Thought this was interesting from the BBC. Hopefully the Soap Box is the right place for it.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-15391515The first page gives you an approximation of what number person you are for all time and for who is alive today. The second page gives statistics on population growth for each country.For the US, "Every Hour, There Are: 484 Births, 288 Deaths, +113 Immigrants". 0.9% Yearly growth.For Mexico, "Every Hour, There Are: 259 Births, 59 Deaths, -41 Immigrants". 1.3% Yearly growth.For Canada, "Every Hour, There Are: 42 Births, 28 Deaths, +25 Immigrants". 1.0% Yearly growth.Just for shits and grins...For China, "Every Hour, There Are: 1908 Births, 1095 Deaths, -43 Immigrants". 0.5% Yearly growth.For the UK, "Every Hour, There Are: 85 Births, 66 Deaths, +23 Immigrants". 0.6% Yearly growth.There are some neat factoids at the end of the article (or whatever you want to call it):
11/15/2011 10:20:34 AM
11/15/2011 10:25:03 AM
I need more elbow room!!!
11/15/2011 10:25:41 AM
^^In other words, there are more cell phone subscriptions in the US than people. Think in terms of personal cell phones and corporate cell phones.
11/15/2011 10:35:04 AM
^^^ Not too hard to believe. I've got two (my personal cell phone and the work-issued BlackBerry).[Edited on November 15, 2011 at 10:36 AM. Reason : .]
11/15/2011 10:35:50 AM
^ 3 here, personal iphone, work blackberry and work nextel.Can't wait til blackberry disappears
11/15/2011 12:50:04 PM
11/15/2011 2:19:48 PM
Less humans, more trees imo.
11/15/2011 2:48:20 PM
^ + 'mr president we need to rethink this middle east "peace" plan''i think we should call it the middle east erradication plan'= mission accomplished[Edited on November 15, 2011 at 3:02 PM. Reason : ,]
11/15/2011 3:02:13 PM
11/15/2011 3:45:28 PM
- Work to eliminate the mindset that we are entitled to cheap, finite resources.- Relearn the importance of living in balance with our environment.- Acknowledge the intrinsic value of non-human species.- Overcome the dogmatic notion that humans have some sort of divine directive to become perpetual baby factories.- Realize that our capabilities as humans give us a responsibility of stewardship as opposed to an excuse for dominion. Those are just a few things that come to mind. A lot of it is changing a pervasive cultural mentality which can take a long time.
11/15/2011 4:23:27 PM
none of those are plans.they're end goals themselves.
11/15/2011 4:31:22 PM
Fair enough. But since no one has said, "HockeyRoman, you have the power to implement this idea, what's your plan?" I haven't given it much thought other than to live a reasonably sustainable, yet rewarding life and encourage values of responsibility in others.
11/15/2011 4:41:50 PM
I'd say over population is probably the greatest threat to Earth and humankind.
11/15/2011 4:55:41 PM
I'd say under-population is probably the greatest threat to Earth and humankind. As population growth slows, so does technological development, and so grows the government.
11/15/2011 5:54:30 PM
I'd like to hear how less humans is somehow bad for the Earth...
11/15/2011 6:07:47 PM
A civilization with fewer members is a poorer civilization. Nothing destroys the environment like poverty.
11/15/2011 6:42:50 PM
And you're prepared to follow this more humans = good chain of thought to some sort of conclusion? Paint that picture for us. . .
11/15/2011 6:54:31 PM
In conclusion, people should have more children?
11/15/2011 7:05:44 PM
Some people should have more children. Some people should have no children.Reproduction is only good if parents can provide their children with a solid upbringing. If they can't, then we're just more and more fucked as time goes on.[Edited on November 15, 2011 at 7:52 PM. Reason : ]
11/15/2011 7:52:07 PM
LoneSnark's hopes and aspirations for the future... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXRjmyJFzrU
11/15/2011 8:05:16 PM
^ omg I love that movie. It is truly one of my favorites. And yes, it is one of the reasons for my belief structure in favor of reproduction. ^^Not at all. This is why we have such things as adoption and, if needed, orphanages.
11/15/2011 10:59:15 PM
Come on guys, we all know about the big problem of US brain drain with our best and brightest moving to Niger or East Timor to seek a higher standard of living and be part of their vibrant tech start-ups.
11/15/2011 11:02:25 PM
11/15/2011 11:06:03 PM
I'd like some politicians to actually speak out some about trying to keep growth neutral or as close to it to being optimal for the economy, I'm not too enthused reading about how we'll have 500 mil to maybe 750 mil by 2100 or whatever
11/17/2011 3:33:13 PM
The optimal size of the economy is far larger than it currently is. We need to throw off enough surplus to colonize the solar system, after-all.
