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What a Population of 7 Billion People Means for the Planet
With global population expected to surpass 7 billion people this year, the staggering impact on the environment is hard to ignore
Demographers aren't known for their sense of humor, but the ones who work for the United Nations recently announced that the world's human population will hit 7 billion on Halloween this year. Since censuses and other surveys can scarcely justify such a precise calculation, it's tempting to imagine that the UN Population Division, the data shop that pinpointed the Day of 7 Billion, is hinting that we should all be afraid, be very afraid.
We have reason to be. The 21st century is not yet a dozen years old, and there are already 1 billion more people than in October 1999 — with the outlook for future energy and food supplies looking bleaker than it has for decades. It took humanity until the early 19th century to gain its first billion people; then another 1.5 billion followed over the next century and a half. In just the last 60 years the world's population has gained yet another 4.5 billion. Never before have so many animals of one species anything like our size inhabited the planet.
And this species interacts with its surroundings far more intensely than any other ever has. Planet Earth has become Planet Humanity, as we co-opt its carbon, water, and nitrogen cycles so completely that no other force can compare. For the first time in life's 3-billion-plus-year history, one form of life — ours — condemns to extinction significant proportions of the plants and animals that are our only known companions in the universe.
Did someone just remark that these impacts don't stem from our population, but from our consumption? Probably, as this assertion emerges often from journals, books, and the blogosphere. It's as though a geometry text were to propound the axiom that it is not length that determines the area of a rectangle, but width. Would we worry about our individual consumption of energy and natural resources if humanity still had the stable population of roughly 300 million people — less than today's U.S. number — that the species maintained throughout the first millennium of the current era?
It is precisely because our population is so large and growing so fast that we must care, ever more with each generation, how much we as individuals are out of sync with environmental sustainability. Our diets, our modes of moving, and our urge to keep interior temperatures close to 70 degrees Fahrenheit no matter what is happening outside — none of these make us awful people. It's just that collectively, these behaviors are moving basic planetary systems into danger zones.
Yet another argument often advanced to wave off population is the assertion that all of us could fit into Los Angeles with room to wiggle our shoulders. The image may comfort some. But space, of course, has never been the issue. The impacts of our needs, greeds, and wants are. We should bemoan — and aggressively address — the gross inequity that characterizes individual consumption around the world. But we should also acknowledge that over the decades-long span of most human lifetimes, most of us are likely to consume a fair amount, regardless of where and how we live; no human being, no matter how poor, can escape interacting with the environment, which is one reason population matters so much. And given the global economic system and the development optimistically anticipated in all regions of the world, we each have a tendency to consume more as that lifetime proceeds. A parent of seven poor children may be the grandparent of 10 to 15 much more affluent ones climbing up the ladder of middle-class consumption.
This, in fact, is the story of China, often seen not as an example of population's impact on the environment but that of rapid industrialization alone. Yet this one country, having grown demographically for millennia, is home to 1.34 billion people. One reason the growth even of low-consuming populations is hazardous is that bursts of per-capita consumption have typically followed decades of rapid demographic growth that occurred while per-capita consumption rates were low. Examples include the United States in the 19th and 20th centuries, China at the turn of the 21st, and India possibly in the coming decade. More immediately worrisome from an environmental perspective, of course, is that the United States and the industrialized world as a whole still have growing populations, despite recent slowdowns in the growth rate, while already living high up on the per-capita consumption ladder.
Many of the impacts of this ubiquitous multiplication of per-capita resource consumption by the number of individuals are by now well documented. Humanity started to overwhelm the atmosphere with greenhouse gases not long after the Industrial Revolution began, a process that accelerated along with population and consumption growth in the 20th century. Fresh water is now shared so thinly that the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) projects that in just 14 years two thirds of the world's population will be living in countries facing water scarcity or stress. Half of the world's original forests have been cleared for human land use, and UNEP warns that the world's fisheries will be effectively depleted by mid-century. The world's area of cultivated land has expanded by about 13 percent since its measurement began in 1961, but the doubling of world population since then means that each of us can count on just half as much land as in 1961 to produce the food we eat.
