Chapter 44: The Population Crisis
- Home
- The First Superhuman: Rebuilding Civilization from the Moon
- Chapter 44: The Population Crisis
Chapter 44: The Population Crisis
Jason slowly regained consciousness, his eyes fluttering open to the harsh white light of a small sterile room. Several scientists in white lab coats were standing nearby, quietly updating digital charts.
What happened? Did I blackout?
The pungent smell of antiseptic hit his nose. He squinted and looked around; it was a small medical infirmary. He must have been brought here after collapsing.
Fragments of a vivid dream lingered in his mind, a vision of a cluster of stars, and a sensation of himself transforming into a blazing sun. He couldn’t tell if it had been a hallucination or something else entirely.
His body was hooked up to various monitoring instruments, heart rate sensors, brainwave scanners and an IV drip was taped to his arm. He glanced at the bag; it was a standard glucose-saline solution.
Two soldiers from the security, guarding at the door. Their expressions were serious, but their posture was relaxed, indicating that the Noah was not in a state of emergency.
Seeing this, Jason finally breathed a sigh of relief. Aside from a slight lingering dizziness, he felt physically excellent, better than he had in months, actually.
No… that wasn’t quite it. The entire world seemed to have shifted slightly in his perception. Everything felt sharper, clearer, though he couldn’t pinpoint exactly how.
“Sir, you’re awake!” A young nurse exclaimed, noticing Jason sitting up. “The doctor said you collapsed from exhaustion. You need to pay more attention to your rest schedule. I’ll go get the senior medical officer.”
Before she could finish her sentence, she hurried out of the room.
Jason didn’t care about doctors. He swung his legs out of bed and ripped the IV tape off his arm himself. Rest? Who has time for rest? He felt perfectly fine.
“Mateo, how long was I out?” he asked the Special Forces soldier stationed at the door.
“Reporting, Sir. Ten hours and thirty-six minutes since you were found,” the soldier replied, snapping to attention. “Commander Austin found you unconscious last night and had you transported here immediately.”
“We maintained strict operational silence. Only a select few know about the incident.”
Jason nodded, relieved. His biggest fear was that his collapse might have triggered a panic. He was currently the backbone of the Noah. If he went down, the resulting power vacuum could lead to chaos. No one else had the authority to hold the disparate factions together.
Fortunately, it had happened during the night cycle. He trusted Austin to handle the cover-up.
Ten hours of sleep. That was probably the longest he had rested in six months. No wonder he felt so energetic.
“Alright. Good work,” Jason said, standing up and stretching. “You two can return to your posts. There’s no need for a guard detail here anymore. And… tell the doctor I’m fine.”
“Yes, Sir!” The two soldiers saluted in unison.
Jason thought of something then he threw on his jacket, tidied his appearance, and hurried out. The nurse’s advice about “more rest” went in one ear and out the other.
He found Austin in the security office.
“Austin, I’ve been thinking,” Jason said, barging into the room without knocking. “If humanity is going to survive and prosper, we have a massive problem. Population.”
The words came from the gut. While he was unconscious, the vision of the star cluster had haunted him. Fifty thousand stars. It was too few. Too dim.
Fifty thousand people. What could they actually accomplish on a galactic scale? The Old World had a population of seven billion.
After the brutal attrition of the Agricultural Transformation and the launch of the Noah, they were left with a severe labor shortage. The survivors were highly skilled, yes, but fifty thousand people was barely enough to maintain a small city, let alone an interstellar civilization.
“Captain! You’re awake!” Austin stood up in surprise. Even though he was now the Head of Security for a civilian government, he still habitually called Jason by his military rank.
“I am. But forget that. Why were you looking for me last night?” Jason asked.
Austin paused, his expression shifting uneasily. “Last night… I felt something. A sun rising in my chest. Burning hot. I don’t know if it was a hallucination or what… I asked around, and others felt it too.”
“My first thought was you, Captain. That’s why I came to your quarters and found you unconscious. Now the ship is buzzing with rumors. They’re talking about the ’Son of God’ again. Calvin’s following is growing.”
Austin looked uncomfortable. He was a man of science and logic, a pragmatist. Facing a mysterious supernatural phenomenon left him feeling uncomfortable.
