Migrant watch (merged topic)

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UndercoverElephant
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Post by UndercoverElephant »

biffvernon wrote:
woodburner wrote:Perhaps I should make clear that the sections that deserve to die off are those that have no empathy for the eco-systems that live along side the human system. That means most of the industrialised world otherwise known as "civilised".
Nobody deserves to die before they have lived their natural life out. To say otherwise is the abandonment of ethics.

I may have said that earlier.
Even if this wasn't a strawman, ethics isn't that simple.

Very few of the humans alive today, or who will be alive when the die-off really takes hold, will be the individual humans who are responsible for causing the problems. Most of the individual humans who caused the problems are dead, although even in their cases they aren't really responsible because until the second half of the 20th century nobody understood how serious those problems are.

A very large number of both humans and non-human living things are going "to die before they have lived their natural life out". That is - very many more than would have done so if the human race hadn't overpopulated this planet and gone into massive overshoot. Almost none of them "deserve" it, but it can't be prevented.

Accepting that something unpleasant can't be prevented is not "an abandonment of ethics." However, refusing to accept that something unpleasant can't be prevented, even though it really can't be prevented, and then attempting to prevent it in ways that end up making things even worse, really is an abandoment of ethics.

I may have explained that to you at least twenty times over the last two years.
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Post by snow hope »

UndercoverElephant wrote:
Accepting that something unpleasant can't be prevented is not "an abandonment of ethics." However, refusing to accept that something unpleasant can't be prevented, even though it really can't be prevented, and then attempting to prevent it in ways that end up making things even worse, really is an abandoment of ethics.

I may have explained that to you at least twenty times over the last two years.
Well said UE. Good to know who is really abandoning their ethics.... pity they can't see it, no matter how hard YOU have tried to point it out. :-(
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Post by woodburner »

Regrettably the medical world is continually trying to prevent natural happenings from providing a popuation moderating influence, by interfering. This is under the cloak of "saving" lives, where it actually only changes the end date. When all those who have been kept alive get to the end along with all the others who get there at the same time, probably many of whom would not have existed, there will be a bigger problem to deal with than would have otherwise been the case.
To become an extremist, hang around with people you agree with. Cass Sunstein
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Post by biffvernon »

woodburner wrote:Regrettably the medical world is continually trying to prevent natural happenings from providing a popuation moderating influence, by interfering.
Yeah, let's ban doctors. Re-introduce sabre-toothed tigers, why don't you. Humanity managed for a couple of million years with at least one hominid species not going extinct. PowerSwitch hits new levels of surrealism.
woodburner
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Post by woodburner »

biffvernon wrote:
woodburner wrote:Regrettably the medical world is continually trying to prevent natural happenings from providing a popuation moderating influence, by interfering.
Yeah, let's ban doctors. Re-introduce sabre-toothed tigers, why don't you. Humanity managed for a couple of million years with at least one hominid species not going extinct. PowerSwitch hits new levels of surrealism.
The sabre tooth tigers are off topic, extinct, and so won't be back, but there are plenty of treatments and drugs provided by the medical profession that are there for the profits of the medical industry, and not to cure the patients. They deal in drugs and procedures, not cures.

But then you wern't intrested in the rational explanation were you? You were on your misguided pseudo-humanitarian kick.
To become an extremist, hang around with people you agree with. Cass Sunstein
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UndercoverElephant
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Post by UndercoverElephant »

woodburner wrote: there are plenty of treatments and drugs provided by the medical profession that are there for the profits of the medical industry, and not to cure the patients. They deal in drugs and procedures, not cures.
Yep. Such as the huge money-spinning drugs for dealing with cholesterol, which is now known to be good for you. In this case the medical industry continues to peddle drugs which are actually harming people. Profits are the only thing that ever mattered.
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Post by clv101 »

UndercoverElephant wrote:
clv101 wrote: I'm having a hard time following your position UE. It seems you both agree overpopulation is a problem, just biffvernon suggests "Women's education, neo-natal healthcare, social security in old age, free access to contraception..." and you suggest "unpopular population control policies".

