>>370783
I actually think this is a very good idea. One of the worst parts of modern dating services like tinder/bumble etc, is that their business model is designed to fundamentally hurt the user.
If someone were to use a for profit dating service once, find someone nice, get married and live happily ever after, this would be a significant loss in potential revenue for the dating app. If you only use the service once, you're not buying the premium subscription, you're not feeding it data that can be sold to advertisers, you're not buying fake tokens, your not viewing ads, etc. Their entire model is based on the user using the dating app in perpetuity.
These companies have an incentive to promote the night stands and shittiest, most shallow relationships possible, rather than more meaningful and long term relationships/marriage, because that's how it keeps people coming back to the app. Making matchmaking based on looks and other shallow characteristics, keeping things gamified and online rather than meeting in real life and so on.
I've thought that either having these services operated by government or required by law to be operated by some sort of non-profit/charity would be a reasonable solution to this problem. But I haven't seen any large scale examples of this happening in practice, I think a single city in China tried this a year or two ago, but I'm not sure how well that worked in the end.
>>370792
>And that failed miserably
It didn't though. It did exactly what the CCP wanted it to do. Imposing a limit on births, lowered the birth rate, which was the goal of the X child policies. The fact that this caused a bunch of damaging side effects doesn't mean it didn't do what it was designed to do.
And I'm not sure what
>>370787 is going on about
>The CCP now almost forcing people to have three or more kids
It's still illegal to have more than 3 children for almost everyone in the country. The chicoms have barely enacted any significant pro-natal policies beyond extended maternity leave for mothers, which is still remarkably short compared to most other countries.