

Various anti-natalist groups have formed across the globe.

By Jack Jiang
PhD Student in Anthropology
The New School
Introduction
In the first few days after Donald Trumpโs election in November 2024, purchases ofย emergency contraceptives spiked, with two companies reporting sales about 1,000% higher than the preceding week. Meanwhile, Planned Parenthood reported a 760%ย increase in appointments for IUDsย the day after his win.
Many Americans are fearful that the incoming administrationย could further curb reproductive rights, 2ยฝ years after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to abortion. Today, roughly one-third of statesย ban the procedureย almost entirely or after the first 6 weeks of pregnancy โ before many women and girlsย realize that theyโre pregnant.
Several nomineesย for Trumpโs second administrationย oppose abortion rights. But some of his allies have suggested that not having children is itself a moral failing.
Inย a 2019 speech, for example, Vice President-elect JD Vance said that people โbecome more attached to their communities, to their families, to their country because they have children.โ In 2021,ย he tweetedย that low birth rates โhave made many elites sociopaths.โ During a Trump rally in 2024, Arkansas Gov.ย Sarah Huckabee Sanders said her childrenย are a โpermanent reminder of whatโs importantโ and โkeep me humble.โ Kamala Harris โ who has two stepchildren, but no biological children โ โdoesnโt have anything keeping her humble,โ Sanders said.
Beyond politics, many people hold similar views. People from New York Times columnistย Ross Douthatย toย Pope Francisย have described decreasing birth rates as a sign of self-centered cultures.
Plenty of childless people want children but canโt have them. Other people may not want kids for personal or economic reasons. But advocates for โanti-natalism,โ a relatively new social movement, argueย giving birth is immoral. Theย anti-natalists Iโve interviewedย push back against the idea that childlessness is selfishness. They believe they are protecting their unborn children, not neglecting them: that childlessness is the ethical choice.
Then and Now

In the 1970s, the word โanti-natalismโ referred to policies designed to reduce a countryโs fertility rate, such as theย campaign to sterilize millions of menย in India during the state of emergency from 1975-1977. Such policies were designed to addressย concerns of overpopulationย and poverty, spurred in part by growing environmental awareness.
In the following decades, niche environmental movements such asย the Voluntary Human Extinction Movementย were influenced by this trend and encouraged people to stop having childrenย for the sake of the planet.
However, anti-natalism first came to denote a moral philosophy in 2006, when two key books were published: โThe Art of Guillotining Procreators,โ by Belgian activist Thรฉophile de Giraud, and โBetter Never to Have Been,โ by South African philosopherย David Benatar.
Rather than emphasize the damage new humans cause to the planet, this new anti-natalism emphasizes the harm life brings to the unborn. By not having children, these philosophers argue, people help the unborn avoid the inherent painfulness of life. The unborn cannot experience lifeโs pleasures, either โ but asย Benatar writes, โthose who never exist cannot be deprived.โ
Anti-natalism took off among a collection of online communities but reached a broader audience in 2019, when Raphael Samuel, a Mumbai businessman, attempted toย sue his parentsย for giving birth to him without his consent. The stunt sparked public conversation about the ethics of procreation and prompted the formation of the activist groupย Childfree India.
Various anti-natalist groups have formed across the globe since, includingย a subredditย with about 230,000 members.ย Stop Having Kids, founded in the U.S. in March 2021, hasย hosted demonstrationsย spanning Canada, Bangladesh and Poland. That same year, Asagi Hozumi and Yuichi Furuno createdย Antinatalism Japanย and have been holding frequent outreach events in Tokyo since 2023. In early 2024, an Israeli activist named Nimrod Harel planned aย European tour to promote anti-natalismย in more than 30 cities.
Stake in the Future
Criticism of anti-natalists comes in many different flavors. Most frequently, however, anti-natalists complain that they are called selfish: that critics assume they are prioritizing their own freedom over raising the next generation. โI never understood people who say โnot having children is selfish,โโ one anti-natalist wrote in their community group chat. โName me one reason you are (having children) for the childโs sake.โ
Deciding not to have childrenย can be motivated by a desire for freedom and self-actualization, but it doesnโt have to be. Often, among the anti-natalist online communities I study, the point of not having children is precisely to protect them.
Shyama, an anti-natalist from Bengaluru, India, used to teach low-income children. After witnessing the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on her students, she hopes to pivot toward a career in mental health research for children and adolescents.
She speaks about her own children, but only in hypothetical terms, having vowed not to have kids. When she reads about bad news, she feels relieved that her children never have to suffer like that. She refuses birth for their sake. When her friends accused her of challenging other peopleโs right to have a child, she told me that โthis was less unfair than bringing another life into this world and imposing an entire lifetime of inevitable suffering on it.โ
Some critics respond that having childrenย gives parents a stake in the future. Philosopherย Samuel Scheffler, for instance, argues that having children personalizes the future, anchoring parents to a community thatย extends beyond their own lifetimes.

Anti-natalists, however, refuse to equate children with a stake in the future. Anugraha Kumar, a Marxist anti-natalist, told me that most leaders within the Communist Party of India are childless. Without needing to support a family, they are free to fight for a better future.
Secularizing Birth
Throughout history, catastrophic events have provoked reflection about the ethics of reproduction. After the Holocaust and the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,ย Jewishย and Japaneseย writers documented some survivorsโ apprehensions about giving birth. According toย anthropologist Jade Sasser, anxieties about climate change, the economy and political turmoil have fueled current questions aboutย whether to have a family.
But I have argued that this narrativeย downplays deeper shiftsย in how many modern societies understand birth.
Traditionally, birth was often considered entwined with religion: something predestined, or even shaped by divine intervention. In many of the societies where anti-natalist groups have formed, however, parents have far more control over whether to give birth, when and to whom โ and birth is viewed in a more secular way.
Birth is less often viewed as part of divine order but often likened to a lottery: a game of chance where parents roll the die and their children suffer the consequences. Japanese anti-natalists, for example, sometimesย compare their birth to โgachaponโ: vending machines that spit out a toy at random each time someone inserts money.
Parents choose to โspin the wheel of life,โ an anti-natalist from Philadelphia told me, without knowing what kind of life they will create. Without a way to acquire consent from the unborn, he added, โThis is not a risk that is ours to take.โ
Originally published by The Conversation, 01.08.2025, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.


