The article features a tweet by Tomaž Štih discussing a hypothetical correlation between financial status, civilizational expectations, and the number of children. Štih poses questions about why people in Africa have many children despite poor financial conditions and why wealthy individuals often have more children than those from the middle class. The post includes a link to an image (via Twitter) illustrating this hypothesis. The content does not present any specific data or research but rather raises theoretical questions about social and economic factors influencing family size. The article concludes with a call for donations to support democratic values and media plurality.
Bias read (Progressive): The framing suggests a critical view of economic inequality and societal structures, particularly through the lens of comparing different socioeconomic groups and their family sizes. While the content itself is speculative, the tone implies a concern for social justice and challenges to traditional,
Why these scores (Factual 75 · Objective 60): The article presents a hypothesis by Tomaž Štih regarding the relationship between financial status, civilizational expectations, and number of children. It references a tweet from X, but does not provide direct evidence or data to support the claim. The factuality score is moderate as the hypothesi





