"The Censors are to determine the generations, origins, families, and properties of the people; they are to (watch over/protect) the city's temples, roads, waters, treasury, and taxes; they are to divide the people into three parts; next, they are to approve the properties, generations, and ranks of the people; they are to describe the offspring of knights and footsoldiers; they are to forbid being unmarried; they are to guide the behavior of the people; they are not to overlook abuse in the Senate."
The censors typically auctioned off to the highest bidder for the space of a lustrum the collection of the tithes and taxes. This auctioning was called venditio or locatio, and seems to have taken place in the month of March, in a public place in Rome. The terms on which they were let, together with the rights and duties of the purchasers, were all specified in the leges censoriae, which the censors published in every case before the bidding commenced.
Your point? That was the view back then because of religion.
It's only recently that marriage and natalism have been up for debate, and they are both heavily despised ideologies.
My point was that those who expect something from the labor of others have always been killed off by the very societies they shill.
Pay your taxes, jew.
Bow to your superiors, parasite.