Dieoff starting in Africa
Moderator: Peak Moderation
- UndercoverElephant
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b7aVZ3BHp3k
ETA: or maybe... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2nHGlE06y0
ETA: or maybe... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2nHGlE06y0
Last edited by UndercoverElephant on 30 Jun 2011, 00:10, edited 1 time in total.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
Providing vast quantities of food aid to countries has also often had the unfortunate negative side effect of driving many local farmers out of business, making the locals less food secure and more reliant on food imports.
NGOs, companies and individuals have been working for decades to try to improve the agriculture in Africa, I've been lectured by a number of them this last year. Sadly in the big picture the negative drivers are much bigger than the positive drivers.
NGOs, companies and individuals have been working for decades to try to improve the agriculture in Africa, I've been lectured by a number of them this last year. Sadly in the big picture the negative drivers are much bigger than the positive drivers.
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Wishful thinking.biffvernon wrote:[We need to step back a moment, look at the physical inputs, sunshine and rain, minerals from the soil, on the physical landscape, and determine what the productive capacity of the land and ocean could be, if everyone behaved themselves.
[quote.="vtsnowedin"]
And what if the capacity is less then the current population? Is not the limiting factor on more then half of the African continent the amount of rainfall. No amount of geoengineering is going to change that.[Quote/]
Somalia could feed itself if only it stopped shooting itself in the foot and the rest of us stopped shooting too.
I know this is a screwed up post and I have just not taken the time to learn the tricks of making several comments to a previous post but I am going to leave it rather then delete the whole thing.
- emordnilap
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How so?vtsnowedin wrote:Wishful thinking.biffvernon wrote:[We need to step back a moment, look at the physical inputs, sunshine and rain, minerals from the soil, on the physical landscape, and determine what the productive capacity of the land and ocean could be, if everyone behaved themselves.
[quote.="vtsnowedin"]
And what if the capacity is less then the current population? Is not the limiting factor on more then half of the African continent the amount of rainfall. No amount of geoengineering is going to change that.[Quote/]
Somalia could feed itself if only it stopped shooting itself in the foot and the rest of us stopped shooting too.
I know this is a screwed up post
Have a go - it's easy and it gets easier.vtsnowedin wrote:I have just not taken the time to learn the tricks of making several comments to a previous post
Eh? Don't understand.vtsnowedin wrote:but I am going to leave it rather then delete the whole thing.
Anyway, if you want to respond to several points, do it in several separate posts. I know Biff prefers shorts, sharp posts; so do I and quite possibly the majority.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
- Lord Beria3
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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-2 ... -says.html
Rising food prices are driving Africa into a mass die-off.The global agriculture supply situation has worsened and a failure to boost food production fast enough to meet demand may lead to shortages, said investor Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings.
“We’ve got to do something or we’re going to have no food at any price at times in the next few years,” Rogers said in a Bloomberg Television interview with Rishaad Salamat today in Singapore. “I still own agriculture. If I found something to buy, I would buy it.”
Peace always has been and always will be an intermittent flash of light in a dark history of warfare, violence, and destruction
- UndercoverElephant
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The proximate causes for this have been prolonged drought and the fact that Somalia is a failed state. That's why it is this particular part of Africa that is being affected. A lot of these people (presumably) were dependent on growing their own food. Rising food prices and diminishing stockpiles are limiting the possible response - they are what will turn the existing emergency into a die-off.Lord Beria3 wrote:http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-2 ... -says.html
Rising food prices are driving Africa into a mass die-off.The global agriculture supply situation has worsened and a failure to boost food production fast enough to meet demand may lead to shortages, said investor Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings.
“We’ve got to do something or we’re going to have no food at any price at times in the next few years,” Rogers said in a Bloomberg Television interview with Rishaad Salamat today in Singapore. “I still own agriculture. If I found something to buy, I would buy it.”
I think it is interesting to see the effect of "donor fatigue" in places like Germany and Finland with respect to bailing out the PIIGS. Eventually people stop responding to further calls for help. I think it is inevitable that the same thing will happen with respect to providing food and financial aid to backward parts of sub-saharan Africa.
Live-Aid acheived nothing. The tactics were fine, but the strategy was disastrous.
