| |
Britain
59 years old - the new young?
Shannon Buckley | 23 May 2011
Charting Happiness
Shannon Buckley | 10 May 2011
Britain unprepared for looming population crisis
William West | 02 October 2009
|
|
| From MercatorNet's home page |
Pink Lego
8 Feb 2012
Why are feminists throwing their toys out of the cot over a victory for girl power?
Oh, Britannia!
7 Feb 2012
It's not her fault but six decades on, Queen Elizabeth rules a wave of social disintegration.
Tightening the screws
7 Feb 2012
The Obama Adminstration is attacking religious rights by mandating that all health-care plans, even church-run one, must provide cover for…
Shifty words
6 Feb 2012
What does “marriage equality” actually mean?
Unnatural Selection
6 Feb 2012
A book by a pro-choice feminist faces up to an unintended consequence of the West's fertility war.
|
|
| Tags |
|
Latvia,
Muslim,
Moscow Demographic Summit 2011,
Recession,
USA,
European Union,
Auckland,
7 billion people,
Detroit,
Nigeria,
South Africa,
carbon emissions,
Royal Family,
Italy,
workforce shortage,
UNICEF,
climate change,
Zimbabwe,
demographic winter,
Portugal,
One-child Policy,
Mothers,
Roger Short,
Belfast,
Brendan O'Neill,
aging,
UN,
Birth,
unemployment,
Internet use,
gendercide,
history,
population aging,
Prince Charles,
falling fertility,
immigration,
sex selective abortion,
Carbon Credits,
Roe v. Wade,
BRICs,
elderly,
China,
Washington rally,
Malthus,
Sterilisation,
sex ratio,
Japan earthquake,
Superannuation, New Zealand, Retirement,
election,
Oxfam,
Rugby World Cup,
old age,
International,
wealth,
abortions,
Belgium,
pension,
Underpopulaiton,
The Economist,
ageing population,
Famine,
development,
Pakistan,
pensions,
US,
marriage,
Paelstine,
ageing,
African Americans,
population decline,
population control,
Japan tsunami,
debt,
birth rate,
Philippines,
human rights,
Abortion,
Muslim-Christian demography,
Nature magazine,
recession,
Contraception,
population bomb,
Sterialisation,
baby boomers,
happiness,
funding,
Middle East,
HIV,
World Bank,
Ethiopia,
Sweden,
Africa,
nursing homes,
Jonathan Sacks,
sustainable development,
birthrates,
Ehrlich,
one-child policy,
investment,
centenarian,
|
|