There's a simple narrative going on among the far right being presented in little pieces but together forming a whole picture.
The bottom line is that a certain segment of white Americans are terrified that they are becoming a minority. This is always been what the Border conversation has been about.
This is what January 6th was about. They just couldn't handle that they got out voted. And they see White America and Jesus America as the same thing. That's why there were Jesus 2020 flags flying that day.
So we're also dealing with Christian Nationalism. And I know like people like to qualify it as White Christian nationalism but any Christian Nationalism needs to go fuck itself.
In addition to "building the wall" (whether a physical wall or an otherwise functional way to control border crossings), now they're talking about a $5,000 breeding bonus. But do you think they want everyone to have that? I assure you they don't.
Then there's the autism registry which is a first step in a eugenics program. I live in Virginia and our eugenics program only officially ended in 1979. It was actually used by the defense in the Nuremberg trials.
If this were really about growing the US population they would be quite a simple solution to it. Making immigration easier!
I'm wondering how you could turn that into a slogan.
Anybody remember the movie A Boy and His Dog? Not seeming so far fetched.
When the global economy finally collapses they can turn all the distribution warehouses into egg fertilization labs.
But at least they'll have kept the immigrants out.
Originally Posted By u/TerrainBrain
At 2025-04-25 08:58:10 AM
| Source
I found an article earlier today on NPR that talks about the people in the pro-natalist movement that like what Trump and Vance are talking about when it comes to making women have more kids, and you're honestly not that far off. It's essentially a new eugenics movement that has alot of the same flavor as the trad wives movement, it's being perpetuated by rich people cosplaying as normal people. https://www.npr.org/2025/04/25/nx-s1-5371718/pronatalist-birth-rate-musk-natal-conference