On the weekend edition of The Mark Steyn Show we discussed the jihad's first murder of a sitting member of the British Parliament and the first Islamic murder in an English church. The slaughter of David Amess has already faded into the usual woozy passive blur of candlelight vigils, but, before his death is completely memory-holed, I would like to note one particular distinction of Sir David:
He had five children.
This made him an unusual man for one of his generation (born 1952) and a remarkably enthusiastic father among today's Englishmen. As Fleet Street reported the day before Sir David's horrific stabbing, the fertility rate in England and Wales has fallen to the lowest on record - 1.58 "children per woman", as it is still quaintly formulated, so maybe all those pregnant men will stampede into the maternity wards and save the day. You need 2.1 children per woman to maintain a stable population, so when it's 1.58 you're heading for an England and Wales with fewer English and Welsh.
This is the same trend line seen in the United States, where fertility has also fallen to record lows - and in a year when both countries have been locked down with nothing to do but procreate, watch Netflix, or Instagram selfies of themselves watching Netflix. Evidently, procreation comes a very distant third. As The Times (of London) reports:
The trends towards later motherhood and having a smaller family may also have been accelerated by financial uncertainty caused by the Covid pandemic, according to the British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS).
Could be. Or it could be that increasing numbers of western populations are simply checking out of the kid business entirely. It's almost as if, for all the joys of the multiculti utopia, they have no faith in the future, or at any rate zero interest in it.
Fifteen years ago I wrote a bestselling book about demography, which is actually pretty tricky to do. And so to increase its chances of going gangbusters at the mall I tried to come up with pithy lines such as:
The future belongs to those who show up.
If you have a country with great infrastructure, handsome buildings and extravagant emporia, it would be unreasonable to expect it just to empty out - any more than a stately home is going to lie abandoned for long just because the last in the line has expired on his drug stash. So, at the Channel ports as at the Rio Grande, the future is showing up. Thus, while the overall fertility rate in England and Wales is going down, the fertility rate of non-UK mothers is going up:
While fertility rates have continually fallen, the actual population of Britain has continued to increase, with mass migration accounting for 'about 90 per cent of population growth between 2017 and 2019.'
For anyone with even a residual memory of Britain from the day before yesterday - or even anyone who's watched a British movie from, say, the 1950s - the specifics are impressive. From the Office of National Statistics:
Percentage of live births to non-UK-born mothers, 2020
Newcastle 31.8 per cent;
Birmingham 43.6 per cent;
Coventry 46.3 per cent;
Manchester 51.3 per cent;
Oxford 51.6 per cent;
Leicester 56.4 per cent;
Cambridge 58.2 per cent;
Slough [next door to Windsor Castle] 64.8 per cent;
Barking and Dagenham 68.2 per cent;
Kensington and Chelsea 69.9 per cent;
Ealing [as in those quintessentially English 1950s "Ealing comedies"] 70.9 per cent;
Westminster [as in "the Westminster system"] 72.8 per cent;
Newham 73.8 per cent;
Harrow [where Winston Churchill went to school] 74.8 per cent;
Brent 75.8 per cent.
Where are all these "non-UK" mothers born? Don't worry, they're not all Somali. The Number One country of origin is Pakistan - legacy of empire and all that, so a lot of vibrant diverse first-cousin marriage in West Yorkshire.
The Number Two country of origin is Romania. Not all Romanian mothers come here voluntarily:
Around three quarters of women trafficked to the UK come from Romania and the majority are sold into the sex trade.
On the other hand, Bangladesh is down to Number Five and Somalia down to Number Seven.
Non-UK mothers accounted for 29.3 per cent of all births in England and Wales - which means the fertility rate of ethnic Anglo-Celts is not 1.58 but something closer to 1.3 births per woman, which is what demographers call lowest-low fertility from which no society known to human history has ever recovered.
The rate of immigration into Britain, Canada and America is beyond the powers of "assimilation", even if our societies were minded to assimilate, rather than denigrating the host culture by introducing (under a government of pseudo-conservative wankers) such novel concepts as the racism of mathematics. But, even without such over-egging of the pudding, on UK and other western rates of immigration, the "host community" does not assimilate the incomers, but vice-versa, as is happening in all the English cities listed above.
In Mitteleuropa, governments are energetically pro-family and opposed to mass unskilled immigration, noting crudely that the easiest way not to have a lot of Muslim terrorist stabbings is not to have a lot of Muslims. Even in France, Eric Zemmour, who may well be in next year's presidential run-off against Macron, speaks of a "demographic tsunami" - and God bless him for doing so, because it is not seemly for great nations to exit the stage of history without at least acknowledging the truth.
In the ever more stupid and trivial politics of the English-speaking world, that kind of talk remains strictly buried in what Tony Blair calls "the subterranean conversation" - save for a dwindling number of "sayers of the unsayable". Even the obsession with "wokeness" and "cancel culture" misses the central point: the educated white upper-middle-class leading the charge against statues and history and all the rest have (consciously or otherwise) grasped that it's over and, like canny aristocrats in revolutionary France or Tariq Aziz in Saddam's Iraq, are simply negotiating a place for themselves in the new order.
At the start of the Great War, Rupert Brooke wrote:
If I should die, think only this of me:
That there's some corner of a foreign field
That is for ever England. There shall be
In that rich earth a richer dust concealed;
A dust whom England bore, shaped, made aware,
Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam;
A body of England's, breathing English air,
Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home.
But not when the foreign field is England itself.
~We had a very busy weekend at SteynOnline starting with the latest edition of The Mark Steyn Show, in which Mark discussed the aforementioned murder of UK MP Sir David Amess by a "British national" and found himself recalling a sharp line from Kipling. Rick McGinnis's Saturday movie date was Sergio Leone's masterpiece Once Upon a Time in the West, and our Sunday song selection was somewhat fatalistic. In our highly popular feature Tales for Our Time, Steyn continued his serialization of Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey: Click for Part Thirteen, Part Fourteen and Part Fifteen - or for a good old binge-listen go here. Our marquee presentation was the latest in Mark's anthology of video poetry: Matthew Prior's meditations on Phyllis's Age.
If you were too busy this weekend fretting about hypothetical outbreaks of Islamophobia, we hope you'll want to check out one or three of the foregoing as a new week begins.
If you've been thinking of joining The Mark Steyn Club, we'd love to have you. Membership also makes a great gift.
Mark will be back this evening with Part Sixteen of Northanger Abbey.