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The
US, Britain, Europe and United Nations have been
working relentlessly to undermine the Muslim ummah
by birth control.
- The Western powers hate Islam (Muslims) so much!
Its time to populate the earth with
Muslim's everywhere! Inshallah!
ITG
look into the strategy behind
population control. Did you know that if half
of Nigerian land where to be cultivated this would
feed the whole of Africa! It is estimated that
the world can cater for a population of 60 billion,
we are only 6 billion to date so why the hysteria?
This again is a plan to undermine the ummah of
Muhammad(saaw).
Brutal
Population Control

The "conventional
wisdom" of the western-sponsored family planning
programs is very simple: There are too many people
in the world. Population is growing too fast and
family planning methods must be made available
to every couple on earth. This point of view has
been stated so often and so forcefully, that some
people are beginning to believe that it is really
true. But behind all these cooked-up truths are
some strange contradictions and some fascinating
puzzles that need to be explored, exposed and
known to our public that has been subjected to
a one-sided propaganda for far too long.
Contrary to our misconceptions, population policies
in the West are rather intended to increase birth
rates. For instance, a family in Germany receives
cash "birth bonus" for having a baby.
The government approves the bonus for the sole
purpose of increasing the number of births by
200,000 per year. France, Switzerland, Greece,
and the Scandinavian countries have all adopted
"incentive" measures to encourage larger
families. These include housing benefits, state
maternity allowances, and a wide variety of regulations
and subsidies making large families more attractive
and affordable. Similarly, the rest of the developed
world is giving tax breaks to large families and
other measures are undertaken that have a positive
impact on fertility.
Yet the same western countries, except one or
two like Greece; are contributing money for reducing
population size in the developing world through
the most repressive population control schemes.
In mid-1970s, they bankrolled the "state
of emergency" declared in India that resulted
in millions of men being hauled away in trucks
and forcibly sterilized. They inspired the notorious
"one-child" population policy in China
which is enforced through compulsory sterilizations
and abortions. In Pakistan too, none of the development
organizations has as much funds available at its
disposal as the Family Planning Association for
propaganda advertisements and other programs.
The US and its allies shifted their focus to
growing populations of the developing world soon
after World War II. According to a portion titled:
Considerations for American Policy, taken from
"Demographic Studies of Selected Areas of
Rapid Growth," (proceedings of the Round
Table on Population Problems, Twenty-Second Annual
Conference of the Milbank Memorial Fund, April
12-13, 1944, New York City, pages 146-158): "Regions
whose readily available resources are now less
fully developed, may emerge with sufficient political
unity and industrial strength to give their growing
numbers power. Failing to find a solution to their
problems within their own borders, they may easily
become threats to world peace." The list
of recommendations made in the above conference
also included:
"It is important that specific and widespread
propaganda be directed to developing an interest
in the health and welfare of children rather than
in large families for their own sake. Such education
would also involve propaganda in favor of controlled
fertility as an integral part of a public health
program. It is important to develop a native leadership
that will acquire new values rapidly and serve
as a medium for their diffusion. To this end native
political leaders, civil servants, and native
middle classes are needed."
Essentially, there has been little deviation
over the past 45 years from this formula of pursuing
ideological change among people in less developed
countries at the initiative of the UN's rich country
members. The practice of promoting ideological
change, both through widespread propaganda and
through the employment of an elite leadership
as agents for social policy, is likewise at the
heart of the U.S. Agency for International Development's
recent emphasis on programs known as "information,
education and communication" and "policy
development."
A Report of the Royal Commission on Population
(U.K. June 1949) acknowledged in paragraphs 20,
21, 353, 354, and 613 that rapid population growth
in Europe was to be an essential condition for
development of the region. The report stated that
the lack of "steady population increase could
threaten the preservation of British influence
abroad" (paragraphs 348, 355, 356, 357, 360,
613, 648, and 649). In paragraph 636, 658 and
659 pro-nationalist measures were suggested to
encourage higher rates of population growth. This
report was presented to the British Parliament
by command of His Majesty and necessary measures
were approved thereafter. Similarly, a study,
in which the CIA, the Department of Defense, the
State Department, the U.S. AID and the Department
of Agriculture participated, concluded in 1974
that population control should be a key element
of U.S. foreign policy because:
-
Significant population growth in certain
larger nations would give them greater political
status and influence and would thereby have
adverse geopolitical implications for the
United States;
-
The United States' military and industrial
sectors require supplies of critical mineral
resources available almost exclusively in
the Southern hemisphere, and access to such
resources might be jeopardized by the political
demands created by larger societies;
-
The growth of population in poor nations,
and the relative youth of societies with high
birth rates tends to give momentum to nationalist
movements that cause political problems for
the U.S.;
-
Growing nations in the South might be tempted
to nationalize foreign investments in order
to better absorb into the national economy
the wealth generated by these firms (National
Security Study Memorandum 200 or "NSSM
200," is reviewed in detail in IPFA Working
Paper, #1 Population Control and National
Security)
Among its many recommendations, the National
Security Council study urged that pressure be
put on leaders of developing countries to adopt
official family planning targets and national
population plans. This was to be done through
a complex strategy of diplomatic contacts by using
U.S. economic leverage under the foreign aid program
and international financial institutions to set
aside development funds specifically earmarked
for family planning activities, and by the dissemination
of aggressive and often deceptive propaganda intended
to dispel fears that support for population control
is based on a desire by the United States and
other northern nations to weaken the future economic
and political strength of the developing countries.