For the rest of life on Earth, the implications of all this are obvious. Where we go, nature retreats. We are entering an epoch scientists have begun calling the Anthropocene, a break with the geologic past marked by humanity's long-term alteration of the natural world and its biota. We are inadvertently bringing on the sixth mass extinction not just because our appetites are vast and our technologies powerful, but because we occupy or manipulate most of the land in every continent except Antarctica. We appropriate anywhere from 24 percent to nearly 40 percent of the photosynthetic output of the planet for our food and other purposes, and more than half of its accessible renewable freshwater runoff.
Given these facts, it's hardly surprising that wildlife conservation faces an uphill battle globally and in every nation, while ambitious concepts like the creation of wildlife corridors to help species escape the ravages of development and climate change proliferate despite their impracticality in a world of growing human impacts.
So should we be afraid on the day we gain a 7 billionth living human being, especially considering UN demographers are now projecting anywhere between 6.2 billion and 15.8 billion people at the end of the century? Fear is not a particularly productive response — courage and a determination to act in the face of risk are the answer. And in this case, there is so much to be done to heal and make sustainable a world of 7 billion breathing human beings that cowering would be not just fatalistic but stupid.
Action means doing a lot of different things right now. We can't stop the growth of our numbers in any acceptable way immediately. But we can put in place conditions that will support an early end to growth, possibly making this year's the last billion-population day we ever mark. We can elevate the autonomy of women to make life-changing decisions for themselves. We can lower birth rates by assuring that women become pregnant only when they themselves decide to bear a child.
Simultaneously, we need a swift transformation of energy, water, and materials consumption through conservation, efficiency, and green technologies. We shouldn't think of these as a sequence of efforts — dealing with consumption first, because population dynamics take time to turn around — but as simultaneous work on multiple fronts. It would be naïve to believe we will arrive at sustainability by wrestling shifting technologies and lifestyles while human population grows indefinitely and most people strive to live as comfortably as Americans do. Nor should we take comfort in the illusion that population growth is already on a path to end soon. Demographers can no more tell us when that will happen (or through what combination of lower birth rates or higher death rates) than economists can predict when robust global economic growth will resume. Both expert groups are mocked by the many surprises the future holds in store.
Rather than forecast the future, we should work to secure it. More than two in five pregnancies worldwide are unintended by the women who experience them, and half or more of these pregnancies result in births that spur continued population growth. Clearly there is vast potential to slow that growth through something women want and need: the capacity to decide for themselves when to become pregnant. If all women had this capacity, survey data affirm, average global childbearing would immediately fall below the "replacement fertility" value of slightly more than two children per woman. Population would immediately move onto a path leading to a peak followed by a gradual decline, possibly well before 2050.
Despite the obvious barriers to women's rights in today's world, such a vision rests on a set of straightforward and achievable conditions: Women must be able to make their own decisions free from fear of coercion or pressure from partners, family, and society. They must not depend on prolific motherhood for social approval and self-esteem. And they must have easy access to a range of safe, effective, and affordable contraceptive methods and the information and counseling needed to use them.
For those who care about the environment, the future of human civilization, or both, the Day of 7 Billion should prod us to face and address the risks of continued population growth. By the sheer scale of our presence and activity we are putting ourselves and all life at risk. No human being has the right to consume forever more than any other. Yet if we could somehow close the global consumption gap, the importance of our numbers would be even more obvious as the limits of natural systems were crossed. It scarcely lessens the importance of reducing both consumption and inequity to celebrate the fact that population growth can end without policies that restrict births, without coercion of any kind, without judgments on those who choose large families. We are not far from a world in which the number of births roughly balances the number of deaths, based on pregnancies universally welcomed by women and their partners.
The transition to this world may not be entirely painless. Nations will have to adjust to rising average ages as birth rates descend further. In China and India, smaller families may contribute to artificially high ratios of baby boys, with possible risks to future social stability. But these problems are the kind that societies and institutions are generally good at handling. Stopping climate change, reducing water scarcity, or keeping ecosystems intact, by contrast, don't yet seem to be in our skill set. Working now to bring population growth to an end through intentional childbearing won't solve such problems by itself, but it will help — a lot. And such an effort, based on human rights and the dignity and freedom of the world's childbearers, is in the interest of all who care about a truly sustainable environment and human future.
