The birth rate debate raging across conservative circles is missing the elephant in the room: while we're arguing about whether nine kids is too many, the radical left is systematically destroying the very foundation of American family life.
A new analysis reveals that conservatives are getting distracted by infighting over family size when they should be laser-focused on the real culprit behind America's demographic collapse - liberal policies that have made it nearly impossible for working families to afford children.
The establishment media loves to paint this as a simple choice between career and family. As one social media user mockingly shared, the narrative is always the same:
"conservatives say the steep decline in our birthrate is the triumph of selfishness over sacrifice... an easy caricature: Privileged, highly educated women have chosen cats over children and are straining the fabric of American society."
But here's what they're not telling you, Patriots. The real reason birth rates are plummeting isn't because American women suddenly decided they hate children. It's because decades of failed liberal policies have made raising a family a luxury most Americans can't afford.
The Hidden War on Families
While conservatives debate optimal family size, the left has been busy:
• Inflating away family savings through reckless spending
• Pushing woke ideology in schools that drives parents to expensive private alternatives
• Creating an economy where both parents must work just to survive
• Promoting anti-family propaganda disguised as "women's empowerment"
The frustration is real among everyday Americans who see through this manipulation. As one patriot put it online: there's "snobbery" from those who "hate themselves and normal people" when it comes to traditional family values.
President Trump's second-term agenda offers hope - with promises to slash regulations, end the war on American energy, and restore sanity to our schools. But will it be enough to reverse decades of anti-family policies?
The question isn't whether families should have nine kids or two. The question is whether America will survive long enough for families to have that choice at all.
