Well, I am actually a population reductionist - in the sense that I think population reduction will happen, whether by systematic implementation or (more likely) by die-off.biffvernon wrote:
The only thing I'd add is the I think talking about behavioural change is harder than population reduction. Folk are happy to talk about population reduction because they are sure that they will not be involved personally. It will be someone else who has to not have a baby or die. Behaviuoral change is much more difficult because there is a danger that it might actually involve oneself.
The population reductionists are just scape-goating.
I simply don't buy the argument that we can sustain a world population of 7 billion without cheap oil. It seems logical to me.
What I'm not going to do is stand up and say which people I think need killing off. When I talk of population reduction, I'm not assuming that I won't be involved.
I just don't think behavioural change will be enough to save us from the cataclysm. Common sense says that Britain can't sustain a population of 60 million without oil - we just don't have the land, and remember, oil isn't just used for oil imports and intra-national transportation - it's also used in food production (machinery, pesticides etc.), so we could expect to see food production at a considerably lower level even than in WW2, when we only had to feed 40 million people. Remember, we had oil back then.