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Show AllWhat a Population of 7 Billion People Means for the Planet
With global population expected to surpass 7 billion people this year, the staggering impact on the environment is hard to ignore
by Robert Engelman
When I've attempted to make similar points here on CD I've been called racist. Let's see how this comment thread goes...
Racist? Maybe, maybe not.
Neoliberal? Definitely.
NYT Brooks Promotes Eugenics "Death Panels" Amid Budget Crisis
http://www.activistpost.com/2011/07/nyt-brooks-promotes-eugenics-death.html
In recent years, particularly since the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), there seems to have been an increase in the amount of commentary espousing the rationing of healthcare for the elderly, chronically ill, and the handicapped. Ever since the allegation (correct as it was) that the Obama health plan contained rationing and “death panels,” there has been a strange flurry of both denial and simultaneous support of the concept of health care rationing for some of the most vulnerable members of society.
Quite clearly we must ration and have death panels. Taxpayers should absolutely not pay for heart transplants for 100-year-olds, for instance. We should work for common sense, well qualified experts to make these decisions. Of course people are free to spend their own money in an attempt to live forever.
http://hnn.us/articles/1796.html
[snip]
More than just providing the scientific roadmap, America funded Germany's eugenic institutions. By 1926, Rockefeller had donated some $410,000 -- almost $4 million in 21st-Century money -- to hundreds of German researchers. In May 1926, Rockefeller awarded $250,000 to the German Psychiatric Institute of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, later to become the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Psychiatry. Among the leading psychiatrists at the German Psychiatric Institute was Ernst Rüdin, who became director and eventually an architect of Hitler's systematic medical repression.
>>Ever since the allegation (correct as it was) that the Obama health plan contained rationing and “death panels,” there has been a strange flurry of both denial and simultaneous support of the concept of health care rationing for some of the most vulnerable members of society.<<
Do you seriously believe that our current "system" does not ration health care, and decide who lives and who dies?
The US Institute of Medicine has just recommended that all women in the US should have free access to birth control. Hopefully something good will come of this (no pun intended with the use of "come").
Unfortunately, even with access to free birth control, you'll have lots of women getting pregnant. I had HS students who refused to use birth control even though they knew how and where to get it. And now we have this crazy "quiverful" movement in the US with radical Christians trying to populate the country with more radical Christians. Why anyone would intentionally plan to have more than a dozen children is beyond me. Even 2 or more seems a bit selfish today. What kind of world is going to be left for them when there are limited resources and the planet will become less hospitable?
Do you think it would be convenient or racist to say, "slip a Micky" in the water supply that temporarily prohibits fertilization and the only way a women could get pregnant was for a man and women to step forward and take responsibility for new life by applying for a LICENSE which would allow them to purchase an antidote. Then there would be no unhappy accidents. It's kinda the other way around what you suggested.
Do you think more people would support or nix this?
Engelman states: "For those who care about the environment, the future of human civilization, or both, the Day of 7 Billion should prod us to face and address the risks of continued population growth." I agree, but would add that the environment is not something external to us; we are a part of it--so that what we do to "the environment," individually and collectively, inevitably affects us. However, regardless of what we do, there's likely to be a severe culling of the human species by 2100 CE, conceivably to the point that we become extinct.
Doug Stanhope has said much the same for many years, only more entertainingly.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YkgDhDa4HHo
Yes, and what a 300 million + over CONSUMING folks in the USA means for the rest of the planet: Death.
USA citizens aren't ALL over-consuming. And it does not matter whether the "overconsumers" live in the United States or in the Middle East. The damage they do spreads over the Earth.
Exactly!!
Was in the supermarket this week and saw a young couple .... and in a university town .... with three kids, all pre-Kindergarten, and the mom was like 8 months pregnant. I thought "We're doomed".
It's more than 30 years since "Population Bomb" was published, and the Chamber of Commerce is positively giddy that the U.S., through birth rate plus immigration, slated to hit 400,000 million by midcentury.
Off by a factor of 1000.
Gene Therapy, what truly boggles the mind is when the eldest of these four children reaches college age, and the parents then call the university financial aid office and complain that they will need more financial aid than they have been given "because they have four kids to put through college." Didn't that enter into their calculations after the birth of child two or three?
