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#1
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#2
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But I can't run. I can walk for miles, and I can do the sort of half walk/half run that people do when they're in a hurry, but a full out sprint? Can't do it. And that's why honey nut cheerios is the best cereal ever. |
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#3
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Well I am not sure if reducing population as a means to increase standards of living is going to be all that popular. Hehe - thats another things by the way for HNM: In many discussions, you kept saying that reducing energy consumption or therelike is not going to be popular, so people will not want to do it, so it cannot be done, so we need more clean energy - preferrably nuclear. I would say it is as hard or harder to tell people that they can only have increases in standard of living if population decreases, so basically it translates to having only one or no kids as the cost of having new iphonies and flatscreen TVs and moon colonies.
Anyways in a simplified equation, total Consumption = number of people * average consumption per capita and that translates into total Consumption = number of people * (average standard of living / Resource Efficiency) Thats a very simplified model, I know, but its an approximation. Now you can think of what to do - the constraints are, that total Consumption may not rise if we want to stop degrading the planet and actually has to decrease if we want to revert some of the changes and slow down degrading processes that already have some inertia. It boils down to reducing population and/or decreasing standard of living and/or increasing the efficiency of the processes that fuel that standard of living. If one of the factors goes in the opposite way, the others have to compensate. The question is what is sustainable on the left side of the equation, theories say that we are in overshoot by a factor of 3-10. Interesting is also that the global average of per capita consumption and standard of living is much less than what we have here in Europe or the US. That means of course that if the millions of people that are below the average want to reach that average at least (not to mention the consumption of Western Countries), either the consumption of the richer countries has to drop drastically or one of the other factors in the equation has to change. In addition to that, I would say that a certain standard of living is only possible if there are enough people to support it, in case of our western culture this is even imperialistic in that our standard of living is maintained to a large degree by the very fact that there are other people that have much less. An iPhone would by far not be as cheap as it is if the people producing it would demand the same kind of payment, health care, vacation, work hours etc as we do in the West - and a price increase in these appliances (e.g. Smartphones, Computers, Laptops, Flatscreen TVs, cars,... etc would all double or triple in price) would in turn equate to a decrease in average standard of living as people would not be able to afford these things as easily as they do now. So to just say we need less people and then all will be fine is ignoring the complexity of the problem by far. P.S.: Interestingly just after I wrote this, I listened to a related interview with Paul Ehrlich, the author of the "population bomb" book from some decades ago. It is only 18 minutes, so maybe this may be an interesting piece related to the topic of population. http://www.ecoshock.org/downloads/ec...lapse_LoFi.mp3 The scientific paper he mentions is to be found here: Can a collapse of global civilization be avoided? at the Royal Society, it is a peer reviewed article without experimental data or therelike, so it is rather a Review paper, in this case it is filed under "Perspective", meaning that the author is presenting information from a vast number of scientific articles and draws conclusions from their totality. P.P.S: BACK ON TOPIC - I am just reading a good book. It is called "The long Earth" by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter. In it, a simple device is invented that allows people to "step sideways" in the quantum universe and go sequentiall to one of millions of Earths that are without humans. It explores in the form of a novel the desire of many people to get away from this, to run away somewhere. Some people take only one or 5 steps and remain in contact with Datum Earth, others - like the main characters - are going far far away in search of "the silence" that can only be heard or felt when they are far from all these people. I am just beginning to read this but it promises to be really good and I feel it relates to the original topic of this thread...
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Know your idols: Who said "Hitler killed five million Jews. It is the greatest crime of our time. But the Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher's knife. They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs.". (Solution: "Mahatma" Ghandi) Stop terraforming Earth (wordpress) "Humans are storytellers. These stories then can become our reality. Only when we loose ourselves in the stories they have the power to control us. Our culture got lost in the wrong story, a story of death and defeat, of opression and control, of separation and competition. We need a new story!" |
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#4
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Now that we have returned to what I think the original post brought up, I will say this. You can change your location, (run away), to change the weather, the language spoken, the government. But you CANNOT run away from YOU. If your problem is generated by you, no matter how far, or how fast you run, you are still stuck with you. In that case, you need to change you, not your location.
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#5
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