>>74
If the 20th century taught us anything, it's that in the current age very few human activities, much less something as subject to variation as immigration levels, can continue unabated for the better part of a century. I'm aware of these kinds of projections, and they're of little value. If you ask me, we're currently on the verge of either leading the world into a technological/trans humanist age that few really appreciate the implications of(in 2 centuries there will be few strictly biological humans left), or of collapsing beneath the weight of eastern powers who are operating out of our 200 year old, antiquated playbook. You give me hope that it will be the former.
>>75 makes me believe that the latter is inevitable.