Japan in serious trouble

A Japanese man would rather play video games and marry a robot than cold approach a woman.

ooof. sad.

Check this out.

So, in 1966 the birthrate in JP dropped precipitously coz of a superstitious belief in the sexagenary zodiac cycle: “girls born would be hot-tempered, bring misfortune, and potentially kill their husbands, leading many families to delay or avoid having daughters that year through abstinence, contraception, and higher abortion rates.”

Nyeri babes should be on this time all the time.

Your theory might be true. For example while @sokwemtu slaves away in nyamakima during the day, @Wasika the delivery boy has already impregnated Njambi his wife with a strong luhya sperm to make sokwe mtu proud and throw a baby shower for

Will never happen, mungich pure breed mimi linesge mzima na ya bibi, the babies are browncieths like mturadoms @gaines

Kíhíí ulikubaliwa uzae aje??

A country with a population of 123 million having 600000 births in a year is quite alarming. They have taken the birth control initiative to dangerous levels and soon there will be no people in that country. They should just encourage people to get married but have a maximum of three kids if possible. The wealthy can get as many kids as they wish

All developed asian countries are below replacement rate as we speak.South Korea countryside is empty as more than 80% are competing for resources and survival in the cities na hawazai.
Ata Kenya, women in the highest wealth quintile have 2.7 children on average against 5.3 children for women in the lowest wealth quintile.
We can judge them from our perspective but we are heading in the same direction.Capitalism is brutal.

Feminism does not exist in Japan if we go by the current definition. The issue in Japan is the economic pressure placed on young people intending to start families. Men are expected to have a house and a stable job, things that are no longer assured. Child rearing is an expensive affair, plus kids are also expected to look after their parents. You cannot really talk about material abundance in a country where people have to work for everything.