UndercoverElephant wrote:clv101 wrote:hodson2k9 wrote:I agree with most of what you just said. You make a good point about consumption being a problem but its not the only problem, both population and consumption are problems.
Of course - but my point is that they are not even remotely equal problems, population is trivial besides consumption. Halve American consumption (down to European levels) and we free up ample for 9bn people to be accommodated.
Where did you pull those figures from?
Quite so
All of which also conveniently ignores;
1) The entire history of human civilization which shows that humans will always allocate resources inequitably. This is not to say that we should not try and mitigate the above. But to solely
rely on that which has proved so intractable a problem over our entire history is more than a little naive, at best. Basically, CV's argument rests on us all behaving a
lot better towards each other. Well, who'd have thought it? Humans need to behave better...
2) The most damning indictment of this position, though, is that even if we
accept the possibility of allocating existing resources more equitably and then we push the envelope
even further out (to 9 billion)
and assuming we have got in place, by that point, such incredibly efficient and equitable resource allocation systems that we can just about manage it, what the hell do people suppose is going to happen to the biosphere,
on which our very existence depends, by that point?
It's
already straining under our activities
as it is. Equitably allocated or inequitably allocated resources, it really doesn't make any difference in the end. None of the population problem denier's arguments even begin to address this issue. I have put this issue up for debate on at least 2 occasions to this point in this thread, and it has been assiduously avoided.
The reason is obvious. It's unarguable.