Russian officials are making a huge push across the country to boost birth rates and get women to procreate by encouraging sex at work as Russia's population crisis escalates and Putin scrambles.
www.yahoo.com
Yes Putin has sent so many to the Ukraine he's having to force women to have sex at work in hope of making a future drone for others to shoot. Also Russian population has been going down due to lower birth and people getting the hell out of that shat hole Putin has created
Russian officials are making a huge push across the country to boost birth rates and get women to procreate by encouraging sex at work as Russia's population crisis escalates and Putin scrambles.
www.yahoo.com
Yes Putin has sent so many to the Ukraine he's having to force women to have sex at work in hope of making a future drone for others to shoot. Also Russian population has been going down due to lower birth and people getting the hell out of that shat hole Putin has created
I don't think that Putin (age 74 or 72) is so dumb as to believe that he could expect women who give birth in 2025 would supply him with an army when he is well, 94 or 92 years old.
It is true that to grow an economy, it is very useful to have a growing population. It is obvious that Russia has room for LOTS more people. Growing a larger population will be a serious challenge for Putin and all who follow him.
The very underpopulated Far East and Siberia are right on the border of China, which is far more heavily populated.
In After the Empire: The Breakdown of the American Order (2001), Todd claims that many indices that he has examined (economic, demographic and ideological) show both that the United States has outlived its status as sole superpower, and that much of the rest of the world is becoming "modern" (declining birth rates etc.) far more rapidly than predicted.<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmanuel_Todd#cite_note-:0-3"><span>[</span>3<span>]</span></a> Controversially, he proposes that many US foreign policy moves are designed to mask what he sees as the redundancy of the United States. In his analysis, Putin's Russia emerges as probably a more trustworthy partner in today's world than the US. The book has been much read although many of its more original ideas have been received with scepticism.
In After the Empire: The Breakdown of the American Order (2001), Todd claims that many indices that he has examined (economic, demographic and ideological) show both that the United States has outlived its status as sole superpower, and that much of the rest of the world is becoming "modern" (declining birth rates etc.) far more rapidly than predicted.<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmanuel_Todd#cite_note-:0-3"><span>[</span>3<span>]</span></a> Controversially, he proposes that many US foreign policy moves are designed to mask what he sees as the redundancy of the United States. In his analysis, Putin's Russia emerges as probably a more trustworthy partner in today's world than the US. The book has been much read although many of its more original ideas have been received with scepticism.
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