How many children does Lao Liang have?

Liang Hongda has no children. Why didn’t the well-known Lao Liang choose to have children?

In order to find this reason, let’s start with Lao Liang’s resume. First of all, Teacher Liang Hongda was born in Suihua City, Heilongjiang Province. Everyone knows that the birth rate in the three northeastern provinces is low from a national perspective. According to the sixth national census, the birth rate in Heilongjiang Province is only 1.03%, and the indicators are significantly lower than The national average level is even lower than that of developed countries such as Japan and South Korea. Regional factors will inevitably have a certain impact on a person's fertility philosophy.

Secondly, Teacher Liang Hongda’s career spans a large area and consumes a lot of energy. Since 1992, he has been working as a reporter after graduating from Heilongjiang University with a major in journalism. In 1995, he joined the magazines "Contemporary Sports" and "Contemporary Music Circle". In 1998, he went south to Beijing and served as the editor-in-chief and chief planner of magazines such as "Contemporary Sports", "Global Sports", "Table Tennis World" and "Slam Dunk". The most unforgettable one was the "Lao Liang Story Collection" hosted by Lao Liang in 2010. Audiences loved it. In his work history of more than 30 years, Lao Liang has served as a planner and judge in different program types such as entertainment, sports, and news. The load of this kind of cross-border work is much greater than that of ordinary hosts.

Finally, the case of teacher Liang Hongda also proves the saying "the more educated a person is, the weaker the concept of childbearing will be." Teacher Liang’s wife Jing Muyao is also a well-known host and producer in China. They gave up having children in order to pursue their careers. With a love for journalism and in order to realize their bigger stage dream, they did not want to waste their energy. When it comes to children, the couple decided to become a DINK family based on their knowledge of fertility.

Today, the fertility problem in China is no longer a problem for individual people. Faced with the current situation of low birth rate, the national policy has been forced to reopen the two-child policy. However, how can we possibly say that when we look at the fertility problem? What about having children and having children? Material desires and rights permeate the entire society, and they also affect everyone's values ????and outlook on life. Perhaps people who choose not to marry and have children are a phenomenon of abnormal social development, rather than a problem that can be solved by one policy.