16% of our population is Hispanic and they provide 42% of new births. They're taking up our slack.
before long, viable babies will be a treasure, not a problem...
maybe we should shut down the factories and clean the place up...
Not a word about the pathological rich and their system of exploitation, Capitalism.
The pathologically rich depend on capitalism that depends on consumption that depends on population growth..
Your third Depends needs changing.
A small lily pad lives in a pond and doubles in size every day. On what day will it occupy half of the entire pond?
Answer: The second to last day.
By the time enough people allow themselves to "see" the problem we might as well sing, "... baby, baby, baby, you're out of time.
I have never understood why the fact of population overshoot is so hard for us to accept. Yes, those who recognize overpopulation often blame it on dark-skinned people in the "developing world." Yes, those who recognize overpopulation's negative consequences for the (rest of the) natural world often overlook how "first world" consumption has as much, if not more, of an impact as simple population growth. These are serious concerns that any conversation about overpopulation should struggle with. That said, to write off any talk of the reality of population overshoot as racist, eugenics, etc., seems to me to be ridiculous, an example of an ideology eclipsing actual geophysical limits on population growth. My two cents.
The problem is that those who rant about population overshoot, nearly always overstate their case, because they do not want to talk about the linked issues of consumption, of wealth distribution, of freedom of movement of peoples (Japan for example, has a rapidly ageing population, raising issues with pensions, healthcare: the rational and logical way to deal with this would be for people from countries with young / growing populations to move to Japan)
Population growth alone is not the problem. The world, organized economically as it presently is, was destroying Nature several centuries ago with a much smaller population that had to be supplied for then.
My generation will always be the one known for having allowed the corporations to totally strip us of having any real Nature left to trash. 'God is dead' translates to Nature is dead... The corporate world killed it and we were too beaten back, corrupted, and ignorant to stop it.
Like his predecessor at Worldwatch,( Lester Brown), Robert Engelman carefully follows the long standing Worldwatch dogma of ignoring some of the biggest elephants in the room, namely the global corporations. They constantly hammer the world's peoples with endless advertising urging us all to "consume, consume, CONSUME!!, more, more, MORE, faster, faster, FASTER." Using Edward Bernay's and the PR professional liars intense knowledge of human psychology and weaknesses, the corporations use the global reach of modern media systems to con the masses into destroying the ecological base of planetary life on which we all depend.
But since Worldwatch depends on regular feeding at the corporate trough, you would never learn from reading their often informative books and articles, that more than half of the largest economic entities on the planet aren't nations but global corporations with enormous power, especially now that they have essentially captured control of the political systems in much of the world. Psychotically driven by greed and power, corporate capitalism is incapable of stopping its own consumptive/reproductive drives. So yes, people having babies is one part of the equation, but we need some sort of birth control or maybe euthanasia for the corporations, those other elephants in the room.
Yes, that's a valid critique. Nicely done. The growth imperative at the heart of capitalism cannot be effectively ignored or downplayed when discussing any major issue that addresses planetary sustainability, including population overshoot.
Yawn. A Western environmentalist harping about the "global overpopulation" problem again. There's not a global overpopulation problem, though, so much as a regional overpopulation problem. There are far too many people living in America and Europe. With living standards, and an accompanying environmental footprint, many magnitudes greater than the environmental impact of the average global citizen, it is the people living in these regions who are contributing the most to the degradation of the environment.
So if we are serious about reducing the population of the world in order to reduce humanity's environmental footprint, the logical place to start would be by reducing the populations of America and Europe. That's how you would have by far the most impact on the environmental impact of human existence.
I would like to see these overpopulation-obsessed Western environmentalists (as opposed to the much more sensible breed of green energy- and green tech-focused environmentalists, to which I belong) put their money where their mouth is, for once, and start preaching about the Western overpopulation problem. Let's see how many opinion pieces they get published in Western newspapers and on Western websites by taking that tack.
A couple of interesting links...
