Dannichu
Tragically unbeyachted.
The kind of people I'm thinking of are usually smokers [...] too.
I lol'd. Both my parents smoke, absolutely loads of my friend's parents smoke, and they're all middle-class people who waited till they were 30-something to have children. I think smoking's a dirty, unhealthy habit, but I hate it so much when people are stigmatised and labelled for having one vice when everyone has some kind of (more socially acceptable) unhealthy habit.
Okay, rant over. Smoking-related one at least.
Again, we hear talk about how much of a problem overpopulation is, but is it actually that much of an issue? I haven't seen any evidence that proves that a) the population as a whole are having more children, and b) if such a thing does happen, it will have a negative effect on the country. Last I heard, the UK is relying on immagrants to keep the working population even vaguely stable because (among a whole series of other things) people keep retiring early and living for a much longer time, meaning there aren't enough working young people to support them.
Yes, there are healthcare issues in the UK, but I'm sure that if you look, it's not the kids (yes, even the mountains of kids born to irresponsible, smoking teenage single mothers living in council houses) who are using up the NHS' resources; it's the people who are living way past 80 and are on every kind of medication you can name.
Furthermore, it's probably better, economically speaking, for the working classes to have larger families than the middle- and upper-classes. So many kids from middle-class families are staying in education for far longer, often not entering the workforce till they're 25+ (meaning not only are they not contributing to the taxpaying workforce, they're using up tax money with their education), while most kids who leave school age 16 and start working (albeit on a low-wage job) are of the lower social classes. And then, later in life, you've got the rich doctors, lawyers and so on who retire at 45 because they can afford to, while all the people in lower-class jobs continue contributing to the workforce until retirement age.
(the last two pragraphs are conjecture on my part, only somewhat backed up by research, and while I could be wrong (it's happened before), it also makes sense)
My point is pretty much the same as it was on the previous page; there's no single cause of overpopulation (assuming overpopulation is even happening and, if so, it's a problem), and in order to talk properly about it, one must first have an understanding of all the issues involved - which is nearly impossible, given the sheer breadth and depth of all the contributing factors.