Furthermore, in a commercial paperback book,
Ray S. Cline, former deputy director of the CIA
and now chairman of the U.S. Global Strategy Council
(USGSC), reports that changes in global population
distribution are moving world centers of power
away from the U.S. and Europe. The publication
called The Power of Nations in the 1990s: A Strategic
Assessment, by the University Press of America,
1975. It said, "The spirit and competence
of the individual human beings in a society, in
the long run, may count as much as or more than
the concrete and material resources a nation possesses.
Population size is clearly a major element in
the international perceptions of whether or not
a country constitutes a critical mass in terms
of national power."
The Western analysts, thus, conclude that except
in special cases, it is the most populous nations
who will dominate the world in the next century.
"It is hard in normal cases to think of nations
with a population of less than 20 million as having
truly treat power in their own right, independent
of the interests or actions of larger nations.
For example, Israel(4 million), New Zealand (3
million), and Singapore (2 million) -- have a
disproportionate influence in international affairs
because of some special circumstance, such as
advantageous strategic location or world-wide
commercial activity," says the publication.
However, it is the 23 countries with the largest
populations that will be "automatically powerful"
in coming years. Those countries include the Peoples
Republic of China, India, Brazil, Nigeria, Pakistan,
Egypt, Bangladesh, Russia, Indonesia, Japan, Mexico,
Vietnam, the Philippines, Iran, Turkey, Thailand,
and Ethiopia.
The Western perspective in this regard is so
obviously contrary to what we are being presented
with. For example, Matthew Connelly and Paul Kennedy,
argued in an article appeared in the December
1994 edition of Africa 2000, that the "key
global problem" for the immediate future
can be found in "unbalanced demographic trends"
and the impact this situation might have on power
structures that maintain the present inequitable
distribution of wealth. They point out that "Europe
and North America, which contained more than 22
percent of the world's population in 1950, will
contain less than 20 percent by 2025" and
elsewhere observe that the low-birth rate societies
of the West "are committing demographic suicide."
They also contend that potential economic progress
in "some of the poor regions of the globe"
poses a danger to the West because it will set
in motion a trend which will result in "the
economic and political balances of power"
moving away from today's allied powers.
This is the crux of the Western objectives behind
sponsoring family planning programs in the developing
world. Even Jacques Chirac of France remarked
not long ago: "When you compare Europe with
the other continents, it's terrifying. In demographic
terms, Europe is disappearing. Twenty or so years
from now our countries will be empty, and no matter
what our technological power, we shall be incapable
of putting it to use." And he also includes
the words of K. Mahbubani from Singapore's Foreign
Ministry who criticizes what he calls the "siege
mentality" of Western leaders. "Simple
arithmetic demonstrates Western folly," Mahbubani
says. "The West has 800 million people; the
rest make up almost 4.7 billion.... No Western
society would accept a situation where 15 percent
of its population legislated for the remaining
85 percent." Thus, he concludes, "power
is shifting among civilizations." And indeed
the West acknowledges as stated by Connelly and
Kennedy that it is "undeniable that a shift
in material power toward Asia is under way.
The Coming Anarchy by Robert D. Kaplan (February
1994 edition, Atlantic Monthly at pages 44-76),
is another representation of the Western thought
that says the developing world has become an explosive
mix of "overpopulation", corruption
and disease. The youth in the developing world,
he says, are "like loose molecules in a very
unstable social fluid, a fluid that [is] clearly
on the verge of igniting."
The West is worried in particular about the Islamic
movement around the world that appeals to the
masses and "spreads across artificial frontiers,
fuelled by mass migrations into the cities and
a soaring birth rate." But all such analysis
and commentaries boil down to the worry about
a declining white race -- determined to hold onto
privilege by brutal force if need be -- even as
it finds itself increasingly outnumbered by people
from the developing world. All this makes "the
revenge of the poor" seem very much well
justified, indeed. Environment is a new factor
that has been added to the family planning propaganda.
