Amish Baby Boom

celticdb15

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At least these white people are going forth and multiplying!


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<H1 id=yn-title>APNewsBreak: Study says Amish expanding westward</H1>http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/brand/SIG=11f589428/**http://www.ap.org/termsandconditions
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<LI ="buzz ult-"><CITE ="vcard">By MARK SCOLFORO, Associated Press Writer Mark Scolforo, Associated Press Writer </CITE>â€" <ABBR title=2010-07-28T10:29:00-0700 ="timedate">WedJul28, 1:29pmET</ABBR></LI>[/list]
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HARRISBURG, Pa. â€" The search by the booming North American population of Amish for affordable, fertile farmland has produced settlements in 28 states and Ontario â€" and has even led parties to scout recently for suitable properties in Alaska and Mexico.


A new study estimates the number of Amish has increased nearly 10 percent in the past two years alone, to a total population of 249,000, compared with about 227,000 in 2008. That figure was just 124,000 in 1992. Nearly all Amish descended from a group of about 5,000 in the early 20th century.


The study by the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown College in Elizabethtown, Pa., found that about two-thirds of Amish still live in the traditional strongholds of Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, but that they continue to spread west, particularly into the Midwestern corn belt.


Farmland in Lancaster County, Pa., can cost $15,000 an acre, compared with $2,000 or $3,000 per acre elsewhere.


"They are sort of challenging some of the mainstream assumptions about progress and how you achieve the good life and happiness," said Elizabethtown professor Don Kraybill, the study's director. "They're not merely surviving; they're thriving, and growing at this very rapid rate."


The highest rates of growth over the past year were recorded in New York (19 percent), Minnesota (9 percent), Missouri (8 percent), Wisconsin (7 percent) and Illinois (7 percent). High-growth areas for Amish in the past five years also include Kentucky, Kansas and Iowa.


The newest state to get an Amish settlement is South Dakota, after a group of at least six families bought several farms near Tripp in the southeastern part of the state. They have planted forage for their cows, built barns and established a weekly bake sale.


Myra Weber, co-owner of Weber's Grocery, said they've patronized her store for baking supplies and ice cream.


"We put it in paper sacks for them, wrap it up really well," Weber said. "They say they have to get it home right away and eat this."


The study focused on all Amish groups that use horse-and-buggy transportation, so it excluded such automobile-driving groups as the Beachy Amish and Mennonites.


The Amish are a devout Christian faith dating to the 1500s, and their ancestors began arriving in eastern Pennsylvania around 1730. They generally eschew modern conveniences such as motorized vehicles, instead relying on horse-drawn carriages and permitting only limited use of telephones and electricity. Practices can vary from group to group, but their plain dress and use of the Pennsylvania Dutch dialect make them distinct in modern society.


The remarkable growth is almost entirely due to the Amish birth rate â€" many Amish families have five or more children. Kraybill said the Amish retain about 85 percent of the young adults who have to decide whether to remain in the church. The Amish marry within the community, and the total number of converts nationwide is believed to be less than 100, he said.


About half the Amish are under 18 years old, meaning the community tends to focus much of its energy on young people and schools, Kraybill said.


Earlier this summer, a van of Amish land scouts from Prattsburg, N.Y., visited Alaska to seek a site for a new settlement but were unable to find anything suitable. Another group, from Illinois and Missouri, just made a return trip to Mexico on a similar mission.


Kraybill said there are no Amish congregations in Alaska or Mexico, although small numbers of Amish schoolteachers from Pennsylvania and Ohio have been helping improve education within an Old Colony Mennonite community in Mexico. That conservative Mennonite group has roots in Russia, rather than Switzerland and southern Germany, like the Amish.


The teachers' supporters produced a newsletter describing their experiences in Mexico, in an effort to raise money for the project.


In the new population study, Pennsylvania passed Ohio as the state with the largest Amish population, in part because the authors employed a more precise method to estimate the number, one that takes into account the different average size of an Amish district, or congregation, depending on the state.


The study says the Amish have targeted areas for new settlements judging by the quality and cost of farmland, the potential for nonfarm employment, a rural lifestyle, other factors conducive to their values and proximity to other Amish communities.


Their decisions to leave are often prompted by suburban sprawl, land costs, tourism and other intrusive activities, zoning or similar governmental disputes, the local business climate, employment needs and church-related conflict.