Thing is biffvernon's proposed solution has been proven to work in many countries, pretty much everywhere does have falling fertility rates, many countries even below replacement level.

Could you please articulate just what your "unpopular population control policies" look like on the ground and how their outcome would differ from the former?
Firstly, "social security in old age" is a new addition to the current debate, and it is yet another unhelpful one. One of the main reasons for resisting both population control measures and defending immigration is the claim that with a growing population of old people, we need ever more young people to support them. But this just keeps the vicious circle going. If there is going to be a population reduction then there is going to be a generation or two of old people who do not get "social security in old age" as a god-given right. On the contrary - they were the very same generations that led us straight into this mess and they do not deserve to be pampered in their old age at the expense of future generations. This is yet another example of elevating the needs and rights of existing humans above those of both future generations of humans and all the non-human living things on this planet.

As for the population control thing, what I am objecting to is the replacement of "population control is key" with "emancipating women is key". Especially because the emancipation of women that is needed is in other parts of the world we have no control over, but the control of population via the cessation of immigration we do have control over.

Provision of education and contraception to women is obviously to be welcomed, but it is not going to be enough, even if it could be implemented in the places it most badly needs to be implemented, which it can't. Biff himself provides a good example: a muslim nation which is resisting population control and female emancipation. So what do we do in response to this sort of behaviour, which is fatal for our civilisation and our planet? Biff's answer is "open the borders and let as many of them come as want to!" This just encourages more of the same behaviour from the offending party while make the existing overpopulation problem in Europe even worse.

Here's the reality (yes, that word again): we have run out of time. We are not going to convince the muslim world to embrace gender equality and implement serious birth control. The only reasonable response to this is to shut the borders and let the excess population in those regions starve. The absolute worst thing we can do is "re-home the refugees".

My problem with Biff's position, as is the case nearly all of the time, is that his proposed policies and the ethical position he defends is based on a simplistic humanitarianism and doesn't take into account the reality of the situation we're in, and as a result it actually makes things worse, not better. It helps some people in the short term, but at the cost of making things much worse for even more people in the long term. It is therefore both unethical and disastrous.

It really does boil down to what Woodburner said: die-off is coming, and actually many parts of our global civilisation simply do not deserve to survive. People who deny women contraception on Islamic grounds are a prime example. If they want to implement such policies that is their business, but if people in our own country are saying we should respond to this by taking in the resulting refugees and making our own, already bad situation, worse...then that is our business.
I've read your contributions a couple of times now and I really just don't get it. I don't understand why you aren't championing the policies and processes that have taken India's fertility rate down from 6 children per woman in 1960 to 2.3 today, around 2 in 8 states and on track to hit replacement levels by 2020... similar stories have happened in *most* parts of the world over the last few decades. These policies *work*.

When I asked you about your "unpopular population control policies" you talked about closing borders, halting migration with the expectation that "excess population in those regions starve". That's just bonkers, numerically bonkers.

Today we hear a lot about migrants from Syria - a country where the fertility rate has fallen from 7 as recently as 1980 to 3 (and on a downward trajectory) before the civil war broke out, other significant sources of migration include Russia, India, Mexico, China, Philippines etc. Critically these aren't generally countries where it's migration or death. Your "unpopular population control policies" doesn't look to be a population control measure at all, or at the very least it pales into insignificant next those to the stuff that's proven to crash fertility rates around the world.

You specifically mention Muslim countries... By population:
Indonesia fertility rate fallen from 5.5 (1970) to 2.4 (2012)
Pakistan 6 (1990) to 3.3 (2012)
India (3rd largest Muslim population) see above, soon to be at replacement
Bangladesh 7 (1970) to 2.2 (2012)
Egypt 6 (1970) to 2.8 (2012)
Nigeria fairly flat at 6 (!)
Iran 6.5 (1980) to 1.9 (!) (2012)
Turkey 5.6 (1970) to 2.1 (2012)
Algeria 7.6 (1970) to 2.8 (2012)
Morocco 7(1975) to 2.7 (2012)

These are the top 10 countries by Muslim population. With one exception they have all dramatically cut their fertility rates - not through migration limits (emigration from these regions has increased over the period their birth rate has fallen!) but through the methods biffvernon mentioned.

