http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-15368276'Too poor to buy clothes, but we still want six children'
Stupid humans.
Moderator: Peak Moderation
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-15368276'Too poor to buy clothes, but we still want six children'
Most of these people do not have the benefit of an education UE.UndercoverElephant wrote:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-15368276'Too poor to buy clothes, but we still want six children'
Stupid humans.
They know they are too poor to buy clothes for the three children they already have. Did you watch the report? The average woman in Zambia has six children, and the report says "this may turn out to be bad news for economic growth."Ludwig wrote:Most of these people do not have the benefit of an education UE.UndercoverElephant wrote:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-15368276'Too poor to buy clothes, but we still want six children'
Stupid humans.
Not a sufficient condition of sensible behaviour, but a necessary one.
The Guardian - 23/10/11
Why current population growth is costing us the Earth
Article continues ...Since we passed one billion in 1800, our rising numbers and consumption have already caused climate change, rising sea levels, expanding deserts and the "sixth extinction" of wildlife. Our growth has been largely funded by rapidly depleting natural capital (fossil fuels, minerals, groundwater, soil fertility, forests, fisheries and biodiversity) rather than sustainable natural income. Our global food supply is heavily dependent on cheap oil and water. Yet peak oil means rising prices, while irrigation is quarrying out vital aquifers in many countries.
Thanks for posting that. This quote is for Biff:Aurora wrote:And from the Guardian:
The Guardian - 23/10/11
Why current population growth is costing us the Earth
Article continues ...Since we passed one billion in 1800, our rising numbers and consumption have already caused climate change, rising sea levels, expanding deserts and the "sixth extinction" of wildlife. Our growth has been largely funded by rapidly depleting natural capital (fossil fuels, minerals, groundwater, soil fertility, forests, fisheries and biodiversity) rather than sustainable natural income. Our global food supply is heavily dependent on cheap oil and water. Yet peak oil means rising prices, while irrigation is quarrying out vital aquifers in many countries.
Some people, notably George Monbiot, argue that western over-consumption is the sole culprit, so criticising expanding population means "blaming the victims". Of course he is right that our self-indulgent lifestyles are grossly inequitable, and must become much more modest – each additional Briton has the carbon footprint of 22 more Malawians, so the 10 million more UK people the ONS projects for 2033 would equate to 220 million more Malawians. But all poor people aspire to become richer; if they succeed, their numbers will matter immensely.
Yes, that's what happens with most of the animals. What distinguishes us from the rest of the animals is that we don't follow those rules. That has allowed individuals who aren't very good at fending for themselves, competing for resources and being stronger than their siblings, survive. It has enabled the thinkers, the artists, the musicians, the story-tellers, the carers and the dreamers to evolve. It's great to be human.jonny2mad wrote:...try to understand how nature is supposed to work, your children are supposed to compete for resources with other peoples children, and the strongest are supposed to be the survivors .
Thats what happens with every animal species,...
Why not?terra77 wrote:This is a little bit ridiculous. However, people shouldn't be limited to amount of children they have due to the fact of money.