http://www.populationelephant.com/PEthe ... ticle.htmlAbout this website:
Climate change, energy depletion, food shortages, resource wars, species extinction - these are not the problem, they are only the symptoms. The singular root problem that causes all these horrifying threats to mankind is overpopulation.
So - logically - the solution that will eliminate these threats is simply to reduce the population of humans on this planet to a sustainable number.
Yet, no one proposes this obvious solution. No one is even willing to discuss it.
It is the Elephant in every room.
Except here.
The Real Problem
Some things are so preeminent within their context that they need no adjectives or explanation. Ask any American football fan what is referred to by "The Play" and they will tell you abut the final play in the 1982 Cal/Stanford game when, after several laterals and a mad dash through the Stanford band, Cal scored the winning touchdown as time expired (do a Google search on "the play" and see for yourself). Likewise, "The Open" refers only to the British Open golf tournament, even though there are dozens of other "Open" athletic events.
The world today is beset with a host of major issues - oil depletion, climate change, food shortages, resource wars, species extinction - to name but a few. But these are only symptoms of the one true problem. "The Real Problem" - the one that spawns all others, and the one that mankind must face at some point - is that there are simply too many human beings on this planet.
Therefore, I suggest, that like "The Play" and "The Open" - hereafter overpopulation should be referred to as "The Problem".
http://www.populationelephant.com/cassandradilemma.html
Clearly, for most people, apathy, denial, and false hope obscure the reality of the danger ahead. The essential question then becomes: How can their apathy, denial, and false hope ever be overcome? The Cassandras among us have completely failed so far.
I think I know why.
But instead, we Cassandras continue putting out scholarly essays, books, and videos. We attempt to convince through our solid logic and our depth of information. We debate the nits and details of peak oil and population projections. We argue about which solution is best, while at the same time expressing that it doesn't really matter because no one will do it anyway.
I assert that what we Cassandras are doing is exactly what is described in that worn-out definition of insanity: "Insanity is doing the same thing over-and-over again, and then expecting a different result."I think I have an answer. For the last eighteen months I've been working on this problem, and I believe I've come up with a creative and unique solution. Bear with me here - this gets a bit complicated.
The first part: I've written a book (well, half a book) called "The Corn Guild". This is a work of fiction, a fast-paced thriller intended for the general public. It covers a period from 2028 to 2036, a period that chronicles the beginning of collapse (a time when the general public is just beginning to be concerned and scared), to the actual collapse event in the year 2036. And while it is primarily intended to be an accessible easy read, it also educates the reader along the way (much like my earlier novel "The Eden Proposition").
However, the book is the small part of this effort. The big part - the unique and creative part - is called "The Faminarchy Project". The Faminarchy project is a website ( www.faminarchy.com ) where The Corn Guild book can be read (for free) in its entirety. The plot-line of "The Corn Guild" ends just as the collapse event begins in 2036. This is the 'set-up'.
At the Faminarchy website I am asking others (those concerned about sustainability, or even those who are just interested in writing) to contribute a short story about what will happen during this collapse event in 2036 (there are several examples of possible plot lines provided). Like any fiction, these stories will have specific characters, in a specific locale, doing specific things (these stories are not another opportunity for a generalized scholarly essay!).
These 'famine stories' will then all (unless wildly inappropriate) be published on the website as they come in. I encourage the writers to delve into their dark places and create horrifying and extreme stories of chaos and violence - nothing hopeful. I'm betting that this exercise in group creativity will yield many extraordinary (and frightening!) efforts.
This aggregation of famine stories will then force those who read them, and especially those who write them, to experience a clear conceptualization of our shared and dangerous future. Lacking the Cassandra camera, this is perhaps the best we can do.
I am reaching beyond the usual sustainability suspects by contacting as many university creative writing programs as I can. As we all know, it is essential that we find a way to get younger generations involved. And I will make every effort that I can to publicize the website through Facebook and Twitter in order to get the widest possible attention and readership. I believe there is a chance that this could get substantial traction - it is a unique idea.
If you believe this to be a valuable effort, please forward this essay to everyone you know. And please, go to www.faminarchy.com for further information. You can read "The Corn Guild" there. I'm sure you will find it to be an informative and intriguing read, a non-stop page-turner! Then, put on your frustrated-fiction-writer cap (you know you have one!) and create your very own short story masterpiece. You can do this.
It is essential that we find a way to increase awareness of the real danger ahead. Only then can steps be taken to avoid the abyss.
Please help with this project.