Don't for a minute think I don't understand how hard it can be to be financially strapped and have a family who depends on you. I won't bore anyone with my own past tales of woe but suffice it to say that yes...I'm well aware of these hardships and I'm thankful on a daily basis that I was able to improve our situation.BNguyen said:a person who has the bigger family needs more money than someone who lives alone. I'm willing to bet that if you had someone you wanted to take care of but lacked the resources because "hey, let's give more money to the lonely guy instead of mister/mrs.family over there simply because they have kids". People who have more mouths to feed, at least halfway decent ones, will work harder to bring home that much more, so we can't discriminate against them because they have one more kid than the next person.Diddy_Mao said:By the same argument why should a person who has engaged in the relatively unimpressive act of procreating get to keep more of theirs? Why should we reward those who lack the foresight to make sure that they can take care of their families without additional assistance?BNguyen said:So why should a family that has fewer children keep more of their paycheck than one that has let's say two more children? A family that has to pay higher taxes would eventually become homeless and/or living off of the government. either that or the stress rate would cause mental breakdowns and increase the amount of violence. Either way, a family that has more mouths to feed needs a bigger amount of money in order to survive even if the amount of people living in the same family was formed under less than reasonable meansDiddy_Mao said:For the sake of argument I'll say zero, at least for a decade or so. Let a decent chunk of our population die off before we insist on filling the gap to exceed the number of deaths.
As far as enforcement, obviously you can't. not without turning your government into a kind of totalitarian "big brother" state. So you just discourage breeding by increasing the incentive to the alternative. For example tax credits for households with no children. Decreasing returns for every child until the number of children in the household equals or exceeds the number of adults in the home.
Despite what you might think I'm a big believer in social programs. I firmly believe that those of us who can should willingly sacrifice for those of us who can't but therein lies my issue with the topic at hand. We should be assisting those who can't not those who won't.
Between contraception, emergency contraception, abortion and adoption there is no reason at all beyond petty sentimentality for a person to raise a kid they aren't fiscally prepared for. Ultimately the increased burden is a choice that the parent has made and I see no reason whatsoever to reward them for making poor financial decisions.
However, the point of the discussion is essentially the hypothetical ethical control of the population size and to me the simplest solution is to increase the incentive to the desired goal. Hence no kids get the cookie, 2 or more kids get no cookie at all.
Now obviously this isn't something you could just roll out overnight and tell everyone who presently has kids to suck it. You roll it out gradually, you provide amnesty for existing families, you increase awareness, You provide a post roll out grace period ( 9 months seems appropriate.)
Lastly, and on a more personal note...you tell every fundamentalist wing nut to start home schooling their kids because like it or not we're teaching the biological realities of the human reproduction cycle in our schools.