“Don’t ask me. I’m not sure what happened either.” Jason was silent for a moment, then he recounted the vision he had seen while unconscious, the stars, the darkness, and the sudden ignition.
The two men looked at each other, struggling to process the impossible.
“Perhaps…” Austin said slowly, “The Enhanced Human physiology has untapped potential. We know the human brain utilizes only a fraction of its capacity. Maybe the genetic modification unlocked something we don’t understand yet.”
“Did you feel anything else?” Jason asked.
“I just feel… vigorous. Full of energy. Nothing negative.”
“If it’s not hurting anyone, we’ll shelf it for now. I’ll have Dr. Roman and his team look into it later.” Jason shook his head.
Since he couldn’t solve the mystery right now, he compartmentalized it. He had bigger issues.
“Austin, listen to me. I’ve been running the numbers. The population bottleneck is our biggest existential threat. What’s the exact headcount right now?”
“51,223 souls,” Austin replied instantly. He had the numbers memorized.
“Fifty-one thousand. It’s too low. What’s the demographic breakdown?”
“26,298 males, 24,925 females. The average age is 28.6 years. There are almost no children, and very few elderly over the age of sixty. The vast majority are of prime childbearing age.”
Jason nodded. The gender ratio was stable, and the age distribution was technically a “workforce sweet spot.” Most of the older individuals were senior scientists or essential experts. But while a workforce of young adults was great for immediate labor, it was a ticking time bomb for the species.
“So, theoretically, if everyone started procreating, we could increase the infant population by a maximum of twenty thousand within a year?”
“That… is the theoretical maximum,” Austin wiped sweat from his forehead. “But practically? Impossible. We’ve run the census. There are only about a thousand established couples on board. Most people aren’t looking to get pregnant in the middle of a deep space with no guaranteeof tomorrow. We currently have only sixteen confirmed pregnancies.”
“Besides, Captain, our current infrastructure couldn’t support a baby boom.”
Sixteen.
It was a pathetic number. If they only produced sixteen new humans a year, the species was doomed.
Their current population pyramid was shaped like a diamond, bulging in the middle, empty at the top and bottom. Right now, the workforce was strong, and they didn’t have to spend resources caring for the elderly or children. But fast forward thirty years?
When this generation aged out, there would be no one to replace them. The population would crash. Civilization would wither and die in the void.
Jason had to think decades ahead.
But humans weren’t livestock. You couldn’t just force them to breed. The government couldn’t mandate love.
Human reproduction was a massive energy investment. It required courtship, stability, marriage, ten months of gestation, and then eighteen years of resource-intensive child-rearing.
In a high-stress survival environment, people naturally stopped having kids.
It was a sociological paradox known well on Earth: The more educated and developed a society, the lower the birth rate. The higher the stress, the lower the desire for children.
These were the three massive hurdles Jason faced:
* High average education level (lowers birth rate).
* High stress/workload (lowers birth rate).
* Economic instability (lowers birth rate).
Everyone on the Noah fit all three criteria perfectly.
Jason rubbed his temples. He couldn’t think of a silver bullet. They didn’t have “family planning” restrictions, yet the birth rate was approaching zero.
“We need to encourage relationships,” Jason mused. “We need to promote marriage. Eventually, we’ll need policy incentives for childbirth.”
“Yes, Sir,” Austin replied. But his tone was hollow. As a soldier, he had no idea how to engineer romance.
“How is the Lunar Society platform doing?” Jason asked.
“Well, we’ve essentially turned the internal forums into a dating app,” Austin said with a wry smile. “The engagement is high. But since the incident yesterday, the feeds are clogged with talk of the ’Sun,’ the ’Son of God,’ and that cult of personality stuff again…”
“I’ll have Roman research it thoroughly ,” Jason waved it off.
He still wondered about the “Enhanced Human” factor. If the enhancement serum or whatever agent had changed him, could be replicated for everyone, perhaps it would make them stronger, smarter… better equipped to survive.
As for the hero worship? It was a double-edged sword. Right now, he needed their loyalty. He couldn’t afford to tarnish his own image. He would deal with the sociological fallout later.
“Captain, I just realized something,” Austin said, raising his voice. “The biggest barrier might be simpler than we think. Our living conditions are garbage. We’re all living in modular metal crates. Groups of people are sharing communal latrines. Who wants to raise a baby in a tin can?”