It is simply wrong to say the Muslim world can't "implement serious birth control". Vast majorly of it has. There are some muslim countries that haven't (yet?) but they are a small proportion of the Muslim world.

Continuing down that list...
Iraq
Afghanistan
Uzbekistan
Saudi Arabia
Ethiopia
Yemen

all show fertility rate declines, even Ethiopia has turned the corner now.

The reality of the situation today is that if your number one concern is global overpopulation, migration policy is a largely ineffective tool. Instead effort should be put into recreating the conditions that allowed the remarkable achievements in say Bangladesh to be repeated in the few remaining countries (Niger, Mali, Uganda etc), with stubbornly high birth rates.
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Post by UndercoverElephant »

clv101 wrote: I've read your contributions a couple of times now and I really just don't get it. I don't understand why you aren't championing the policies and processes that have taken India's fertility rate down from 6 children per woman in 1960 to 2.3 today, around 2 in 8 states and on track to hit replacement levels by 2020... similar stories have happened in *most* parts of the world over the last few decades. These policies *work*.
Have I said they don't work?
When I asked you about your "unpopular population control policies" you talked about closing borders, halting migration with the expectation that "excess population in those regions starve". That's just bonkers, numerically bonkers.
It's numerically bonkers to say that closing borders has a negative influence on population numbers within the closed borders?

"Unpopular population control policies" would also include prohibiting all people from having more than 2 children.
The reality of the situation today is that if your number one concern is global overpopulation, migration policy is a largely ineffective tool.
I don't understand your argument. The entire current rise in the population of Europe and North America is due to immigration. All of it.
Instead effort should be put into recreating the conditions that allowed the remarkable achievements in say Bangladesh to be repeated in the few remaining countries (Niger, Mali, Uganda etc), with stubbornly high birth rates.
You have set up a false dichotomy, Chris. I never said we had to choose between the policies you are talking about (which need to be implemented in non-western countries) and immigration control policies in Europe. Both are necessary.
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Post by AutomaticEarth »

Another reason, if we needed it, for not allowing uncontrolled immigration....

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/06 ... man-music/
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UndercoverElephant
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Post by UndercoverElephant »

clv101 wrote: The reality of the situation today is that if your number one concern is global overpopulation, migration policy is a largely ineffective tool.
I just re-read your post and noticed the word "global."

The problem here is that while global overpopulation is clearly a very big problem, there's not much we in the western world can do to stop it. We are not responsible for the laws and culture of the countries where most of the growth is still taking place.

My concern is with overpopulation at all levels, from global to my own local area. And of all those levels, the one that is most important in terms of what can actually be done, is the national level (which becomes the european level if there is freedom of movement within the EU).

I believe that those places which are most guilty of overpopulating should be made to suffer for what they are doing instead of exporting their problem. Perhaps then they may learn to stop doing it. Sorry if this seems heartless, but letting them get away with it just encourages more of the same.
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Post by biffvernon »

A particularly good piece from Giles Fraser

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfre ... of-poverty
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Post by kenneal - lagger »

biffvernon wrote:A particularly good piece from Giles Fraser

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfre ... of-poverty
The ignorance of the guy astounds me! He obviously hasn't had any contact with the existing UK poor and jobless and he doesn't know a thing about global warming, sustainability or the upcoming global food crisis, things which Biff knows about but chooses to ignore in this context.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
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UndercoverElephant
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Post by UndercoverElephant »

biffvernon wrote:A particularly good piece from Giles Fraser

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfre ... of-poverty
I presume you didn't bother to read the comments, which almost universally deride the author as an ignorant moron who has written a load of childish babble.
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Post by AutomaticEarth »

Even the Dalai Lama seems to be coming out against uncontrolled immigration:

http://tribune.com.pk/story/1113521/dal ... es-europe/
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Post by kenneal - lagger »

Refugee warns of too many refugees!
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
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