A look at the Silicon Valley approach to reinstalization


Michael Hit: I sit at the window here in the wire office, and when I look at the window, look at the Gulf Bridge and see electronic transport throughout the day.

Zoë Schiffer: Oh, my God.

Lauren Jude: It is almost similar to electronic transitions only in actual time. They rejoice, and they empty more electronic transfers. Is this the worst thing in this episode ever?

Michael Hit: Do you know? I will take it.

Lauren Jude: Good.

Michael Hit: I will take it completely.

This is wireless Wadi GharibShow people and strength and the effect of silicon valley. Today, we are talking about Pronatalism, and how the batch goes to increase birth rates between some of the largest and wealthy silicon valley names. We will talk about some date behind Pronatalism, who are the great defenders now, and what all this indicates. I Michael Calore, Director of Technology and Consumer Culture here in WIRED.

Lauren Jude: I am Lauren Jude, I am a great writer in Wire.

Zoë Schiffer: I am Zoë Schiffer, Wire Business and Industry Manager.

Lauren Jude: So, a few weeks ago when we were talking about dating applications, I was like, oh no, comrades you’ll tend to me because I think between us, I may have most of the experience in using dating applications, but now I feel that I am Mike, you and I will only be like “, zoë, tell us what a child is like”.

Zoë Schiffer: I feel that I am doing a decrease in the population. I had two and I will not face anymore, thank you.

Michael Hit: The scene is placed here, and Lauren is free of children.

Lauren Jude: Zoë is now one of our great presidents in Wire. Therefore, I would just like to say in an ordinary environment, not a bodcast environment, I may not sit from it and say: “Tell me about your experience to have children and be a parent,” but for podcast.

Zoë Schiffer: Lauren, we bring ourselves completely to work, come on.

Lauren Jude: Me too.

Zoë Schiffer: We are friends.

Lauren Jude: Yes, we are friends.

Michael Hit: Well, to start the conversation, I think we must determine what tendency is and who are the biggest supporters at the present time of this movement.

Zoë Schiffer: I thought you would say, we will determine what the child is. It is like a small person baldness. The next question.

Well, so the tendency in its essence is an ideology that enhances people having children. In Silicon Valley specifically, it was linked to this preoccupation with the low population. The idea that people do not have enough children to renew the population, and that it creates all kinds of economic problems on the road.

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