NO! What you are doing is trying to deflect attention away from The Problem by focusing on some other aspect of the global crisis. We live in a world where there are grotesque inequalities, where we waste important resources we do not need to waste, and where we encourage people to buy things they don't need. All of these things are real problems, but underlying the lot of them is the overpopulation issue. The truth is that there are too many people on this planet who are all "doing the wrong thing" - or trying to. All of them, apart from a tiny minority of very wealthy people who already consume everything they want to, are trying to improve their standard of living. So you can't get away with saying "this isn't about population." Oh yes it is! It may be about a load of other things too, but so long as we continue to pretend that the population problem isn't real and doesn't multiply all the other problems, the whole debate is based on fantasy.clv101 wrote:This isn't an 'excellent website on population'. It just rehearses the tired and lazy idea that the number of people are what's important. It isn't. What's important is what those people actually do.
I've made this point several times on PowerSwitch before:
clv101 wrote:The question of 'carrying capacity' is almost always the wrong question. The actual number of people, whilst interesting is dwarfed in significance by what those people actually do - their behaviour in short.
Sure, if people in the UK are reduced to living like people currently do in Uganda.Carrying capacity is a useful term in biology, as most animal's behaviour is extremely limited in variability. It's not possible for one rabbit to use 100x as much resource as another rabbit. All rabbits behave, like rabbits. So the best way to describe the requirements is by the size of the population.
This logic doesn't hold for humans. Some humans do use 100x the resource of others. The UK could support 100 million people, 10 million people or just 1 million people
No, that's denialist propaganda.This really isn't the case. Remember 'impact' is population x behaviour and that population is minor factor when compared to behavior.
You are trying to downplay the importance of population.
....in fact anything but population...No, I really don't see this as a problem. We already grow dramatically more food than is needed to feed 7bn people well. The problems are to do will allocation and behaviour etc.