This one lets you directly compare the richest/environtmentally worst countries (U.S. and Europe) with some other "middle class" countries--notice that the poorest countries weren't even surveyed, so can't be compared:
http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/greendex/
Don't know how legit this one is - I couldn't find any corroborating stories online - but it is certainly disturbing if true:
http://www.latindailyfinancialnews.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7208%3Aguatemalan-women-were-sterilized-without-their-consent-due-to-us-policies&catid=215%3Apolitics&Itemid=647&lang=en
Good Info that Worldwatch is a Rockefeller funded institute [like Margret Sanger's Birth Control League {now missed named 'Family Planning'} clinics which were setup in Harlem & Brooklyn - or their funding of the NAZI's main Eugenics Research Institute].
This Author starts off basically admitting that no-one has substantiated that the World Population will soon hit 7 billion - by actual census count - & that demographers' statistical models aren't necessarily reliable- but then goes on to 'presume' its true anyway. He then says women [not adult couples- though thats what it takes to make babies {not counting sexually active immature adolecents] should have the right to plan child-bearing - a subtle [innocuous sounding] reference to the 'Birth Control League's [now Planned Parenthood / Family Planning] agenda cleverly couched in terms of so-called 'empowering women' [NOTE the following quote: 'Women must be able to make their own decisions free from fear of coercion or pressure from partners, family, and society. They must not depend on prolific motherhood for social approval and self-esteem. And they must have easy access to a range of safe, effective, and affordable contraceptive methods and the information and counseling needed to use them.']. So, according to this author, the greatest influence on a women decision to bear children should be the agenda of the Rockefeller funded Planned Parenthood International - rather than a woman's own husband, family & community!
He then subtly approves of China's draconian 1 child policy by stating: ['In China and India, smaller families may contribute to artificially high ratios of baby boys, with possible risks to future social stability. But these problems are the kind that societies and institutions are generally good at handling {OH Really}. Stopping climate change, reducing water scarcity, or keeping ecosystems intact, by contrast, don't yet seem to be in our skill set. Working now to bring population growth to an end through intentional {wonder if he meant un-intentional or if this was a Freudian slip} childbearing won't solve such problems by itself, but it will help — a lot...'].
Lets Flesh This Out- China in the course of 40yrs of '1 child / couple only' has created an imbalance of 30 - 50 million excess bachelors w virtually no prospect of finding a suitable Chinese woman for a mate [& also India to a some-what lesser extent] . IT IS UN-Precedented in human history that the World's most populous country {w India ranking 2nd} w the largest manned army, soon to be the World largest Econ, w the World 3rd largest Nuke arsenal - to have so many unmatch-able bachelors [many countries' population is approx = or even less than 30 - 50 million]! But this author acts like this is of LITTLE CONCERN! So we should just keep on w policies like China's DRACONIAN 1 Child Policy [which includes FORCED abortions & sterilizations - so much for empowering women to freely choose] because we haven't come to grips w climate change, water scarcity, eco-system damage. Thus this author assumes the role of a so-called 'green' advocate for population control.
The so-called population explosion concurred w the so-called modern industrial age which concurred w the advent & rise of Euro-American World domination. This unprecedented assault on the Eco-sphere is directly linked to the Euro-American assault on the World's other societies & peoples! Traditional societies [pre- so-called modern] emphasized living in harmony w nature. Euro-American society emphasizes Full-Spectrum-Dominance, over-production & over-consumption [in the name of 'comfort', 'advancement' & economic 'growth'] - leading to out of control resource consumption, waste & environmental degradation! Traditional societies were primarily agrarian [using more natural & sustainable methods]- while the Euro-American paradigm of modernization emphasizes industrial farming [ala the missed named 'Green' Revolution], using toxic petro-chem fertilizers-herbicides-insecticides, mono-culture cash-crops, globalized so-called 'Free-markets' over local Econs being self-sufficient [especially in food]... Also linked to the so-called population explosion is Globalized Corporate friendly policies [IE: GATT, NAFTA, WTO, etc] which have effectively driven small farmers off of their lands where they were once growing food to feed their families & communities, into the large cities & slums which are the epicenters for over-population!
When are these population obsessed folk going to talk about aborting / birth-controlling out-of-control globalized greedy Corps & besides aborting / birth-controlling unborn children!
RE: The so-called population explosion concurred w the so-called modern industrial age which concurred w the advent & rise of Euro-American World domination.