“I think privacy and housing quality are the major choke points.”
“You’re right,” Jason sighed, looking around the metal room. “If we want them to build families, we have to give them a home.”
“Get the engineering leads ready. I want to launch a new project.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 194: Prevention
- Chapter 193: Investigation
- Chapter 192: A Secret Report
- Chapter 191: The Memory Weapon
- Chapter 190: Treatment
- Chapter 189: Getting to Work
- Chapter 188: The Great Scientific Religion
- Chapter 187: The Path To Truth
- Chapter 186: Ambition
- Chapter 185: The Super Hadron Collider
- Chapter 184: A Metal Breakdown
- Chapter 183: The Arrest
- Chapter 182: A Day in the Life of an Alien
- Chapter 181: The Artificial Earth
- Chapter 180: A Extraterrestrial Parasite
- Chapter 179: The Loser Club
- Chapter 178: The Mysterious Superconductor
- Chapter 177: The Superalloy Series
- Chapter 176: The Great Leap in Science and Technology
- Chapter 175: Approximate Location
- Chapter 174: Comic Sociology
- Chapter 173: Honor System
- Chapter 172: Progress
- Chapter 171: Utopia
- Chapter 170: Democracy
- Chapter 169: Turning Waste into Treasure
- Chapter 168: Time Dilation
- Chapter 167: Magma Layer
- Chapter 166: A New Journey
- Chapter 165: Ultimate Destruction
- Chapter 164: The Last Supper
- Chapter 163: Taunts and Insults
- Chapter 162: A Feast For Scientists
- Chapter 161: A Small Star
- Chapter 160: Massive Attack
- Chapter 159: The First Battle in Deep Space
- Chapter 158: Nuclear Attack
- Chapter 157: Anti-Entropy Field Aggregation Particles
- Chapter 156: The Viridian Bribery
- Chapter 155: Emergency Manufacturing
- Chapter 154: A Two Prolonged Approach
- Chapter 153: Another Hope
- Chapter 152: Nuclear Interception
- Chapter 151: The Neutron Star Fragment
- Chapter 150: Culture
- Chapter 149: Enemy of the Viridian’s
- Chapter 148: Planetary Spaceship
- Chapter 147: Star Fragment Energy
- Chapter 146: Holding a Treasure?
- Chapter 145: A Mysterious Gravitational Source
- Chapter 144: In Blink of an Eye
- Chapter 143: Quantum Computer
- Chapter 142: A State of Equilibrium
- Chapter 141: The Federation
- Chapter 140: A Psychological Advantage
- Chapter 139: Fawning
- Chapter 138: The End of a Civilization
- Chapter 137: Alien, Monkey, Tree-Folk
- Chapter 136: An Unforeseen Crisis
- Chapter 135: Too Frightening!
- Chapter 134: Mutual Distrust
- Chapter 133: Continuing the Disguise
- Chapter 132: Decryption
- Chapter 131: The Victory of the Pretender
- Chapter 130: The Fall Of An Interstellar Empire
- Chapter 129: The Response
- Chapter 128: The Dark Forest
- Chapter 127: The Ion Cannon
- Chapter 126: Open Fire!!
- Chapter 125: Smoke and Mirrors
- Chapter 124: Space Fortress
- Chapter 123: The Disguise Plan
- Chapter 122: Signals from Outer Space
- Chapter 121: The Beginning of a Great Era
- Chapter 120: Nuclear Fusion
- Chapter 119: Technological Boom (2)
- Chapter 118: Technological Boom(1)
- Chapter 117: Relocation
- Chapter 116: Mom on the Destruction of Earth
- Chapter 115: Various Theories
- Chapter 114: Post-Recovery Meeting
- Chapter 113: Going Home
- Chapter 112: Crisis and... Gains?
- Chapter 111: Sudden Battle
- Chapter 110: Rescue Plan
- Chapter 109: Psychological Warfare
- Chapter 108: Metal Door
- Chapter 107: Missing
- Chapter 106: Hypnosis
- Chapter 105: Onwards
- Chapter 104: Final Preparations
- Chapter 103: Modified Gauss Rifle
- Chapter 102: Target-Inner Ring
- Chapter 101: Advice
- Chapter 100: Investigation
- Chapter 99: Exploration Operation
- Chapter 98: Surveillance
- Chapter 97: Choice
- Chapter 96: A Sudden Crisis!!
