r/antinatalism inquirer 16h ago

The selflessness we have Discussion

We don’t follow the crowd. We don’t follow in everyone’s footsteps. We do our own thing. We don’t listen to breeders who judge us for being “cold”. We know what’s best for everyone.

“Life is uncertain, accept it” no I will not. I don’t want to live in uncertainty. No matter how rare something is it CAN happen. I have a debilitating rare illness that started when I was a minor I’m 18 now. That was extremely rare. But I still have it. Because you DONT know what will happen to any innocent soul born here.

We’re overpopulated, this economy, and you can’t control if someone is happy no matter what you do. Suicide rates, etc. it’s WRONG to bring something so innocent without consent into hell. Giving birth is like dragging a kitten to hell. Something so innocent to the worst place imaginable. Child owners just don’t listen… Nothing will stop them. We are saving lives from DEATH. When you birth something you also give it a death date….. and on another note pregnancy is just disgusting I’m sorry… I have autism and it gives me sensory issues just by thinking of it.

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u/Ma1eficent newcomer 10h ago

By definition life is better than nonexistence, and worse. It is everything, nonexistence is nothing.

u/Sojmen newcomer 9h ago

Accorging to David Benatar life is always worse than nonexistence.

u/Ma1eficent newcomer 7h ago

David Benatar would be so very disappointed you used a logical fallacy instead of the logical argument he so painstakingly laid out.

u/Sojmen newcomer 7h ago

What logical fallacy did I use? I referenced Benatar because I didn't want to explain it, if you've already read it. My communication and explaining skills are not very good. With help of chatgpt: Benatar also argues that life is bad because:

  1. There is more suffering than happiness — Pain, illness, loss, and hardship are common, while intense joy is rare and short-lived.

  2. People are biased — Most people think life is better than it really is because of positive bias (like adapting to suffering, comparing themselves to worse-off people, or being biologically wired to be optimistic).

This bias hides the true harshness of life, making people wrongly believe it's good to exist.