And concurred with the rise of THE CAPITALIST ECONOMIC SYSTEM: THE SINGLE MOST IMPORTANT FACTOR IN ALL THE CRISES WE FACE TODAY - including population.
The author and most posters don't mention this at all. Typical of liberals (like this author), of all the myriad (and connected) problems out there the culprit cannot be the system, they must find a scapegoat; preferably those who are unlikely to fight back - poor people!
You are correct. The US subsidizes anyone living here to have as many babies as they like (Octomom - how many plastic diapers does she use a week?). And about 5 years ago I read an article that said we were reaching " ZERO" population growth and that it would cause problems in sustaining Social Security. We were saved from extinction by Hispanics (in 2009,16% of the population is producing 42% of new births). If you want to control the population HERE you should tax children rather than subsidize them. But then only people with money could afford the luxury of having children ( unless you don't work at all, then you get everything paid for). I believe this is the heart of the dilemma. This is our economic system regarding propagation and uncontrolled population growth in the US.
We stick our nose in all the other poor countries under the guise of humanitarian aid. We attempt to wipe out disease and sickness but offer no birth control, or education and burden them with our religion.
Its important Info [posted by medmedude, aesops dog & courtjester] that Worldwatch is Rockefeller [& Bill Gates too] funded- just as were Margret Sanger's Birth Control League {now missed named 'Family Planning'} clinics which were setup in Harlem & Brooklyn - or the [pre WWII] NAZI's main Eugenics Research Institute!
This Author starts off basically admitting that no-one has substantiated that the World's Population will soon hit 7 billion - by an actual census count - & that demographers' statistical models aren't necessarily reliable- but then goes on to 'presume' its valid anyway. He then says women [not adult couples- though that's what it takes to make babies {not counting sexually active immature adolescents] should have the right to plan child-bearing - a subtle [innocuous sounding] reference to the 'Birth Control League's [now Planned Parenthood / Family Planning] agenda cleverly couched in terms of so-called 'empowering women' [NOTE the following quote: 'Women must be able to make their own decisions free from fear of coercion or pressure from partners, family, and society. They must not depend on prolific motherhood for social approval and self-esteem. And they must have easy access to a range of safe, effective, and affordable contraceptive methods and the information and counseling needed to use them.']. So, according to this author, the greatest influence on a woman's decision to bear children should be the agenda of the Rockefeller funded Planned Parenthood International - rather than a woman's own husband, family & community!
He then subtly approves of China's draconian 1 child policy by stating: ['In China and India, smaller families may contribute to artificially high ratios of baby boys, with possible risks to future social stability. But these problems are the kind that societies and institutions are generally good at handling {OH Really}. Stopping climate change, reducing water scarcity, or keeping ecosystems intact, by contrast, don't yet seem to be in our skill set. Working now to bring population growth to an end through intentional childbearing won't solve such problems by itself, but it will help — a lot...'].
Lets Flesh This Out- China in the course of 40yrs of '1 child / couple only' has created an imbalance of 30 - 50 million excess young bachelors w virtually no prospect of finding a suitable Chinese woman for a mate [& also India to a some-what lesser extent] . IT IS UN-Precedented in human history that the World's most populous country {w India ranking 2nd} w the largest manned army, soon to be the World largest Econ, w the World 3rd largest Nuke arsenal - to have so many unmatch-able young bachelors [many countries' population is approx = or even less than 30 - 50 million]! But this author acts like this is of LITTLE CONCERN! So we should just keep on w policies like China's DRACONIAN 1 Child Policy [which includes FORCED abortions & sterilizations - so much for empowering women to freely choose] because we haven't come to grips w climate change, water scarcity, eco-system damage. Thus this author assumes the role of a so-called 'green' advocate for population control.
