by threadbear » Thu 16 Mar 2006, 14:08:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', 'D')ense urbanization curtails population.
Seems pretty clear to me that dense urbanization curtails the populations of almost all species (rats, mice, and roaches being potential exceptions.) The idea that the way to protect nature is to crowd all the humans together in toxic dead zones, doesn't wash with me. Seems to me that living in urban wastelands makes people more cavalier towards nature not less. Someone who has never seen an old growth forest could care less if it gets razed to build his house.
I think it is also a serious misconception to think that desertification and other ecological destruction in Africa and elsewhere is simply a mater of too many peasants. People have been living on the land for milenia. So how come all of a sudden the whole global ecosystem is collapsing? IMHO the answer is that the colonization process radically disrupted almost every subsistance group in the world. Under those local tribal structures people had a conection to the land and a motivation to protect it.
A perfect example is the problem of the Acacia trees in Somalia. To the subsistance peoples in Somalia, the Acacia trees, which can live hundreds of years, are a vitally important resource. Their seed pods are a vital forage for goats, they are an important source of herbal medicine, and their roots hold the soil together as a critical deterent to erosion. So to the subsistance farmers and herders they are this enormously important resource. They are disapearing though because young males from the Mogadishu, who no longer identify with the land or with a subsistance group are forming armed gangs and going around and cutting down all the Acacias and making them into charcoal to sell to Egypt and Saudi Arabia. As a result the subsistance peoples are starving and the place is becoming a desert.
When people become displaced and loose their identification with a subsistance group and loose their identification with the land, that is when they start ravaging the environment.
You have a very romantic view of subsistence farming. The Mayans subsistence farmed themselves right out of civilization. I don't disagree with you on many points, but see the problem more mathematically. The industrial revolution in Europe, as horrid as it was, did accomplish one thing. It familiarized people with lower birth rates as an adaptation to harsh circumstances. Farmers in the third world have zero incentive to lower birth rates, and that combined with the green revolution and advent of antibiotics has driven birth rates skyward.
The large cities are still absorbing the sons and daughters of farmers in the third world. Their children will not have as many children, because they can't, and unfortunately this is exactly what is needed, as ass backward as it may sound.
To really get back to nature and live within an eco system, people would have to get rid of modern hunting methods and return to hunting trapping and fishing with primitive tools. Subsistence farming, as it would be practised today, is still tough on the environment. If people are forced to live and work in cramped conditions in toxic dead zones, they have tremendous incentive to reduce their numbers. It happened in Europe and Japan, and it can happen in developing nations too.