Pronatalism: The Unseen Ideology
An examination of the cultural, religious, and economic machinery that treats procreation as a default, and the philosophical arguments for a more critical approach.
What happens to a life when most of it is sold by the hour? These essays examine anti-work theory, consumer capitalism, corporate culture, and the quiet alienation of late modernity — drawing on philosophy, sociology, and lived experience.
An examination of the cultural, religious, and economic machinery that treats procreation as a default, and the philosophical arguments for a more critical approach.
Pronatalism, the pervasive but often invisible ideology that treats procreation as a default, shapes our world by serving powerful cultural, religious, and economic systems.
A critical examination of the cultural, religious, and economic machinery that frames procreation not as a choice, but as a default.
Pronatalism is not a neutral stance but a deeply embedded ideology. This essay unpacks the cultural, religious, and economic machinery that promotes procreation as a default imperative, often at the expense of individual autonomy and ethical consideration.
Antinatalism vs childfree: one is a personal lifestyle choice, the other an ethical argument that procreation itself is wrong. Here is how they actually differ.
Why the demand to be constantly productive is not a law of nature but a political arrangement—and what it costs us.
Modern alienation is not about loneliness. It is about the way connection has been reorganized by technology, markets, and the erosion of shared space.
Corporate culture is not about productivity. It is about performance, compliance, and the domestication of the self.
Consumerism is not a personal failing. It is a system designed to manufacture dissatisfaction. Understanding how it works is the first step toward freedom.