DeepSummary
In this episode, Malcolm and Simone Collins discuss a controversial Lancet study funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation that predicts a dramatic decline in global fertility rates by 2100. The study envisions a future where wealthy nations compete fiercely for immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa to sustain their economies, effectively treating these countries as 'human farms.'
The couple critiques the study's celebration of population decline as a 'success story' due to reduced carbon emissions, and its call for 'explicitly left-wing solutions' to rebuild society. They express concerns about the ethical implications of coercive immigration policies and the long-term consequences of treating human beings as mere economic resources.
Malcolm and Simone also highlight the potential cultural impacts of selectively draining certain countries of their most productive individuals, ultimately leading to the erosion of those societies. They argue that the study's assumptions fail to consider the importance of having economically productive cultural groups within nations for sustaining social systems and innovation.
Key Episodes Takeaways
- The Lancet study funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation predicts a dramatic decline in global fertility rates by 2100, with wealthy nations competing for immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa to sustain their economies.
- The study celebrates population decline as a 'success story' due to reduced carbon emissions and calls for 'explicitly left-wing solutions' to rebuild society.
- Malcolm and Simone Collins critique the ethical implications of treating certain countries as 'human farms' for economic gain, and the potential cultural erosion of these societies.
- They argue that the study fails to consider the importance of having economically productive cultural groups within nations for sustaining social systems and innovation.
- The couple expresses concerns about the long-term consequences of coercive immigration policies and treating human beings as mere economic resources.
- They highlight the potential for a fundamental reorganization of societies and the global balance of power as a result of the predicted fertility decline.
- The episode underscores the couple's passionate opposition to the policies outlined in the study, likening the potential outcome to historical tragedies.
- The discussion raises questions about the ethical considerations and unintended consequences of policies aimed at addressing demographic challenges.
Top Episodes Quotes
- “This is a vision for the year 2100 provided by Bill and Melinda Gates foundation“ by Simone Collins
- “The implications are immense. The future trends in fertility rates and live births will completely reconfigure the global economy and the international balance of power, and will necessitate reorganizing societies.“ by Dr. Natalia (from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation)
- “They are literally laying out their plans to keep these countries in poverty, to use them as human farms. Oh, my God.“ by Malcolm Collins
- “The world that they are setting up will be on that scale of human tragedy. And that is why I fight so hard and why I feel so strongly about this.“ by Malcolm Collins
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Episode Information
Based Camp | Simone & Malcolm Collins
Based Camp | Simone & Malcolm Collins
4/8/24
In this thought-provoking episode, Malcolm and Simone Collins discuss a controversial Lancet study funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation that predicts a dramatic decline in global fertility rates by 2100. The couple delves into the study's alarming implications, including the potential for wealthy nations to exploit impoverished countries as "human farms" to sustain their economies through immigration. Malcolm and Simone also examine the study's celebration of population decline as a "success story" and its call for explicitly left-wing solutions to rebuild society. Throughout the conversation, they critique the study's assumptions, highlight the ethical concerns surrounding coercive immigration policies, and warn of the long-term consequences of treating human beings as mere economic resources.
Simone Collins: [00:00:00] While the scenario may sound alarming, the paper describes the collapse in global birth rates as a, quote unquote, success story.
Fewer humans means less carbon emissions, the paper, observed. urged readers to prepare for a rapidly shrinking global population where most newborns worldwide are in sub Saharan Africa, where wealthy countries compete fiercely for immigrants to prop up their economies.
This is a vision for the year 2100 provided by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Would you like to know more?
Simone Collins: Okay. What? I, I was just clicking through to the research square article. Withdrawn the association between adult penile length and IQ evidences from 139
Malcolm Collins: countries. Why is that? Why would they withdraw it for
Simone Collins: that reason? 22 February 2024, Research Square has withdrawn this preprint due to the problematic nature of the topic concerning race and intelligence.
We acknowledge the [00:01:00] sensitivities involved and the potential for misrepresentation or harm. This decision reflects our commitment to disseminate, disseminate, withdraw on research that meets our rigorous standards for integrity and respect for all individuals. Please refer to
Malcolm Collins: our, so people who know what this article was on, it, it correlated IQ with penis links.
Yeah. And, and it did obviously break its cohorts by ethnic group. And unfortunately this ended up showing IQ differences in ethnic groups, which led to the paper being the
Simone Collins: results are still posted. I'll, I'll I'll, I'll read the results. statistically significant negative correlation was found between flaccid penile length and IQ, indicating higher IQs in individuals with shorter penile lengths and notable ethnic differences were observed.
Oh no. And so it's so funny though, because like, you'd think that this would be protracted. Because it's about. But I was just [00:02:00] reflecting on the fact that you somehow, despite, you know, all this, get to buck the trend and you've got both the big package and the big brain, I hope you appreciate what you have
Malcolm Collins: to crude for this podcast.
Simone. I didn't put
Simone Collins: disseminated in this. I didn't put
Malcolm Collins: talk about a really fascinating article today that I was going over because progressives are now beginning to admit that we've got a problem. We're not that we've got a problem, but that global fertility is crashing Much more rapidly and much faster than they thought before they are.
It's exciting. It was an article where I was like, okay, what I'm going to do is I am going to read segments from this article. Like we usually do when we're going over articles, just like the important points. But I just went through it. I was like every line in this is worth reacting to because it is so fascinating.
So what we're going to be going through and talking thr