Last edited by UndercoverElephant on 09 Jul 2011, 21:41, edited 1 time in total.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
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You don't understand the trouble I have getting posts to go through. I get a lot of "Invalid session " messages and it some times takes a dozen attempts to get a post to send. It often requires refreshing the page and repasting in the post (if I have thought ahead and copied it.) a couple of times. Totally random as sometimes it will go on a single click as it should and does with every other site. I think it has something to do with my signal coming down from the satellite driving on the wrong side of the beam.emordnilap wrote:Eh? Don't understand.vtsnowedin wrote:]but I am going to leave it rather then delete the whole thing.
Anyway, if you want to respond to several points, do it in several separate posts. I know Biff prefers shorts, sharp posts; so do I and quite possibly the majority.
I was shooting for a point counterpoint presentation which I find quite readable but one of my points printed out as if it was contained inside the original post.
I like my writing to be readable and on target but becoming the worlds sharpest blog poster is a few steps down on my priority list. I'll fine tune my technique as time permits.
- biffvernon
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Yeah, I'm good at wishful thinking. But that doesn't detract from the physical reality that there is enough rain to sustain the current population.vtsnowedin wrote:Wishful thinking.biffvernon wrote:[We need to step back a moment, look at the physical inputs, sunshine and rain, minerals from the soil, on the physical landscape, and determine what the productive capacity of the land and ocean could be, if everyone behaved themselves.
[quote.="vtsnowedin"]
And what if the capacity is less then the current population? Is not the limiting factor on more then half of the African continent the amount of rainfall. No amount of geoengineering is going to change that.[Quote/]
Somalia could feed itself if only it stopped shooting itself in the foot and the rest of us stopped shooting too.
It's a people behaviour problem not a climate or population problem, that is at the root. Climate and population just make things worse.
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Damn! That was only supposed to happen to RGR.vtsnowedin wrote:You don't understand the trouble I have getting posts to go through. I get a lot of "Invalid session " messages and it some times takes a dozen attempts to get a post to send. It often requires refreshing the page and repasting in the post (if I have thought ahead and copied it.) a couple of times. Totally random as sometimes it will go on a single click as it should and does with every other site. I think it has something to do with my signal coming down from the satellite driving on the wrong side of the beam.emordnilap wrote:Eh? Don't understand.vtsnowedin wrote:]but I am going to leave it rather then delete the whole thing.
Anyway, if you want to respond to several points, do it in several separate posts. I know Biff prefers shorts, sharp posts; so do I and quite possibly the majority.
I was shooting for a point counterpoint presentation which I find quite readable but one of my points printed out as if it was contained inside the original post.
I like my writing to be readable and on target but becoming the worlds sharpest blog poster is a few steps down on my priority list. I'll fine tune my technique as time permits.
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Wishful thinking.[/quote]biffvernon wrote:[Somalia could feed itself if only it stopped shooting itself in the foot and the rest of us stopped shooting too.
Yeah, I'm good at wishful thinking. But that doesn't detract from the physical reality that there is enough rain to sustain the current population.It's a people behaviour problem not a climate or population problem, that is at the root. Climate and population just make things worse.[/quote]
Do you really think that is true today? And even if it is true today, with two percent per year population growth when will it become false?
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- biffvernon
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Yes, I do think it is true. People are able to live, and feed themselves, in remarkably arid places if the social and political conditions are right. That's a big 'if'.vtsnowedin wrote:Do you really think that is true today? And even if it is true today, with two percent per year population growth when will it become false?
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Oops. Spoke too soon?Lord Beria3 wrote:Rising food prices are driving Africa into a mass die-off.
- UndercoverElephant
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How is a better-than-expect maize crop in North America going to help millions of starving people in the horn of Africa?JavaScriptDonkey wrote:Oops. Spoke too soon?Lord Beria3 wrote:Rising food prices are driving Africa into a mass die-off.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
- UndercoverElephant
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Of course they are. The Bedouin inhabitated the Arabian peninsular for centuries. But how many of them were there?biffvernon wrote:Yes, I do think it is true. People are able to live, and feed themselves, in remarkably arid places if the social and political conditions are right. That's a big 'if'.vtsnowedin wrote:Do you really think that is true today? And even if it is true today, with two percent per year population growth when will it become false?
Places like Saudi Arabia and Egypt are absolutely dependent on importing food. It doesn't matter how good the social and political conditions are, they simply do not have enough fertile land and/or rainfall to grow enough food to feed their current populations. Not even close.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)