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Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low total white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link which shows that white fertility rates are projected to rise whereas all other groups will continue to fall (upper left figure). It's just a matter of time until white conservative numbers reach a critical level at which their high fertility compensates for the low birthrates of white liberals. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage (conservatives), that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates and increasing White evangelical fertility rates (center left figure).

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low total white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link which shows that white fertility rates are projected to rise whereas all other groups will continue to fall (upper left figure). It's just a matter of time until white conservative numbers reach a critical level at which their high fertility compensates for the low birthrates of white liberals. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage (conservatives), that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low total white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link which shows that white fertility rates are projected to rise whereas all other groups will continue to fall (upper left figure). It's just a matter of time until white conservative numbers reach a critical level at which their high fertility compensates for the low birthrates of white liberals. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage (conservatives), that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low total white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link which shows that white fertility rates are projected to rise whereas all other groups will continue to fall (upper left figure). It's just a matter of time until their numbers reach a critical level at which their high fertility compensates for the low birthrates of white liberals. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage (conservatives), that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low total white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. It's just a matter of time until their numbers reach a critical level at which their high fertility compensates for the low birthrates of white liberals. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage (conservatives), that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low total white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. It's just a matter of time until their numbers reach a critical level at which their high fertility compensates for the low birthrates of white liberals. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage (conservatives), that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low total white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. It's just a matter of time until their numbers reach a critical level at which their high fertility compensates for the low birthrates of white liberals. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage (conservatives), that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low total white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. It's just a matter of time until their numbers reach a critical level at which their high fertility compensates for the low birthrates of white liberals. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage, that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low total white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. It's just a matter of time until their numbers reach a critical level at which their high fertility overcompensates the low birthrates of white liberals. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage, that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Again, no. Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage, that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage, that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility. The opposite is true for historically Black churches, where more are leaving than joining. And since church attendance correlates with fertility, we can see how this correlates nicely with falling black fertility rates.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage, that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving, so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage, that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level. In addition, more Evangelicals are joining the faith than are leaving., so they aren't going anywhere, and will only increase in numbers due to high fertility.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Anabaptists like the Amish and Mennonites have had high fertility rates since the 18th century. As a matter of fact, fertility rates in the 18th century (fertility 5.29) were lower than today (8.31). So your claim that Anabaptist or Amish fertility rates will fall with emancipation of women is wrong, mostly because most Anabaptists don't leave their faith and thus don't become emancipated; they have a retention rate of almost 90%, so no, their fertility rates will not drop as you can see in above linked studies.

Furthermore, your Gallup graphs are meaningless, mostly because they reflect the overall population. It does not consider the fact that there's a white high fertility group that is about to turn low white fertility rates around, as you can see in my link. You don't have to be a genius to understand that if you have a high fertility group with a 40% fertility advantage, that they will eventually outgrow others, esp. since immigrant fertility rates are collapsing as well and are barely at replacement level.

America's future is White and Christian.

257 days ago
1 score