Italy is Dying as There are Now More Deaths Than Births

Daily Slave
February 15, 2015

Italy now has more deaths than births and apparently the solution to this problem is to bring in hordes of Blacks and Moslems.

Perhaps the Italian government should consider compensating White Italian women for having children.  This would undoubtedly increase the birth rate because these women wouldn’t feel the need to go out and get some slave job.  They would be much more inclined to have kids.

Of course this would make too much sense so they will obviously not implement such measures.  Apparently national suicide is a preferable option.  They’d rather bring in hordes of retarded Africans and violent mud people than encourage additional White births.

The Telegraph:

Italy’s birth rate has fallen to its lowest level since the foundation of the modern state in 1861, prompting fresh alarm in a society that has been steadily ageing for decades.

The number of births per 1,000 people has fallen to just 8.4 per cent, down from 38.3 per cent when Italy’s territories and kingdoms were unified a century and a half ago.

In Britain and the United States, the figures are 12 per cent and 13 per cent respectively.

Last year 509,000 babies were born in Italy, 5,000 fewer than in 2013.

The mortality rate also declined last year, stretching life expectancy for Italian women to 85 years, while the average man will live to 80.

Beatrice Lorenzin, the minister of health, said: “We are at the threshold where people who die are not being replaced by newborns. That means we are a dying country.

On top of this, there really isn’t a need for more people.  Automation is making it so less and less people are required to run society, while giving smaller populations a higher quality of living.  All that bringing in these hordes does is require White people to work more to feed them, since they do absolutely nothing but consume resources.  Even if they work – and the Pakis do open little shops – they aren’t providing anything, and simply taking away work which could just as easily be done by Italians.

Andrew Anglin contributed to this report.