May 12, 2007

Mañana es el Día de la Madre por estas latitudes. Sin pretender ser mala onda, les dejo este artículo sobre la caída de la tasa de natalidad en países como Canadá (visto en Instapundit):

Canada isn't the only country in this predicament. According to America Alone, Mark Steyn's self-described and penetrating rant on "demography, Islam and civilizational exhaustion," the developed world has gone from 30 per cent to 20 per cent of global population. Greece has 1.3 births per couple -- the "lowest low" from which no society has ever recovered; Russia, where 60 per cent of pregnancies are terminated, has the fastest-growing rate of HIV in the world and, by 2050, 60 per cent of Italians will have no brothers, sisters, cousins, aunts or uncles. In the developed world, only the United States, with a 2.1 birth rate, is replacing itself.

How did it come to this? In Canada, one answer is infertility. This affects one in every 15 Canadian couples (in Britain one in six are affected), who spend some $30 million a year on in-vitro fertilization alone. Defined as failure to conceive after one year of trying, infertility can result from many factors affecting both males and females, but according to the government of Canada's Biobasics website, the two biggest factors are delayed childbearing and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).

2 comments:

  1. Luis a tu mamá la llamás mañana o en octubre?

    La verdad nunca supe por qué era en octubre por acá, ni por qué allá es en mayo...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Iván, Con mi mamá y el resto de la parentela y amigos argentinos sigo usando las fechas argentinas, pero acá seguimos las costumbres locales.

    ReplyDelete

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