- Chapter 95: Civilization Turning Point
- Chapter 94: A Happy and Busy Life
- Chapter 93: Laser Ignition Scheme
- Chapter 92: Weapon Research
- Chapter 91: The Longevity Hypothesis
- Chapter 90: The Blast Furnace
- Chapter 89: The Longevity Virus
- Chapter 88: Machine Prototypes
- Chapter 87: Willpower
- Chapter 86: No Way Out
- Chapter 85: Lily’s Secret
- Chapter 84: Superhuman Research
- Chapter 83: A New Atmosphere
- Chapter 82: A New Year Begins
- Chapter 81: Weapon Research
- Chapter 80: Destructive Technology
- Chapter 79: Dark Universe
- Chapter 78: A Powerful Civilization?
- Chapter 77: The Great Filter
- Chapter 76: The Universal Law of Life
- Chapter 75: The Mystery of the Universe
- Chapter 74: A New Environment
- Chapter 73: Sense of Crisis
- Chapter 72: The Horn of the Industry
- Chapter 71: The Grand Design
- Chapter 70: Ironclad Order
- Chapter 69: The Grand Blueprint
- Chapter 68: The Mega Deposit
- Chapter 67: Awakening
- Chapter 66: Dawn of Victory
- Chapter 65: Psychic Ability
- Chapter 64: Serum Therapy
- Chapter 63: Johnny’s Death
- Chapter 62: Superhuman Enter The Battle
- Chapter 61: One after Another
- Chapter 60: Silent Battle
- Chapter 59: The Arrival Of The Noah
- Chapter 58: Rescue Plan
- Chapter 57: Unknown Plague
- Chapter 56: The Uranium Strike
- Chapter 55: Landing
- Chapter 54: Selecting The Team
- Chapter 53: Arrival on Mars
- Chapter 52: Vacuum Zero Point Energy
- Chapter 51: The Energy Paradox
- Chapter 50: Mars
- Chapter 49: Ice Cooling
- Chapter 48: Wolfpack Vs Tesla
- Chapter 47: The Great Construction Project
- Chapter 46: The New Economy
- Chapter 45: The Beginning Of Super Civilization
- Chapter 44: The Population Crisis
- Chapter 43: Malice Of The Cosmos
- Chapter 42: Goodbye, Mother
- Chapter 41: Towards Mars
- Chapter 40: Departure To Mars
- Chapter 39: Everything Is Ready
- Chapter 38: Choose Both
- Chapter 37: The Detonation
- Chapter 36: Nuclear Test
- Chapter 35: The Special Individual
- Chapter 34: The Helium 3 Warhead
- Chapter 33: The Argument
- Chapter 32: The Celebration
- Chapter 31: The Lunar Society
- Chapter 30: The Secret of Humanity
- Chapter 29: The Captain’s Shadow
- Chapter 28: The Four Phases
- Chapter 27: Project Noah
- Chapter 26: Project Starfire
- Chapter 25: The First Harvest
- Chapter 24: Fast, Hard And Precise
- Chapter 23: Project Orion
- Chapter 22: Ecstasy
- Chapter 21: Lily’s Theorem
- Chapter 20: At Worst We Die
- Chapter 19: The Death Spiral
- Chapter 18: The Light Curtain
- Chapter 17: The Federation’s Sins
- Chapter 16: The Human Resource
- Chapter 15: The Seeds Of Godhood
- Chapter 14: Great Construction Era
- Chapter 13: A Reason To Live
- Chapter 12: The Folded World
- Chapter 11: Opening The Tomb
- Chapter 10: A Crown Of Ash
- Chapter 9: The Prophet
- Chapter 8: The 44th Floor
- Chapter 7: The First Superhuman
- Chapter 6: Calvin’s Invitation
- Chapter 5: Zero Gravity Combat
- Chapter 4: The Slaughterhouse
- Chapter 3: Plan B: The Hard Choice
- Chapter 2: The Secret Of Moon Base
- Chapter 1: Death Of The Earth