The Amish account for less than one-tenth of a percent of the U.S. population of 310 million. Edited by: celticdb15
 
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there's some Amish around here, and some of the young women are very goodlooking!
smiley27.gif
 

Highlander

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I have great admiration for the Amish. When I was on contract in South-Central PA a few years ago, I took a drive straight north of Harrisburg towards Sunbury for a Sunday drive and saw an older Amish man driving a small horse-drawn cart alongside the highway. Later on, while driving through a small town farther north, a small Amish Dutch boy, in traditional Dutch-boy garb, darted out of a large barn-looking garage on a horse just to the left of me and dashed in front of me and down the street away from me. After that, I was on the outlook for the Oleson's General Store, thinking maybe I could get some of those candy rocks, licorice and gumballs I saw they had on TV there as a kid in the 70's...maybe even see Laura and Nellie in a cat fight.

I've always said, when the sh*t really hits the fan, the Amish won't miss a beat. They are thriving because they never entered into the Matrix like most everyone else. It's also probably why they were on the Bu$h Administration's home-grown terr0r1st list a few years ago...the Globalist Elite Banksters cannot profit from the likes of them. What does it say about our government that such a peaceful, responsible, and traditional Christian group such as them would be considered a threat or potential "terr0rists".

Edited by: Highlander
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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Highlander said:
I've always said, when the sh*t really hits the fan, the Amish won't miss a beat. They are thriving because they never entered into the Matrix like most everyone else.

you are partly right, Highlander. but you are also partly wrong. i say that because, without a doubt theirknowledge of how to get by off the grid would mean their lifestyle would continue on without a hitch ... IF (and as you can see that's a big if) they managed to evade the looting and pillaging that is sure to crop up WTSHTF.

while they don't consider themselves to be pacifists, the Amish refuse to do violence and will not pick up a firearm. i don't think this attitude will serve them well when the roving hordes of gangs and looters eventually find them. but if they can survive this lawless period, then they will bounce back wonderfully due to their knowledge of how to live (and live well) without modern tech.
 

Thrashen

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Amish birth rates are certainly among the highest of any group on planet earth, at around 7-8 children per woman. I've read that some experts believe this figure to be a rather low approximation. Unlike some Mennonite groups, who recruit non-white inner city "members,"Â￾ the Amish have been of Swiss-German decent, and have spoken "Schweizerdeutsch"Â￾ for hundreds of years.

Unfortunately, Jimmy's correct with concern to the Amish's non-violent traditions. I've read countless stories of Native Americans (you know, those noble, cordial environmentalists) brutally raiding Amish homesteads, stealing their resources, murdering men and women, and burning their homes with children sleeping inside. As Jimmy said, the Amish have no weaponry, so the "fight"Â￾ was quite analogous to "The Black Citizens of South Africa VS. White South African Farmers."Â￾

The Amish represent the exact opposite of everything that modern whites are vehemently encouraged to be"¦religious, kind, caring, hard-working, courteous, loving, loyal, modest, decent, self-reliant, efficient, and prudent. Not to mention that they feel that large families are a gift from God. Most whites poke fun at the "backwards"Â￾ nature of the Amish"¦which makes perfect sense, because modern whites are rigidly instructed to mock and deride and discredit all the beliefs and traditions that their people once held dear.

May the Amish one day be the sole survivors"¦and permeate this hellish Earth with their goodness. Edited by: Thrashen
 

Riddlewire

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Jimmy Chitwood said:
i don't think this attitude will serve them well when the roving hordes of gangs and looters eventually find them.
I believe that Obama is a far greater threat to the Amish than any societal collapse. Everything he does is designed to control and homogenize all American life. It is anathema to global socialists to allow a distinct cultural group to remain separate from the rest of their unified social vision. Although the Amish can opt out of the health insurance mandate, I'm sure that won't last very long. Eventually, they will be required to submit to BMI testing, forced health payments, forced civil service and perhaps forced education doctrines for their children.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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Riddlewire, i agree with you about Obongo ... but i suspect his (or rather his handlers) plans will result in the collapse of the USA, if they are implemented. whether this collapse will become violent, i don't know.
 

759852372

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Amish population growth

http://www.washingtonpost.com/natio...96f146-e001-11e1-8d48-2b1243f34c85_story.html


MIDDLEFIELD, Ohio — The Amish are one of the fastest-growing religious groups in North America, according to a new census by researchers at Ohio State University. The study, released July 27 at the annual meeting of the Rural Sociological Society, suggests a new community sprouting every three and a half weeks.

Nearly 250,000 Amish live in the U.S. and Canada, and the population is expected to exceed 1 million around 2050.
 

Highlander

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No doubt that's one reason why "our" government considers them "Domestic Extremists".

I've always wondered if you had to be born into an Amish family to be considered Amish or if you could marry or convert and become one.
 
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