Then you are simply ignoring the real problem. I think you have to accept that humans are going to continue to behave like humans. That is...all of them will want to continue to improve their standards of living, by which they mean the amount/cost/availability of material goods and the ability to get from A to B for less money, or quicker, or in greater comfort, etc... You are not going to be able to convince many people that they would actually be happier living a simpler, post-industrial "back to the land" sort of life, no matter how much the romantics here might like the idea.biffvernon wrote:Population, a scapegoat.
Of course problems for the planet caused by people are likely to be made worse by more people. No brainer, but that doesn't get us very far. My contention is that what the people do is an order of magnitude greater in importance than how many there are.
I am 42, I have no children and THIS is the primary reason why. I am NOT a hypocrite and this is no scapegoat.Scapegoat? Well the population problem is often raised by old people, (past it) men (we don't have babies) and people who are happy to have less than 2.1 children.
The population problem is being caused by human beings doing what human beings naturally do. It is NOBODY's "fault".The population problem can then safely be blamed on someone else, young people, women, people who like lots of kids, foreigners, poor people who worry they need children to look after them, poor people who worry that their children are likely to die. The population problem is easy to pin on others.
Sorry Biff, but this is just total rubbish. Pointing out that population is the #1 problem does not lead to the conclusion that one's own level of consumption does not matter. It does, however, place a heavy ethical burden on persons who deliberately have more than two children, and rightly so.Making the population problem number one avoids having to look at one's own ecological footprint, how much carbon we burn, meat we eat, resources we consume.
I think you are living in a dreamworld, Biff. I can repeat what I have already said: on the upslope of resource consumption these ideals are (just about) achievable, although our historical record on tackling them has been patchy at best, but on the downslope, as the average global living standard inevitably and inexorably falls, they become an impossible dream. The political reality changes as it finally dawns on people that the future they have been sold by the politicians was a pack of lies and that they'd better start listening to the scientists instead. The political reality changes because the message from the scientific community is BLEAK. In the words of James Lovelock "the bigger picture is terrifying."Let's campaign about poverty, child health, women's education, and most of all, our own behaviour regarding resource consumption. The population problem will melt away if we are successful on these issues.
This is the bottom line: the general public will not accept radical environmental/sustainability policies until they become sufficiently scared about what is happening that they fear for their own futures and that of their children. The political response to this situation cannot and will not be the one of global social justice to which you are ideologically committed. On the contrary, it will be the response of the non-left environmentalists, as currently typified by your political nemesis: the BNP. Do not believe for one moment that the BNP interest in peak oil and other environmental issues is a cover for racism; their political position is more complex than that. The BNP are genuinely interested in creating a UK which is self-sufficient and internally sustainable. Indeed they are probably more genuinely committed to that goal than any other political party, including the greens, because the greens, like yourself, have a far more universal commitment to social justice. In other words, the greens are suffering from a greater "conflict of ideals" than the BNP does.