11/17/2011 4:51:40 PM
In the vast majority of the developed world, population is in decline. The USA is the only exception, and we're just maintaining.Its Africa, Southeast Asia, Central America and the Middle East where the populations are exploding. This is mainly due to strong gender roles (men earn money and women keep the home) and other cultural facets that promote large families.I'm not terribly worried about over-population. I think the increasing standard-of-living in these regions will be a bigger concern. These societies will continue to improve, and their citizens will continue to demand greater amounts of resources to support their richer lifestyle. The world can only support one USA, maybe two after plundering the last of its environmental sanctuaries. The world's growing "per-capita-consumption" is the true threat.
11/18/2011 2:01:08 AM
Honestly, the more wealth, the more pressure on the price of material goods we have, and then the less people will consume.
11/18/2011 10:51:56 AM
I think a lot of this is relative to what define as 'essential'. If I want to buy a car, that doesn't stop a village in Nigeria from growing food or building shelter. In that regard, the competition of industrialized nations towards 3rd world countries is not nearly as profound.Where it becomes an issue is when 1st world solutions are needed to counter and issue. The typical dooms-day population models basically say we'll either kill each other off or disease/starvation will limit the population. 3rd world countries will only be harmed by 1st world's consumption is we start having to import food which we currently do not (not for essential consumption, anyway). We don't really have any interest in killing off overpopulating 3rd world countries and they aren't going to rise up against many of the developed countries, so that leaves disease. This is the only place that the 1st world could hurt the 3rd world. Due to the globalization of business and trade, diseases travel more easily than in generations past. If a disease were to spread to less developed countries, there is a very real scenario where the US (and others) are able to develop medicines and vaccines while the less developed countries must endure epidemics.
11/18/2011 11:05:25 AM
11/18/2011 11:38:48 AM
11/18/2011 11:43:36 AM
11/18/2011 11:59:00 AM
Oh, God, more population terrors.Calm down, children, we're fine.
11/18/2011 12:19:17 PM
You want to reduce population growth? Improve the standard of living for the average person. When people actually have education and careers to be engaged in, they tend to put off having kids into the future, and have fewer when they do.
11/18/2011 12:29:58 PM
disappointed it took 32 posts to be mentioned ]
11/18/2011 12:37:17 PM
11/18/2011 12:37:38 PM
That the poor are poor has nothing to do with the non-poor. If God wiped the rest of the planet away tomorrow and therefore we didn't buy another car, poor Nigerians would not be better off. In fact, they would be far worse off, as some of them certainly had families working in the oil sector which now have no jobs as the rest of the world no longer exists to buy the oil. In fact, for this narrow example the oil consumption of Nigerians themselves would fall were this to occur, because I don't believe Nigeria has any oil refineries. As such, take the rest of the world away and they would be forced to abandon their own resources without any way of using them.
11/18/2011 1:10:00 PM
11/18/2011 1:25:43 PM
11/18/2011 2:10:59 PM
11/18/2011 2:28:46 PM
11/18/2011 3:33:02 PM
11/18/2011 4:06:14 PM
11/18/2011 4:25:47 PM
11/18/2011 4:27:28 PM
11/18/2011 5:03:45 PM
11/18/2011 6:17:56 PM
11/18/2011 6:42:34 PM
^^ As long as that is the case, food price inflation won't outpace income inflation.But that has an implicit assumption that they own all the means of production of farming. Also, in Africa's case, the demographic distribution is strongly skewed toward the young. That means that future farmers will effectively have less land to work with. I have no doubt that they can increase yields to compensate. But that would make it more like American food production.You can ask American farmers about the problems with not owning all of the means of production. This was a common theme in documentaries such as Food Inc. This clip is directly to that point:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRDWabqAXvU[Edited on November 18, 2011 at 6:49 PM. Reason : ]
11/18/2011 6:49:14 PM
^^ She shell paid the Nigerian government to avoid bad press from protestors. How does that disprove my theory that shell would pay the Nigerian government to avoid bad press from further persecuting the ethnic minority locals? Corporations must operate under the regime they find themselves. Corporations across America are buying land the government took through eminent domain. Corporations in Russia are bribing government officials to engage in legal activity. The Nigerian government was persecuting and impoverishing its own citizens long before Shell arrived. Oil production is not a bad thing, and that is all Shell wants to do. It is not their fault the Nigerians corrupt everything into unmitigated human suffering. In effect, you are outraged at the corner grocer for selling fruit to gangsters. You don't need to change shell to make the problems go away. I'm sure the managers of shell wish Nigeria was a better regime than it is. But it isn't. Preventing shell from doing business will not make the problem go away. After-all, shell didn't pick Nigeria. Nigeria picked shell. And if shell leaves the Nigerian regime will just seize everything and replace them with some Chinese or Russian oil services company which might not care about bad press while the bodies pile up. ^ They do own all the means of production of farming, because the poor don't have access to anything else. I do doubt they can increase yields because poor countries are poor. If they could utilize modern means of production then they wouldn't be poor. Although I must confess I have heard good things out of Africa lately, so this may be changing. [Edited on November 19, 2011 at 10:26 AM. Reason : ,.,]
11/19/2011 10:25:21 AM
11/19/2011 10:45:54 AM