OK, I don't think there's any question about whether the world can sustain the human population with proper resource management. In fact, a centralized world government with absolute power over natural resources and real estate could probably sustain 10 times the current population in comfort. Unfortunately, our current society would need to be entirely destroyed before such a thing could happen. Civilization would need to be rebuilt from the ground up, and our core values would need to be revised (private property, imminent domain, personal freedoms, etc).
11/19/2011 6:41:18 PM
So the government can more efficiently allocate resources? What words would you use to describe your sociopolitical affiliations?
11/19/2011 7:10:32 PM
I was speaking in the context of this coversation:
11/19/2011 7:19:40 PM
He didn't actually mean we should move everyone to Brazil. The point was that the housing and engagement of humans in our cities doesn't actually take up much space, leaving the vast majority of it available for everything else we use it for. One world government would reduce the carrying capacity of the planet, in my opinion.
11/19/2011 7:55:42 PM
OK I definitely missed the broader point. Yes, the space taken up by all of humanity's residences and shopping malls is likely smaller than Brazil.Studies have already been done to estimate the total of humanity's ecological footprint, and it is currently one and a half earths.
11/19/2011 8:23:37 PM
11/19/2011 8:49:21 PM
When energy use becomes a problem, petroleum is the source that will get squeezed and transportation is the service that will get squeezed.It's probably fortunate for the poor that they have comparatively less direct use of petroleum. It's getting rich while avoiding petroleum-intensive activity that will the the key.
11/19/2011 9:38:15 PM
^I'd agree with the exception that a lot of our food production (at least currently) is also dependant on petroleum for harvesting and pesticide production, I think that will affect the poor pretty heavily. Another thing to consider is that, in America, a pretty large portion of our poor population is actually rural poor, who are pretty dependent on their own transportation -- they have to drive 20 miles each way just to go to the grocery store or to work.
11/19/2011 9:45:15 PM
11/19/2011 11:18:24 PM
Incorrect. We import oil. We import various metals. We import various manufactured goods. Meanwhile, we export food, coal, ore, timber, everything else. America is a big free trade zone with lots of resources. Were we to impose self sufficiency upon ourselves our standard of living would drop something like 10%, not a dramatic change. Rather than so must stuff being made using Chinese labor it would be made using American robots.
11/19/2011 11:40:51 PM
11/20/2011 12:26:35 AM
11/20/2011 1:11:54 AM
^ We wouldn't do without these things, we would do without 60% of them. Production in the States has already been shown to have very little ability to ramp up in response to more demand. The economy would be more oil efficient. We would also use more coal.On top of that, if we lost our imports right now would would face catastrophe. Such a statement that trade buys us 10% of GDP only works in a theoretical economic sense, supposing our economy had sufficient time to restructure. Although I might argue it could be upwards of 20%, this isn't precise. Trade only creates value proportional to the difference in prices between two different places, although there's some feedback, go look at macro economic equations.
11/20/2011 1:33:55 AM
^^ We in America waste oil. If our vehicle fleet was swapped with that of western Europe it would replace most of what we import. Shifting to alternative sources by shipping more by rail and using natural gas instead of oil for industrial and home heating would come close to getting the rest done. ^ Quite right, I should have made that more explicit. Had we imposed self sufficiency upon ourselves since we were almost self sufficient around WW2, assuming today's technology we would have about the same living standard, 10% to 20% loss seems like a reasonable range. Of course, self sufficiency is for saps, as it would have also stunted our technological advancement, which would really have bitten into living standards by now. The point is not that trade hasn't help us, it clearly has, the point is that it is not international trade that has made us who we are. We are rich because of our regime and they are poor because of their regime. You can argue the trading system helps sustain the bad regime the poor suffer under, but history has shown that embargoes and blockades do not lead to regime change (see USSR, Iraq, Iran, Cuba, North Korea, etc).
11/20/2011 3:11:18 PM
I am telling you, right now, that our standard of living is fully dependent on imports. That is the point I made when it seemed like mrfrog was implying otherwise, though it had nothing to do with HIS point. I'm not making any points about a regime. You stated that our lifestyle would change "ten percent" without imports, and though that's very vague, that assumption seemed ridiculously optimistic to me, given the fact that almost everything we use has imported materials. Even products that are "made in America" are not actually completely made in America. The resources come from somewhere else and we simply manufacture them, or add some kind of value. And no - if "our vehicle fleet was swapped with that of western Europe" it would not save us any gas. Europeans use less vehicle fuel because they travel smaller distances, have fewer emissions regulations, and have heavily subsidized public transport. Their vehicles are not inherently more efficient.
11/20/2011 6:53:33 PM
11/20/2011 7:13:59 PM
11/20/2011 7:56:39 PM
^ why does the US standard matter anyway? they'll just exempt the larger vehicles as being in another "class" anyway.
11/20/2011 8:28:47 PM
I have a question, where do you people get these graphs from?
