The problem is not that people don’t have children. It’s that they don’t know how to raise them.
Modern society treats parenthood as an accessory, not a responsibility. Children are born into homes without authority, without order, without examples of strength. Parents outsource everything — to schools, to screens, to the State — and then wonder why their sons are weak and their daughters lost.
A generation ago, family meant discipline, sacrifice, and transmission of values. Today, it is selfies with a stroller and a belief that love alone will replace duty. But love without structure produces chaos, and chaos destroys both child and parent.
Civilizations are not sustained by the number of births alone. They are sustained by the quality of the men and women who are formed. And if parents no longer know how to raise children into adults, then no demographic policy, no subsidies, no slogans will save the nation from decline.