How Do I Request A Hotel For An Early...
Travel2 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by phaloides. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Whilst agreeing with previous posters that we are merely entering into a global warming cycle have you really thought about what you are proposing? Do you want to live in a world populated by those who offer no hope to their fellow man in time of urgent need? If you want to know about compulsary birth control I suggest you seek and out and talk to any chinese ladies, they usually have very strong views on the subject, and rightly so.
I don't personally want to live in a world where we have no regard for our brothers who are suffering just so that our own nest might be feathered that little more.
Ah, the old Malthus vs Boserup debate, Smithers! Malthus essentially says if competition for resources in a closed system becomes too great, disasters (i.e. wars, famine etc) will occur and adjust the population balance.
Boserup was the originator of 'necessity is the mother of invention' and is actually the preferred theory, though I've never quite been able to accept that. Malthus' theory (at the level I've explained it here) seems more intuitively correct, but my uni professors were adamant it wasn't...
You may be right, Mr B. I have heard it said my old place harboured the odd lefty or two.
I don't 'like' Malthusian theory, in that it doesn't make me feel warm and fuzzy inside - quite the opposite, it just seems to be more instinctively correct, whereas Boserup seemed naive! Of course, to bring this back to the question, the thing is that we don't actually have limited resources at all, but the way we live and consume does create a defacto closed system.
Phaloid's solution seems to be a particularly callous brand of eugenics to me though; 'Hey, you know how we've got all the money, food and stuff, and you get exploited and we won't let you develop your economies properly and all that well known malarky? Guess what we've decided to do to you next... If only you'd have the sense to be born in the first world, eh?'
Well as overpopulation IS the biggest threat to the future of mankind etc.. that needs addressing above all else, obviously at some time in the near future population growth must come down to zero.
If you doubt this, it is easy to calculate that with the present growth rate the human race will expand so that within 700 years there will one person per square metre on the dry land surface of the earth, obviously this cannot happen so at some stage the growth MUST come to zero.
The question is how to achieve it with the least disruption to our fragile economic systems. Mind you what with Peak Oil which is here now, bird/human flu looming on the horizon and the US ''not ruling out'' a nuclear strike on Iran, the growth might come to zero a lot sooner than we all expect!!!