by jmnemonic » Sat 18 Dec 2010, 19:24:08
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'W')e may need to get off of a few things (like oil) in order to get ourselves back on track.
What does 'back on track' really mean? I guess that's a philosophical question: why are we here? What is our purpose? What do we wish to achieve as a species? That's probably where we should start, by answering those questions. We can decide what our purpose is. For example, it might be to co-exist with the planet rather than trying to impose our will upon it regardless of the cost. Or, it might be to achieve space flight and move some of our genetic eggs to another planet or asteroid colony or whatever, to hedge our bets against disaster. Or it could be to breed our numbers up as high as we can get them - a kind of global high score game - before nature says whoa and kills 80% of us off to start over in the ruins of the last attempt at a new high population score. (And if we 'win' and get high score, most of us die, yay!)
Once we decide what our over-arching species-wide purpose is then we can decide what population we need to accomplish the goal. Once we know THAT then we simply have to decide how to keep it there, carrots or sticks or some combination. Like, every time every person is born, enter their DNA into a database. No name associated with it, just a marker for the existence of a person with that DNA. Every time you renew your drivers license (or vote, whatever) the database is checked to see if a *descendant* of yours now exists. If none (you have not reproduced) then you receive a $2,500 check or something. That continues as long as you live or until you have a descendant. If you have ONE descendant the checks stop, but as long as you don't have TWO then the first gets a free college education. Something like that, a reward system for not reproducing, or at least slowing reproduction. Obviously, the Big Brother aspects are a little unsettling, but then again, 5 billion people starving from population overshoot is going to be even more unsettling. We have to figure something out; that's clear. If we don't, well, nature has her traditional population-reduction strategies...but those really suck.