11/20/2011 10:41:35 PM
The only group of people who have the time to make a graph like the energy flow one are people working for the government.
11/20/2011 11:02:19 PM
If you mean "us" then the answer for me is either searching my RSS feeds for something I saw posted months ago or Google image search like the one above. Why?
11/20/2011 11:08:26 PM
11/21/2011 2:31:29 AM
11/21/2011 10:49:45 AM
That's really nice anecdotal evidence but Volvo says otherwisehttp://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-25/volvo-third-quarter-profit-misses-estimates-as-europe-truck-market-shrinks.html#While slowing of demand is expected in the future, Volvo truck sales in Europe for 2011 were forecasted to exceed those in North America by about 30,000Granted, that was the forecast, there's probably actual data somewhere now that 2011's coming to a close, but you're going to have to do a little better than "I was in 'Yurp and didn't see no trucks also they gots weird terlets"[Edited on November 21, 2011 at 11:40 AM. Reason : .]
11/21/2011 11:11:47 AM
11/21/2011 11:18:11 AM
11/21/2011 2:50:12 PM
11/21/2011 4:44:33 PM
Nice try Str8Foolish. Trying to take after McDanger I see? I said that I saw no F-150s. I did not. That I saw no F-150s on European roads does not even imply there are no trucks. But gasoline prices above $8 a gallon sure does prevent people from driving a 16mpg pickup truck to work each day.
11/21/2011 5:50:50 PM
11/21/2011 6:03:43 PM
11/21/2011 6:28:08 PM
^^ Sweet. ^ This time I said nothing about work done, merely efficiency. So admit it. In your mind using a 300 ton vehicle is comparably efficient to using a 2 ton vehicle for the task of moving a 200 lb human being ten miles and back.
11/21/2011 7:27:40 PM
11/21/2011 7:34:58 PM
^^^ Exactly,W = 300 ton x 200 lb = 3,200 MJW = 2 ton x 200 lb = 21 MJ[Edited on November 21, 2011 at 7:37 PM. Reason : ]
11/21/2011 7:36:07 PM
Well, actually, the work done in both instances is zero. The vehicle moved temporarily. You did accelerate it up to speed, only to slow it down again with negative force over distance. As such, over-all, the total work done was zero in both cases. Of course, the atmosphere was heated, not sure how to calculate that.
11/21/2011 7:55:37 PM
A lot of over-simplifications ITT. The discussion of "efficiency" as it applies to gas mileage assumes you are using your vehicle for it's designed payload on a fairly constant basis. As skeptical as I am about all of the 'Americans are the worst violators of the environment' crap, if you use an F-150 to tow 0.5 tons, but only use it for that purpose 25% of the time you are driving, you are only being, at best 75% of the time at it's optimal running rate.You also have to consider that automobiles are built to reach maximum efficiency at certain speeds with certain loads. In the US, most cars are designed to reach maximum efficiency (that is, where the gas consumption yields the greatest possible power) at speeds between 40-55mph. In Europe, due to the terrain, they are designed much lower. A good way to see this effect is to take an older model "light" pick-up (like one of those Mazdas with the 4-banger in it) and run it down the interstate at 90mph. Assuming you don't get a ticket, you'll see your car chugging gas.---Not necessarily saying anyone is right or wrong; just pointing out that saying "what is more efficient" is really ambiguous and is one reason why when someone says, "Europe has {insert cool, new, eco-friendly vehicle}, so why don't we have it?", their complaint doesn't make a lot of sense.
11/22/2011 8:39:22 AM
11/22/2011 8:43:28 AM
11/22/2011 8:50:19 AM
I'll have to take your word for it, I guess...
11/22/2011 9:00:42 AM
Lmao oh okay so there's plenty of trucks in Europe, but not F-150's, and you're upset about that. Thanks for clarifying.PS: Still waiting for you to provide anything resembling data to back up your riveting story of being in Europe and not seeing F-150's. [Edited on November 22, 2011 at 11:37 AM. Reason : .]
11/22/2011 11:36:50 AM
What the hell do you want? Proof I went to Europe? All the pictures I took? I didn't say there were no F-150s, I'm sure some American moved to Europe and took his truck. All I said was that I didn't see any. Stop wasting people's time. I provided evidence that Europe's vehicle fleet is more efficient than ours. If you want to challenge something, challenge that.
11/22/2011 12:03:54 PM
11/22/2011 1:11:39 PM
11/22/2011 1:24:25 PM
^^Is there any reason to conclude vehicles in Europe are being used less efficiently? Europeans are not driving more miles than Americans are, yet presumably they are accomplishing the same task (take me wherever I decide to go), so I suspect we can discount your position.
11/22/2011 1:33:21 PM
11/22/2011 1:50:32 PM
I apologize for the multi-post in advanced, but I missed this part.
11/22/2011 2:01:36 PM
Increase tire pressure.More efficiency.Less safety.Problem solved?
11/22/2011 6:34:09 PM