You should tell that to every professor I've ever had, I'm sure they'll be ecstatic to recieve your expert opinion. The Canadian foster care system is overburdened, and ****ty. There are many kids who need care on our own soil, and becoming a foster parent is comparatively cheap too - sometimes the government even gives you money, whereas anonymous in-vitro can cost up to $25,000 for one round (money which you might need to provide an optimum quality of life for your new family). Also I didn't say that every child without a stable home was in an industrialized society, and you are able to adopt outside of your country (like Virgil did). It's a bit troublesome, but the price is comparable to anonymous in-vitro, especially if you're using a donated egg (and that's only for one round, it often requires two or three, or it never takes). My assertion thus far in this thread has been that given the choice between costly anonymous in-vitro and costly overseas adoption/domestic fostering, I'd choose the latter because the children already exist and need to be cared for. Better to reduce suffering than to create more.
J-curve:
Yeah, that should be happening any day now.
You're really going to have to stop beating that poor horse, it's long dead.
Yeah, but most of the really fat people in America are poor, and the reason they're fat is because they can only afford food that's high in fat and sugar and low in vitamins and nutrients, like fast food. The first world does have a lot of resources though, and I believe that scientific and technological advancement really could meet at least the basic needs for the world's entire human population and still account for our species' natural pyramidal distribution tendancy, but we've really got to get going on it. Agricultural biogenetics/pesticide innovation/ect. is a step in the right direction, that's why "organic" food isn't a good idea. Vastly decreased food output, those on the bottom suffer.




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