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Originally Posted by
Jozanny
View the documentary King Corn. Cattle are grass eaters. In the US we torture them, force feeding them corn in penned cages. If we didn't slaughter them first, the frutcose diet alone would do it, just not as quickly.
It is ashame the poor lives they lead, but all farm animals lead miserable lives. That has been going on in one way or another from the beginning of animal domestication. Veal (baby calfs) goes back to ancient Rome at least, and I assume you know the poor lives they are forced to have. Of course if people are really disturbed by this a larger global world may need to have more vegetarian dishes in their diet.
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I respect your intelligence Virgil, but on demographics we simply disagree.
I assume you mean we disgree on the what future demographics mean. Ok we disgree. I don't mean to be frustrating people discussing this with me.
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The CIA has NIE's which suggest future military conflicts will be fought over water.
As if the CIA has never been wrong. :lol: Have you heard of weapons of mass destruction?
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We cannot simply drain the oceans and take the salt out. Our bodies process about 5 liters a day. Add in what has to go to sustain agriculture. Add the fresh water necessary for healthy aquatic populations. Water is a recycled planetary resource, but it is not an unlimited one, and we cannot restore ground water supply, which takes years to become a resource in itself.
Well, we do disagree. We will have to find a solution, unless you intend euthanaisa. The population of the earth is growing and will continue to grow. Perhaps the question I should ask is if you think it is apocalyptic if the earth's population continues to grow, what do you advocate to reverse it?
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The casuality numbers from the tsunami disaster in 05 and the recent cyclone disaster in Burma may not be statistically significant, but such figures will be as storms become larger and more powerful with climate disruption.
Can someone please show me where climate has gotten any worse historically? What evidence is there that storms have gotten any worse? With the information age we now know of every storm and its aftermath when in the past it went unnoticed by people thausands of miles away. Are you saying that this tsunami was the worst in history?
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And a minor point. Both Britain and the US were the most powerful empires of the 19th and 20th centuries, with small populations when compared to the Third World. It is technological distribution, not the number of people, which has made the modern quality of life.
First, the US has never been an empire. Second it wasn't just the US and Britain but most European nations. Probably true on the population ratio. But European & US populations continued to grow for the past several centuries. I'm not sure about third world populations but I bet they didn't grow. At least not in recent years.
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And no, in general I am not species optimistic: We are a remarkable animal, one that got lucky and evolved in intelligence fairly rapidly, but we are too driven by self-interest to act as a collective whole to modify our excesses. Nuclear proliferation is a great example of this. Neither the US, Russia, nor China are going to scour the world to destroy the knowledge necessary to keep creating nuclear powers, and the more powers there are with nuclear capacity, the higher the risk of a new disaster.
Well, I would catagorize myself as optimistic on human progress and standards of living, but neutral on man's capacity to degenerate against his fellow man. I wouldn't say I'm pessimistic, but certainly realistic. Look I don't know how old you are, but we've just come through a cold war where for decades nations had hundreds if not thousands of nuclear weapons aimed at each other. And nothing happened. Today a few more nations have nuclear weapons, but they probably have a few total not hundreds. Now even one can cause a lot of destruction and death, but the situation is far less severe than when the cold war was in full bloom. And wouldn't it be better if the world had a large population in the event a nuclear bomb was launched? More people would improve man's survival.
Well, we can keep discussing, but obviously we disagree. :) That's alright. ;)
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Originally Posted by
kasie
I'm not at all sure how to answer you, Virgil - I'd like to think that your clever responses are ironic, that you are being merely provocative and arguing for the sake of arguing, that you are deliberately misinterpreting the replies to your apparently blinkered posts but I fear you are all too serious and truly believe over-population is a 'good thing'.
Well, I'm being serious and provocative. Now I know how Socrates felt. :D And yes I do truely believe that a larger population is a good thing.
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You are of course quite right that the human soul will be the same regardless of population size: people always have been and probably always will be selfish, avaricious and power-hungry. They never have and probably never will ensure that the goodies are fairly divided. They don't often look to the future and ask themselves if the fish will always be in the sea, the soil there to grow the crops, the grass be sufficient to pasture the herds, the buffalo (or the woolly mammoths) roaming the plains to be hunted, the oil there to be drilled. The 'modernisation' that you regard so highly might have come about through the application of brain power but those clever people didn't look very far ahead to consider the sustainability of the life-style they were changing.
But so far we have sustained it. I just looked it up. In 1750 the world had about 1B people. In 1900, 2B. Today 6.7B We have sustained it. Set aside the countries that don't have good food distribution (because that's a distribution problem not a lack of food problem) and you have greater and greater obesity problems. There is too much food.
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The question should be not 'Can it be done?' but 'Should it be done?'
Well there we agree. I don't know whether it should be done. I certainly don't believe in euthanasia, or abortion for the sake of abortion. Are you going to advocate birth control laws like communist China? So how does one stop the population growth? I just fundementally disagree with all the people who think it's a problem.
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Yes, of course homo sapiens will think his way out of problems - it's just a pity that he created many of them in the first place.
Well, you could choose not to live, if you think life is so bad. After studying what life was like for the average person in the middle ages I believe that life has essentially gotten better, and not just by a little, but by a lot. Sure there will always be problems. But let's keep them in perspective and see how much better life is now.
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And no, I didn't say the people in Mumbai etc were genetically incapable of 'modernising' themselves - you know very well I didn't! But it may surprise you to know that no one can 'think' themselves out of the poverty trap: it takes determination, application, concentration, and a lot of other '-tions' as well as health and strength, which surprisingly are enhanced by physical well-being, brought about by food, security, cleanliness, somewhere safe to sleep and raise your children. Education is quite high up the pyramid of basic needs, Culture (the sort with the capital C) is even higher. The poor didn't ask to be poor, they would haul themselves out of it if only they could - what we in the so-called 'civilised' West need to ask ourselves is why are they still poor and what can we do to help them.
You may consider this another side note, but I don't. I believe that there is far less pverty today than at any time in human history. And yes, I attribute part of that to a larger population.
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I do hope you are being provocative. If you are, would you please ask yourself if your 'stirring' is on an appropriate subject? If you are not but are seriously suggesting that all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds, will you at least consider the possibility that you may be being a tad selective in your appraisal of the world situation? Am I saddened by this thread? Yes, I am, more than a little. Am I angered by its assumptions and its sophistry? You bet your life I am!
Like I said, I'm a little tongue in cheek, but I do believe and stand by the positions I've put forward. I guess what irks me is that this new generaton has never been so pessimistic and apocalyptic than I've ever seen. I guess I'm fundementally a renaissance humanist, believing in the power of humanity. This generation seems to be more conscerned about the population of polar bears than of humans.
Peace Kasie. I don't mean to frustrate you. :)