White births now account for less than half of all births in the United States. As if that wasn't a bad enough indicator for the future of the white race, this next article illustrates that, for the first time ever in US history, the white death rates outnumber the white birth rates. These two facts, combined with increasing mass immigration from non-white countries, means that if present trends continue white Americans will soon be a minority.
A 2013 article highlights that in 2011, 31% of children born in the UK were born to one foreign parent. In the same year, it was shown that 18% of children born were born to two foreign parents, meaning altogether 49% of children born in the UK that year had foreign ancestry. Professor David Coleman, of Oxford University, said: "On current trends European populations will become more ethnically diverse, with the possibility that today's majority ethnic groups will no longer comprise a numerical majority." What he means, then, without all the politically correct euphemisms that he has to use, is that whites will be a minority in Britain before long. How long? 2066. Already, white British people are a minority at 45% in London, with another 15% being non-British whites. So, only 60% of London is white, according to the 2011 Census. Is that acceptable? Would it be acceptable if Abuja was 45% Nigerian, or would it be labelled what it is - population replacement?
According the Italian National Office of Statistics, the fertility rate of Italian women was 1.41 per head in 2009. This doesn't meet the 2.1 target needed just to replace the existing Italian population. Italy's fertility rate has been below replacements levels for over three decades now. By 2050, Italy will be a country with a birth rate that has been continuously below zero population growth for 75 years. Italy's birth rate in 1950 was almost twice its death rate. But the death rate equaled the birth rate in 1985, exceeds it today and will be approaching twice the birth rate by 2050. Italy is an aging country. Italians are dying out. By 2100, assuming present trends continue, Italy will no longer exist.
Greece may seem an odd choice for this list, being relatively small, but seeing as European civilisation all traces back to Greece, and Greece has done more than any other to grow and defend that legacy, I thought it would be poignant to illustrate the Greek demographic crisis in a little depth. Greece has a dangerously low total fertility rate, well below replacement levels at 1.3. Greece also has a rapidly-aging population and a death rate that far outnumbers the birth rate (by 16,300) and because of the economic crisis Greeks are leaving in droves. This all means that in decades, Greece will cease to be a viable nation-state.
The 2011 fertility rate for Germany was just 1.36 per woman. Again, well below the 2.1 necessary just for replacement. Only 663,000 babies were born in Germany in 2011, the lowest in history - contrast this to the peak, in 1964 when German births (east and west) reached 1.4 million. That's over a 50% decrease in less than 50 years, and combined with mass immigration into Germany from Turkey, the wider Middle East and Africa, will mean that Germans will soon be a minority in Germany.
The demographic decline in Ukraine is another tale of woe. Under the Soviets, the Ukrainian total fertility rate generally met the replacement target and at some points well exceeded it, resulting in a steady population boost, from very low levels post-Holodomor (a cold-blooded extermination attempt) in the 1940s to 1993, when the decline started. In 2001, Ukraine's fertility rate was the extremely low 1.1 child per woman. Deaths outnumbered births, resulting in an annual population decrease of of 373,000 and is now decreasing at around half a million every single year. In 1990, the total population of Ukraine was 52 million. Today, in 2014, it is 45 million - a population decrease of 7 million in 24 years. Ukraine's situation is very similar to the Italian one, but Ukrainian life expectancy is significantly lower. Ukrainians, too, are on the way to extinction unless things change.