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NPG Calls for White House Commitment to Study U.S. Population Growth

Cites need for Presidential Commission on Population as critical to administration’s priority to reverse climate change. Following the release of the White House’s National Climate Assessment last month, Negative Population Growth (NPG) President Don Mann has called on the Obama administration to give top priority to studying the consequences of U.S. population growth. In a letter to Dr. John P. Holdren, Director of …

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NPG Commentary Published in Spring Issue of Social Contract Journal

The Spring 2014 issue of Social Contract Journal is out!  This issue’s theme is:  What Should America’s Immigration Policy Be?  NPG Deputy Director Tracy Canada contributed the piece “U.S. Immigration Policy – An Ever-Growing Challenge,” which highlights the real facts about U.S. immigration.  NPG Special Advisor David Simcox collaborated with Tracy to submit a revised version of his classic NPG …

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NPG Re-Issues its Call for an 80 Percent Cut in Legal Immigration

Alexandria, VA (May 11, 2014) – Observing that mass immigration has by default become the nation’s de facto population policy, Negative Population Growth (NPG) President Don Mann has released an updated position paper.  The paper, Toward Negative Population Growth, restates NPG’s call for an eighty percent reduction of annual legal immigration into the U.S. NPG’s proposal would reduce the current …

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Perpetual Population Growth is the Aim of Washington’s Immigration Policy, Says NPG Head Don Mann

Alexandria, VA (March 13, 2014) – NPG President Don Mann, in his March 2014 President’s Column, states that the current drive in Congress and the White House to double immigration grows out of the widely held but misguided conviction that immigration-fed population growth ensures economic growth. Mann rejects the warning of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors that the slowing …

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New NPG Paper Foresees Rising Scarcity and Costs of Non-Renewable Natural Resources

Alexandria, VA (March 10, 2014) – For more than two centuries, the United States and the rest of the industrialized world have taken for granted the abundance and affordability of the high quality non-renewable natural resources (NNRs) – minerals, metals, and fossil fuels – vital to maintaining and expanding their high-consumption industrial societies. These were “the good old days” that …

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