Marriage and family formation, however, are not obstacles to financial stability; they are often the foundation of it. Dual-income households reduce financial pressure. Long-term commitments create predictable support systems. Stability at the household level translates into stability at the societal level. Strong families provided both economic security and social cohesion.

In recent decades, a growing share of that stability has been transferred to the federal government through programs such as Medicaid, SNAP, and expanded healthcare systems. When the state assumes roles once fulfilled by families, the incentives surrounding family formation begin to shift. Individuals rely less on family structures for economic and social support and more on institutional systems.

A declining birth rate combined with an expanding welfare state creates fiscal strain. Fewer workers are responsible for supporting a larger retired population. The imbalance forces difficult choices: higher taxes, reduced benefits, or increasing national debt. None of those outcomes is sustainable over the long term.

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At the same time, cultural messaging has increasingly framed family life as optional or even burdensome. Parenthood is often portrayed as something that limits personal freedom rather than as a contributor to long-term fulfillment and stability. That framing influences behavior, particularly among younger generations who are still forming their views on family and responsibility.

Abortion also plays a role in the broader demographic picture. In 2025, more than 1.1 million abortions were performed in the United States, at a time when the country is already experiencing below-replacement fertility. Regardless of how abortion is framed legally or morally, the demographic impact is measurable. A country with declining birth rates cannot sustain long-term population stability while simultaneously reducing births on that scale.

It is also in the Democrats' best interest to continue delaying family formation. Individuals with children tend to focus more on education policy, taxation, community stability, and long-term economic planning. A society with fewer families will naturally shift in how it approaches those issues.

Whether these outcomes are intentional or the result of broader cultural trends is ultimately secondary. The effects are the same. The United States is producing fewer families, fewer children, and a smaller next generation. That trajectory carries consequences that cannot be resolved through short-term policy adjustments.

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My generation will not be able to sustain the country if current demographic trends continue. A shrinking younger population will be expected to support an older population that is living longer and drawing more heavily on entitlement programs.

Responsibility for that outcome does not rest solely on my generation. Political incentives have increasingly aligned with policies and cultural messaging that delay or discourage family formation. Within the Democratic Party, in particular, those positions are often framed as economic or social priorities, but they carry long-term demographic consequences that are rarely directly addressed.

If immediate attention is not brought to America’s demographic decline, the country will no longer resemble the strong and stable nation it has long been.

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