The so-called population explosion concurred w the so-called modern industrial age which concurred w the advent & rise of Euro-American World domination. This unprecedented assault on the Eco-sphere is directly linked to the Euro-American assault on the World's other societies & peoples! Traditional societies [pre- so-called 'modern'] emphasized living in harmony w nature. The modern Euro-American paradigm emphasizes Full-Spectrum-Dominance, over-production & over-consumption [in the name of 'comfort', 'progress' & economic 'growth'] - leading to out of control resource consumption, waste & environmental degradation! Traditional societies were primarily agrarian [using more natural & sustainable farming methods]- while the Euro-American paradigm of modernization emphasizes industrial farming [ala the missed named 'Green' Revolution] which relies on toxic petro-chem fertilizers-herbicides-insecticides, mono-cultural / GMO based- cash-crops, globalized so-called 'Free-markets' over local Econs being self-sufficient [especially in food]... Also linked to the so-called population explosion is Globalized Corporate friendly policies [IE: GATT, NAFTA, WTO, etc] which have effectively driven small farmers off of their lands where they were once growing food to feed their families & communities, into the large cities & slums which are the epicenters for over-population!
This author is a bit coy as to whether he is recommending gradually slowing & stabilizing population growth to about 7 - 9 billion [implies an average global birth-rate of about 2 children per couple]; or if he wants to reduce the population either by rolling-out [imposing & enforcing] a Chinese-like 1 child per couple policy -OR- even more sinisterly- quickly & dramatically cutting the population by 1/2 - 1 Billion OR MORE - which is quickly achievable only by CULLING [KILLING OFF] VAST NUMBERS OF PEOPLE!
Will these population obsessed folk EVER talk about aborting / birth-controlling out-of-control GREEDY Globalized CORPORATIONS [Motto: GREED IS GOOD] & the Military Industrial Complex - besides aborting / birth-controlling unborn [generally Black & Brown] babies??!! {though this author didn't overtly state that}... Or ever talk about how Corps make vast sums of money by promoting an over-sexualized pop-culture targeted at immature youth [under the cover of so-called 'freedom of speech & expression']- which glamorizes & SELLS SEX [& even out-rite PROMISCUITY] by sexualizing not just women but also Teenage & increasingly Pre-Teenage GIRLS FOR PROFIT [so just how does this promote women's & girls' dignity let alone lead to reduced rates of teenage pregnancy] via the fashion industry, music / video industry, TV & movie industry, etc?!
You've written more than the original article. Perhaps you should get a job with "Common Dreams."
If we divide 7 billion into groups of 4, and give them a 3 bedroom house on a standard sized lot, the entire world population would fit into the state of Texas.
Hmmmm. The farce is strong with this one, an obvious fan of Thomas Sowell.
http://message.snopes.com/showthread.php?t=51292
Your own link proves Derby Lad right.
"I don't know anything about the claim, but I will do the math for you. Using the square milage you gave for Texas: 1 square mile = 5280 x 5280 square feet = 27,878,400 square feet. So 268,581 square miles = 7,487,608,550,400. For simplicity say 7.5 x 10^12. That divided by 7 x 10^9 is indeed over 1000 square feet per person. So if we made one giant one-story compound over Texas, land, water, and all, we would each get a 1,000 square foot unit."
Whether that fact has any practical significance is a matter of dispute. Certainly it would be misleading to suggest that the human race could actually live in such a dense arrangement. However, that doesn't make what he said a "farce" - in fact, he was technically correct. And I didn't read him as implying that humans could actually live like that, only that they could fit.
Did IQ's just drop suddenly in the summer heat?
You are one of the FR's Rahm was referring to.
Lol. Don't feel bad that you were proved wrong, it happens to the best of us. Although usually not from our own link, haha.
And just for the record--for anyone else reading this--I do agree that the Texas thing is a fact with absolutely no practical relevance to the population debate. At best it helps us to visualize world population size, but it doesn't tell us anything about environmental impact.
This isn't directed at you- But to all those who are trippin on this Texas info-
What this implies is that you could easily put all of the World's 7 Billion people [if is 7 billion] in / spread-out across Australia [whose land-mass approx = the Continental USA's] w room for all of the necessary support infrastructure & have PLENTY OF ROOM TO SPARE..., While using all of the land in North, Central & South America, Europe, Asia, Africa - just for to grow food to feed every-one!
The World's total for currently suitable & reclaimable farm-land is 7.3 million square miles = 2.3Xs the land-mass of Australia [That's greater than the land-mass of all of S. America -or- approx = the entire land-mass of the USA & Canada... FYI: Australia's land-mass is 12Xs bigger than Texas].
