America’s Birth Rate Is Shifting Toward a Minority Majority and Now Things Are Starting to Make Sense

For the first time in the nation’s history, the country’s birth rate marks a landmark shift. According to ABC7, white births have fallen below 50 percent—an unprecedented milestone that means minorities are becoming the new majority.


A new study published by the Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell analyzed data from 33 million U.S. births over the past eight years. Researchers found that white births made up 49.6 percent, while all other races, including Hispanic, Black and Asian births, accounted for 50.4 percent combined.


This milestone carries a striking irony: while the nation continues to experience declining fertility rates despite the White House’s calls for women to have more babies, there is growing suspicion that this shift is fueling the Trump administration’s push for stricter Medicaid rules and tougher immigration crackdowns. Supporters claim these policies are about “reducing federal waste” and improving border control, but critics argue they directly target the women driving the nation’s growth.

The demographic shift should come as no surprise. Less than a decade ago, the U.S. Census projected that the nation would become ‘minority white’ by 2045. According to Dr. Amos Grunebaum, interviewed by ABC7, the data show that Hispanic women are having more children than white women and at younger ages. Grunebaum did not provide specific statistics for Black births.

Yet as the nation’s population grows more diverse, the systems intended to support maternal and infant health face increasing threats. Medicaid currently covers more than 40 percent of U.S. births, and several states use their Medicaid programs to close gaps in maternity care and reduce maternal health disparities— disparities that disproportionately affect Black women, who have the highest rate of maternal mortality.






Blacks fuck like rabbits ...black woman has 6 kids by 5 different daddies
 
For the first time in the nation’s history, the country’s birth rate marks a landmark shift. According to ABC7, white births have fallen below 50 percent—an unprecedented milestone that means minorities are becoming the new majority.


A new study published by the Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell analyzed data from 33 million U.S. births over the past eight years. Researchers found that white births made up 49.6 percent, while all other races, including Hispanic, Black and Asian births, accounted for 50.4 percent combined.


This milestone carries a striking irony: while the nation continues to experience declining fertility rates despite the White House’s calls for women to have more babies, there is growing suspicion that this shift is fueling the Trump administration’s push for stricter Medicaid rules and tougher immigration crackdowns. Supporters claim these policies are about “reducing federal waste” and improving border control, but critics argue they directly target the women driving the nation’s growth.

The demographic shift should come as no surprise. Less than a decade ago, the U.S. Census projected that the nation would become ‘minority white’ by 2045. According to Dr. Amos Grunebaum, interviewed by ABC7, the data show that Hispanic women are having more children than white women and at younger ages. Grunebaum did not provide specific statistics for Black births.

Yet as the nation’s population grows more diverse, the systems intended to support maternal and infant health face increasing threats. Medicaid currently covers more than 40 percent of U.S. births, and several states use their Medicaid programs to close gaps in maternity care and reduce maternal health disparities— disparities that disproportionately affect Black women, who have the highest rate of maternal mortality.






You're right flooding the country for 4 years with millions upon millions of illegals..... it does all make sense!
 
Yes. Recent demographic data confirms that White (non‑Hispanic) Americans have experienced more deaths than births for several years, and this pattern continued into 2024 and 2025.

The key point is that this shift did not begin in 2024—it began earlier and has been widening.

📉 When deaths began exceeding births among White Americans
According to a Washington Post–based demographic analysis summarized in 2025:

Among White Americans, deaths began consistently outpacing births in 2016, and

“the gap has widened since.”

This means that by 2024 and 2025, the pattern was already well‑established and continuing.

🧭 Why this is happening
Several demographic forces are driving the trend:

Aging population: White Americans are older on average than other racial groups.

Low fertility: Births among White women fell 19% between 2008 and 2023.

Delayed family formation: Fewer marriages and later childbearing reduce birth totals.

Stable death rates: Deaths have been steady, but births have fallen sharply.

The combination produces what demographers call “natural decrease”—more deaths than births.

🗓️ What this means for 2024–2025
Because the crossover happened in 2016 and has widened every year since, it is accurate to say:

Yes, in 2024 and 2025 White deaths exceeded White births,

and this is part of a long-term demographic shift, not a sudden change.

Nationally, the U.S. still has more births than deaths overall, but the margin is shrinking, and winter months are approaching near‑crossovers.

📌 Broader implications
States with older White populations (e.g., Maine, West Virginia, Vermont) now show strong natural decrease.

Younger, more diverse states show the opposite pattern.

The U.S. increasingly relies on immigration to maintain population growth.

illuminem.com/illuminemvoices/in-these-us-groups-deaths-now-exceed-births-whats-happening?utm_source=copilot.com
 
Do non-white US citizens births exceed deaths in 2024 and 2025

Yes — non‑white U.S. citizens continued to have more births than deaths in 2024 and 2025, based on the most recent national natality–mortality data. The available federal data does not yet publish final 2025 race‑specific tables, but the 2024 CDC and Census‑aligned datasets show the pattern clearly and consistently.

www.cdc.gov/nchs/data-visualization/birth-to-death-ratios/natality-mortality-trends.htm?utm_source=copilot.com
 
No, the major factor is that you were wrong, I educated you to the contrary, and you don't have the courage to acknowledge such.
25.3% of all live births during the 2021–2023 average were to Hispanic mothers

 
25.3% of all live births during the 2021–2023 average were to Hispanic mothers

No kidding? What's your point? Please RE-READ my post #33
 
This is about the 3rd time you posted this, chuckles. But if that were indeed the case, then your like-minded brethren would not be having hissy fits about this since that NYT article in the1990's. See post #33.
Everything's fine..... And it is indeed the case....It's not going to make a difference at all...
 
Back
Top