• ???@lemmy.worldOP
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    1 year ago

    That’s what war and siege does. People lose children a lot so they have more children.

    This is what it means to live in Gaza:

    0–14 years: 44.1% (male 415,746/female 394,195)

    15–24 years: 21.3% (male 197,797/female 194,112)

    25–54 years: 28.5% (male 256,103/female 267,285)

    55–64 years: 3.5% (male 33,413/female 30,592)’

    65 years and over: 2.6% (male 24,863/female 22,607) (2018 est.)

    Edit: source https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_the_State_of_Palestine

    • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      Maybe I don’t know, don’t bring more people into the world if they live on a literal battlefield? I don’t even want to bring kids into america right now. I can’t imagine how selfish one would have to be to bring a child into a warzone where their life expectancy is half the norm and they will suffer the entire time.

      • ???@lemmy.worldOP
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        1 year ago

        This is just something all humans do during war. I would never want kids either but I won’t blame others for doing a completely human thing. Not having children would mean a slow extinction for them.

      • ComradeKhoumrag@infosec.pub
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        1 year ago

        You live in the most sheltered country in the world and somehow have a very in depth perspective for what it’s like to live in a battlefield?

      • griefreeze@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        This is such an ignorant take and yet you felt compelled to share it as if it’s some obvious truth. I wish I could walk around with that kind of confidence.

        You probably think they should just move too, right? Such a simple easy answer, I wonder why they can’t…

      • Sparking@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        They aren’t having more sex. You have 18 years to be a child, and then another ~60 to die. At low life expectancy, the chances of you being a child is very high.

        • ???@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          I can tell you’re one of the people who never fights back because it’s easier to surrender.

          I don’t think it’s good or helpful to make conclusions about that person. It’s reasonable to not bring children into a bad economy… if you can afford to not have them and have lots more to fulfill you. It’s not reasonable, though, to go around judging people by whether or not they have had a child because of a situation that is totally out of control. Palestinians would easily lose the fight when outnumbered. No one is making “soldier babies” or anything like that – these are just children who deserve a good existence and not an open-air prison.

          This person doesn’t want kids, kudos to them, I can’t wait for the day when the last human goes extinct but this is a totally different issue.

          @Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com

          So who will be the one to blame? A normal human being getting married and having kids VS a genocidal ethnostate that wants to ethnically cleanse the natives of the land?

          Would it have been morally wrong for Jews during Nazi Germany to have kids? Maybe Anne Frank should have just not been born so we can prevent her suffering?!? Come on.

          • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 year ago

            First of all, thank you Snek for having a reasonable and adult discussion. And thanks to whoever cleaned up this thread (my shit included, even if the wafflehouse bit was hilarious).

            I’m not really looking at this as who to point a finger at. In terms of having kids, it’s a risk/reward analysis. This is just my opinion, and I’ve never implied it’s the only right answer. But me personally; if I was living somewhere under threat of being attacked, I would not feel comfortable bringing a child into that environment.

            If someone brings a child into the world and someone else dropped a bomb on that child, would I say it’s the parents fault? No, of course not. Will that parent be devastated? Yes. Will that parent have put blood, money and love into something that’s how gone? Yes. Will that parent spend the rest of their life feeling guilty about what happened? Probably. Do I personally want to put myself into that position? Hell no!

            But that’s me and my opinion. Like I said earlier, parenthood is hard as it is right now. Nevermind climate change…

            • ???@lemmy.worldOP
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              1 year ago

              Thanks for clarifying

              But me personally; if I was living somewhere under threat of being attacked, I would not feel comfortable bringing a child into that environment.

              Me too, I wouldn’t either (heck I’m not even having kids in normal circumstances)

              Climate change is also another (quite good) reason to clean up the planet and empty the orphanages first…

        • RubberElectrons@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Calm down man, at least on the second point. Having a kid is essentially a one-way ticket, let’s encourage people being sure they can be a quality parent.