by DesuMaiden » Mon 02 Feb 2015, 12:41:22
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onlooker', 'T')his has been discussed at length. Basically, the Green Revolution has played out. We have exploited fossil fuels to create transportation fuel and to extract food from the land at prodigious rates. Now, fresh water is getting scarce, the land is bereft of vitality (dead), fossil fuels are on the downward slope especially as a economically feasible resource. Enormous population and consumer lifestyle is continuing to inflict damage upon the array of ecosystems which maintain a livable environment and same ecosystems are dangerously deteriorating. All this amid a backdrop of ominous global warming which in itself could bring down civilization and even most higher forms of life in the not to distant future. I would say it is actually fortunate for the future of habitability on this planet that we have so populated the planet that a dieoff is now inevitable and could happen soon. A ticking time bomb of environmental catastrophe is ready to go off. So the answer is a resounding NO. Oh and even if we could the way of life would be miserable for most.
Like Daniel Quinn said, if we doubled the Earth's population, we are screwed. Even if we could double the world's population, we couldn't sustain that population for very long without a total population collapse and die-off.
A lot of people think humans are immune to the laws of nature that govern all other species because somehow humans are "special". That's nonsense. All species follow the same laws of nature. No species encounters favorable circumstances and then experiences vertical trajectory population growth (unnaturally fast population growth) without an immediate crash down. Michael Ruppert said this in the movie Collapse.
Nothing grows forever. The bottom line of the movie Collapse is that infinite consumption and infinite growth in population is impossible on a finite planet. You can't double population and consumption forever.
If we doubled population, this means the majority of species on this planet will become extinct. The human population is so great that we overwhelm all of the other species on this planet to extinction. The flesh in a human body is made of the bodies of other organisms. We needed to take the lives of other organisms in order to exist. Human beings aren't made of shadows or sand. Other species need to be sacrificed to support the massive human population.
There is no way millions of species can peacefully coexist with an ever-growing human population. It is either we go. Or every other species goes. We use up all of the resources that other animals need for their survival for our own massive population. Thus by stealing the resources from other species with our massive population, we render them extinct.
There always needs to be a balance between population of one species compared to other species. Clearly there is too many human beings, which results in other species becoming extinct.
The only species on this planet that needs a massive culling of population is human beings. There are already far too many human beings. Let me show you a graph of human population.
http://www.emeraldecocity.com/pictures/ ... losion.jpgOnly towards the end of the graph does the human population grow in a vertical trajectory meaning unnaturally fast growth. We more than quadrupled our population in a little over 100 years since 1900. There are more than ten to twenty times more people on Earth right now then the population throughout most of human history. There are ten times more people than during the 18th century, which was only three hundred years ago. But the amount of resources on this planet has not increased. In fact, there is now less resources on this planet because the huge population has consumed most of the resources already. There are less resources per capita because as you increase the population, everyone gets less. The resources remain the same amount, so by increasing the population, you need to divide the same resources amongst more people.
The world population in the beginning of the 21st century was growing at 1.3% per year. That might sound like a low growth rate, but that's actually a very fast growth rate. That means the population will double in less than every 70 years. If this growth rate continues indefinitely that means, in another 780 years there will be one person for every square meter of dry land surface area on this planet. By 2500 years, that means the human population of the Earth equals the mass of the Earth. Obviously, there is no way we could have one person per square meter of this planet. So obviously, there is no way exponential growth at 1.3% per year of population can continue forever.
The infinite growth paradigm cannot continue forever. Exponential growth is a concept that most people don't understand the power of. Exponential growth is probably the most powerful concept in nature, and it is a concept most people are unfortunately unable to comprehend.
History repeats itself. Just everytime with different characters and players.