If this doesn't drive home the point that there should be PLENTY of suitable farm-land to EASILY FEED every person in the World with PLENTY of capacity to spare - Then NOTHING WILL!
Idiot! You sound like someone complaining about dirty dishes in the sink when the kitchen stove is on fire. I suspect you are a lawyer.
That's because 20% of them would be sentenced to capital punishment and another 70% would be shot because they're illegal immigrants.
"If we divide 7 billion into groups of 4, and give them a 3 bedroom house on a standard sized lot, the entire world population would fit into the state of Texas."
O.K. you've dealt with the "space" issue, presuming there is that much habitable space in Texas. Now, can you provide enough food, water, sewage disposal, fuel, etc. to build and sustain those "standard" lots with their cars, refrigerators, computers, etc? Or, do they smother in their own waste? Just curious.
Perhaps you have a good point that the wealthy will need to down-size to a 4 bedroom house in order for everyone to have one? But, aren't they our "innovators"? Oh, the humanity!
You propose an interesting thought experiment but it needs more in-depth research...
Perhaps you have a good point that the wealthy will need to down-size to a 4 bedroom house in order for everyone to have one? But, aren't they our "innovators"?
The Power Elites are more our CONTROLLERS than our 'innovators'. That's why CEO salaries in the last 3 -4 decades went from an average of 40Xs - 50Xs that of the average worker to now its 300Xs- 500Xs that of the average worker! That's why in the same time period they've shipped jobs abroad whole-sale, yet the lot of the average worker in the 3rd World has scarcely improved. That's why in this current economic crash, the CEOs who put the most folks out of work got the BIGGEST SALARIES! That's why the Wall St Banksters who caused the Econ crisis got bailed-out to the tune of $10 -25 Trillion of the peoples [IE: Gov't] money, got $Trillion plus in tax-cuts -&- the Military Industrial Intel Complex can fight multiple wars of aggression in Af-Pak, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Somalia, etc- costing $Trillions -BUT- Now they insist that the budget must be balanced by cutting Social Security, Medicare, & that there's not enough money to keep paying un-employment or to roll-out a serious back to work prog , etc, etc- while they attack public sector employees & their Unions...
These are the type of 'innovations' the Power Elites have in mind for the average Joe & Jane. I think we can do a lot better without those types of 'innovations'.
Organisms that grow in an unrestricted way seem to eventually kill their host. The cancer cell has much in common with the human race. Collectively, it seems there is about the same level of intellegence.
The greatest threat, by several orders of magnitude, to the ecosphere is the growing population of billionaires on this planet. Because of their economic power involving mining, chemical and industrial factories, war profiteering and media mendacity support, EACH ONE OF THEM easily exceeds one million average to poor humans in carbon footprint, pollution generation and corruption fostering.
So if we have one million billionaires, that equates to the ecosphere destroying juggernaut of one trillion average to poor humans. That is one thousand times one billion people.
So when someone talks about a tiny fraction of that amount as the end of the world, I say that he needs to look just a little harder at what billionaire life styles and income schemes do to the planet.
In a just world, the worst offenders would be forced to constrain their ecosphere destroying behavior as an example to the rest of humanity. Most people in the world may be poor but they won't buy rich people's hypocrisy.
If we were an intelligent species our first governmental spending priority would be a cash incentive and sterilization for any person who does not wish to have more children.
I have read estimates that the Earth can only sustain about 1 billion people without oil and the cheap energy it supplies. We are running out of oil. Think about it.
I enjoyed this piece especially for his use of the geometry metaphor. The two legs of consumption and numbers are well worth contemplating.
When I served as a conservation commissioner years ago I was enraged at the wetlands being destroyed not for low income housing but rather for new boating facilities. As I worked in the field longer I saw encroachments mainly from new housing developments and fairly small commercial developments. As the author states where humans advance nature retreats. There are really limits to growth.
I agree with the great commentator on this website SouixRose that there is a big difference between the eugenics crowd and those who see the need to allow women to set their own limits on child birth. The rub comes when you see the opposition party and the Church in Rome firmly against even such a benign proposal as family planning.
Well hell Malthus, just use a condom next time.