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KILLING-US-SOFTLY1

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decline. Without migration the EU’s population would have started a rapid decline in 2010. The<br />

birth of approximately 300 million Europeans has been prevented by the Global Depopulation<br />

Policy.<br />

The entire European continent, including Russia, has entered the last stage of the demographic<br />

transition, the shrinking stage. This shows that the covert chemical sterilization methods chosen<br />

by western nations, in conjunction with a variety of psychosocial methods, have been<br />

extraordinarily effective in halting population growth. In fact they have been so effective that<br />

many EU nations have had to introduce economic incentives to boost births in order to prevent a<br />

population decline that is too rapid and could spell their economic collapse.<br />

Russia’s demographic transition is even more<br />

advanced than that of Europe. Its population<br />

reached a historic peak in 1991, at 149 million,<br />

then declined at a rate of 0.5% until 2009 down<br />

to 143 million, and has been growing modestly<br />

since. The high death rate (due to rampant<br />

alcoholism) and low birth rate (due to covert<br />

chemical sterilization measures and tough<br />

economic conditions) account for the drastic<br />

fall. The Russian government, having been<br />

poisoning its people for the past 60 years in<br />

order to lower their fertility, now has to<br />

encourage more births to prevent a population<br />

collapse. Russia’s TFR has climbed to 1.7 (from a low of 1.15 reached in 1999) and is now<br />

higher than in any other Eastern European country.<br />

Russia had a population of 120 million in 1960 and 102 million in 1950. That means that its<br />

population has increased by a paltry 16% since 1960 and by only 23% since 1950. Russia,<br />

therefore, records one of the smallest population increases in the world since World War II. This<br />

is the result of the clumsy and callous way in which the Soviet and later the Russian government<br />

has combated population growth.<br />

Japan is at an even more advanced stage in its demographic transition than Europe. In 1945,<br />

when the Allies started their occupation and began controlling the growth of the Japanese<br />

population through chemical means, Japan had 72 million people. By 1960, when it already<br />

reached replacement level fertility, Japan had grown to 95 million. Its population peaked at 128<br />

million in 2010 and has been decreasing ever since. That means that Japan has grown only 44%<br />

since the end of World War II when the Allies imposed population control, and by a paltry 25%<br />

since 1960. Its population is expected to decline by nearly one million people per year in the<br />

coming decades and settle at 85 million by 2060, by which time more than 40% of the population<br />

36

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