by peripato » Wed 02 Nov 2005, 01:07:06
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('marko', 'A')s a result, our civilization is likely to unravel in potentially very dangerous ways.
I too enjoyed your post. However you neglected to mention what effect these recurring economic and social crises will have on the environment and well-being of future generations. I also think the chances of nuclear war occuring as a result of the raft of crises facing us have been understated by most people posting in these forums, largely I feel because it is considered a taboo subject. In support of this argument a few things bear noting:
Environmentalism is a lost cause. The massive species extinction caused by human overpopulation and industrial activity has been recognised and discussed for decades, but no effective action has ever been taken to remedy the situation, even though it is a “life-or-death” one for the planet.
Mankind’s large population and high level of industrial activity is exterminating thousands of species a year. Under even the most optimistic World Bank and UN population projections, the human population is expected to increase for at least half a century, and industrial activity to increase indefinitely.
These projections imply that unless a major famine, plague, war, or other catastrophe occurs to dramatically reduce human numbers and industrial activity, the environmental destruction and species extinction will continue for a very long time. It is now also apparent that global warming is well under way.
Waiting for a hypothetical worldwide “demographic transition” to reduce global human population will accomplish nothing but the destruction of much of the planet’s biosphere. The chance of a demographic transition ever reducing human population is zero, because it is not in the interest of economic development to do so. Even countries such as the US, Germany, Canada, and Australia that have achieved very high levels of economic development press for even greater population increases and more economic activity through the encouragement of immigration now their fertility rates have fallen below replacement level.
All world political leaders want more economic development, not less. It’s absurd to believe that economic activity will ever drop of its own accord as some suggest. To suggest otherwise when all political leaders point to increased economic growth as a measure of success is an exercise in denial.
Because of the population explosion, environmental degradation and all-out industrial development, the likelihood of nuclear war is increasing dramatically, for several reasons:
Firstly, is the increasing overcrowding and hopelessness of life for massive numbers of people: the “politics of envy” drives the “have nots” to destroy the material riches that they can never possess;
Secondly, the information explosion and proliferation of plutonium have made nuclear technology and the ability to construct atomic bombs readily available to terrorist groups and rogue nations;
Thirdly, as the world supply of easy fossil fuels depletes and the effects of global warming become ever more apparent, nuclear energy increasingly touted as the techno-messiah becomes a long-term solution only if “fast-breeder” reactors, which produce plutonium, are used. The amount of plutonium available worldwide may be about to increase very much as a result.
So the death rattle of industrial civilisation may well appear a drawn out affair when viewed from a global perspective but from where you and I stand if we don't watch out we are likely to be swept up earlier rather than later by one of "manifestations" of this breakdown if trends continue the way they have unabated.
Regards.