By G. Tracy Mehan, III on 10.18.06 @ 12:07AM
America's populationo hit the 300 million mark this week -- no small thanks to immigrants and couples happy to have many wonderful children.
On Tuesday, just around breakfast, America passed the 300
million mark in terms of population. While I haven't spoken to my
wife about this, I can tell you that I am feeling a sense of
accomplishment -- doing our part, so to speak -- to reach this
milestone: we have seven children.
Clearly, it is immigration which is the major contribution to
the nation's growing population. But some of us native born
citizens have also made a contribution to America's dynamism and
vitality in this regard.
Big deal, you may say. Well, yes, thank you, it is. For three
decades my wife and I have had to endure endless smug, waspish
jokes about our family's size. Really, most of them are quite
offensive, deserving a punch in the nose, rather than the mild,
passive smile we usually muster in the face of these lame attempts
at hilarity such as:
"Don't you own a TV?"
"All by the same wife?"
"Don't you know there are ways to fix this problem?"
"What about the environment?"
"Well, at least someone is doing something about the Social
Security crisis!"
And the lamest of the lame: "You need to get out evenings."
AT VARIOUS TIMES we have been tempted to answer, "No" to these
jibes, adding, "Actually, we just like sex a lot." No doubt, the
person on the receiving end of such a rejoinder would be shocked,
shocked, at the rudeness of the reply. Go figure.
As to the feeling of accomplishment, there is some joy in
knowing that we are helping to insure that the American people will
not devolve into a thin, vaporous haze which appears to be the fate
of the Italians, Spanish, and other assorted members of the
European Union. This is incredibly sad. As a fan of opera,
classical culture, Frank Sinatra, and pasta (not necessarily in
this order), I simply cannot imagine a world without a critical
mass of Italians.
The great irony of my life is that my professional work for the
last eighteen years has been in the fields of natural resources and
environmental protection. While almost all of my co-workers have
been supportive of me and my family, there are those in certain
bien-pensant circles who barely suppress their view that I
am some kind of war criminal for spawning so many mouths, yes,
consumers, for the world to feed. The Walter Mitty deep inside me
has wanted to respond to these censorious opinions with something
like:
"Maybe your yuppy spawn is a leach on society, but don't project
your problems onto my kids. Mine will serve the world, build
businesses, grow families, teach the young, aid the sick, feed the
poor, and pay for your retirement without breaking a sweat. They
have brains, and hands, and hearts, and souls -- not just
mouths."
A PROFESSOR from the University of Michigan was on NPR saying that
the United States is now the third largest country in the world
after China and India. This same professor was surprisingly upbeat
about our ability to handle the larger population. We have the
space, the ingenuity, and the adaptability to assimilate and
transform our growing population into an asset, not a
liability.
Later in the programming came a story about China's latest push
to force its rural population to restrict family size to just one
child. The tyranny driving this government mandate was glossed over
in the bland coverage of this latest outrage in what was once
referred to as "Red" China. Demographers are now saying that the
Chinese attempt at social engineering has resulted in too few
girls, and wives, and the prospect of an aged society in the not
too distant future.
There will be fewer, older Chinese, Japanese, and Europeans.
America, however, will continue to benefit and prosper from a
youthful, robust society due to the grit of immigrants and, I am
happy to say, from a few of us doing our part for the good of the
cause.
topics:
Business, Environment, European Union, Immigration