It is argued that population increase is going
to adversely impact on the environment. In fact,
the environment depends on other factors. Indeed,
populous countries tend to have greater resources
available for environmental projects than do nations
with fewer people. The Western policy of boosting
fertility in its own societies makes the whole
environment argument seem ridiculous: advocates
of Globally Responsible Birthing (GRB) want faster
population growth at home -- among the very people
who already are consuming nearly 80 percent of
the world's resources.
Who's Crowded?

Then comes the complicated question of
the "carrying capacity" of the planet.
Calcutta might be called "crowded."
Mexico City could be considered the same, and
so could Manila or Lagos or Cairo. But the word
"crowded" is almost never used to describe
cities in developed countries like New York, London,
or Tokyo - despite the fact that these cities
are even more densely inhabited than major cities
of the developing world. Population "density"
actually measures "crowding" and it
works like this: Netherlands, for example, consists
of 37,466 square kilometers of land. The country's
population is 14.9 million. Therefore, Netherlands
has 397 people per square kilometer of its territory
and 397 is its population density. England consists
of 245,778 square kilometers with a population
of 57.4 million, giving that country a density
of 233 persons per square kilometer. In Germany,
there are 221 people per square kilometer. And
all of these countries want their own populations
to increase.
Now look at the population figures for the countries
that are being forced to slash birth rates by
foreign aid donors and lenders. In Pakistan, there
are just 142 people for each square kilometer
of territory. China, the most populous nation
on earth, has a total land mass of 9.6 million
square kilometers with a population density of
just 116. Indonesia and Thailand - two countries
that have been subjected to particularly ruthless
population-reduction campaigns - have densities
of only 99 and 108 respectively. The ratio of
people-per-kilometer in Mexico is barely 45. In
Ethiopia it is 42, meaning that Britain is more
than sixteen times as crowded as Ethiopia. Elsewhere
the figures are even more startling. In Senegal,
for example, there are 37 people for every square
kilometer of land. In Brazil, there are fewer
than 18. Somalids population density is a mere
13. And in some places - Namibia and Mauritania,
for example -there are less than two people for
every square kilometers of territory. Which means
the problem is not with population and resources,
but with development and the economic inequality.
The debate on the carrying capacity implies that
less-developed countries cannot "sustain"
as many people as rich countries can. But why
not? The Western nations became wealthy through
industrialization - and industrialization was
made possible by raw materials extracted mainly
through the construction of vast colonial empires,
from the present developing countries and their
natural resources. Even today, the natural resources
on which the powerful countries depend must be
imported from Asia, Africa, Latin America and
the Middle East. The developing countries only
need systematic and organized efforts toward sustainable
development provided they are left in peace. As
long as the West keeps on interfering in their
internal affairs, the developing nations won't
get an opportunity to focus on development. Stop
all population planning programs and just help
India and Pakistan resolve the Kashmir issue and
then see the level of development in this region.
Irrespective of the disproportionate use of fuel
for heating and other purposes in the temperate
regions of the West, the warm climates of the
developing countries can sustain - in terms of
food - about twice as great a population density
as the North. And this answers the other half
of the "sustainable population" question
- that is food. Most of the 549,146 square kilometers
of land that make up France can produce crops
for only about half the year. But in tropical
Kenya, with roughly the same amount of space,
the land can produce year- round.
Unfortunately, however, there is a lack of basic
justice in international relations and politics.
Most of the usable land in the developed countries
is cultivated, their technology is advanced, and
they can afford to import what they cannot grow.
In developing countries, however, only a small
percentage of fertile land is in cultivation,
and the countries are so poor that they must export
most of what they grow.
The next question is of stability: Will population
growth in the developing world lead to conflict?
Birth control advocates are quick to use this
argument as a last resort. They argue that the
crime rate would increase and there would be a
conflict for capturing the resources. Of course,
urban areas tend to have more crime than do rural
villages, but this rate also varies from Society
to society. The number of serious crimes reported
compared to the total population in Shreveport,
Louisiana, US, with 200,000 people, for instance
is immensely higher than it is in Cairo, Egypt
with 20 million people.
In fact, the western strategic planners are more
worried about international conflict than they
are about robbery and assault in the streets.
They fear that as populations grow in the less-developed
areas, pressures will mount for a redistribution
of wealth from rich to the poor. In this respect,
they are undoubtedly right. This explains why
such enormous effort is expended by the powerful
nations of the world to gather census figures,
project population growth rates, evaluate political-demographic
trends, sponsor family planning and fund poverty
alleviation programs - a fund that is no more
than a few drops in a desert.
The nature of the population and conflict equation
with a few.
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