biffvernon wrote:Atman wrote:
7 billion humans clearly exceeds the carrying capacity of the planet [citations easily found obviously].
That is the dodgy bit and saying it is clear and obvious does not make it less dodgy. As I've said many times, I would prefer there to be fewer people, but my preferences don't stand for much. The fact is that one cannot say a particular number of people exceeds the carrying capacity without first describing the impact of those people.
Actually, it is completely irrelevant. Why? Because the vast majority of those who are not having a large impact are not in that situation out of choice.
There is a tiny minority at the top who have more wealth than they could possibly ever spend. This is a problem in terms of social justice, but there is a limit to how much ecological damage they can do because there are so few of them. Then there is a much larger population (say 1 billion) who live in reasonably developed countries and have a relatively large impact. Below them are further layers which get progressively bigger as the impact gets progressively lower, but almost the entire population underneath the very top layer is trying to increase their wealth and thereby increase their ability to consume more and have more impact. The number of people who are
choosing to limit their impact out of respect for the ecosystem and their descendents is so small as to be
utterly irrelevant. It makes a difference to their "soul" maybe. It sets an example maybe (though few will follow it). But in terms of making a difference to the overall impact it is utterly irrelevant, because any resources they aren't using are just going to get used by somebody else who belongs to the overwhelming majority who are trying to consume more by becoming more wealthy.
So I'm afraid your argument is a red herring, Biff. Since there is no way that the majority of humans are ever going to change their ways and join that tiny minority who are consuming less out of choice, the only thing that actually matters is the overall number of humans. The only way we, as a species, are going to stop f***ing this planet up is when there are so few of us left that our global impact ceases to be significant, as has been the case for most of human history and will probably be the case for most of the future. Unfortunately, before we can return to that state lots of people have to die.
Your position depends on a belief that through education and other "improvements" in the human situation, we can convince people to either voluntarily do less damage to the ecosystem or vote for a government which will make those changes compulsory.
Both of these things are pipe dreams, and anyone who proposes real policy based on pipe dreams is part of the problem, not part of the solution.