by gg3 » Mon 26 Jun 2006, 02:25:07
From what I've read, carrying capacity is 2 billion humans at approximately European living standards. Assuming that's a reasonable target, what we have is:
1) Develop the list of criteria for the hypothetical European standard of living and ecological impact, for example, mean average figures for each of the following:
a) Size of dwelling, square feet.
b) Yearly consumption of electricity, KWH / year.
c) Yearly consumption of petrol (litres/year) and natural gas (however measured), keeping in mind that these will have to be replaced with something else e.g. biofuels, electricity, etc.
d) Average daily caloric intake.
e) Average daily water consumption.
f) Average daily sewage production.
g) Yearly production of recyclable solid waste.
h) Yearly production of compostable solid waste.
i) Yearly production of nonrecyclable solid waste.
j) Automobiles per capita, and average fuel efficiency.
... etc....
2) Publicize those targets and get individual Americans to shoot for them regardless of law & politics. Much of this can be done with little impact on standard of living and quality of life, e.g replace the SUV with a more efficient vehicle and then carpool or take public transport to work etc. In some areas it won't be possible, but the point is to at least make it popular enough that candidates for public office can start talking about it and forward-thinking companies can start implementing relevant policies on their own.
3) Recognize that dieoff is basically inevitable at this point. In any case we need to get down to 2 billion, and we can do that in a planned way, or we can let nature run its course (probably multiple pandemics) and end up with an unpredictable outcome in terms of numbers and quality of life for those who survive.
4) People such as ourselves who are planning ahead, should plan for the greatest possible degree of self-sufficiency, local sufficiency, and relocalization. Multiple levels of backup plans, each one more spartan than the preceding one, to maximize the probability of surviving the transition.
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Notes:
What I don't get is: Americans routinely go on vacation in Europe and enjoy it immensely (else they wouldn't go back). So then, how can they complain about having to adopt that standard of living permanently? Perhaps what's needed here is a marketing campaign. "You loved your visit to Europe. Now you can bring back more than memories and photos..."
Getting down to 2 billion: Multiple pandemics. This means that sustainable communities are going to have to be hyper-alert about public health issues, including the willingness and capability to go into self-quarantine for months at a time: no one gets in, no one goes out.
Re. hands in the dirt: I grew up with it. And I frankly pity (as in, consider pathetic) anyone who grew up in a suburban or rural setting but never bothered to do at least two of the following: go running around in the woods, climbing trees, growing a garden, wading into a pond, swamp, or stream, playing in the dirt (topsoil is clean dirt!), doing household cleaning chores, etc. etc. What I find incomprehensible is how people can be afraid of any of that, or unwilling to do the grownup version which is any form of physical labor. Personally if I had to choose between pushing paper and digging ditches, I would dig ditches. Happily.
Here's a Great Big Clue for anyone who works at a desk and is terrified of getting their hands in the dirt: When you work with your brain all day, you get done and you're mentally exhausted but your body is still antsy and it's difficult to rest and moer difficult to do anything creative or interesting. When you work with your muscles all day, you get done and you're physically tired but your brain isn't worn down, your mind is still ready to go, and you can do all manner of creative things such as writing, music, art, religion, philosophy, science, and (on the weekends when your body isn't tired from work) athletics.
Likely future: Nature's going to take us down to something between 3 and 5 billion and keep us there. At that point we're going to bounce around just below that ceiling level, while the quality of life slowly gets worse for an increasing number. Then we end up with a two-tier world, split between those nations that already made it into a technological society (which will be better equipped to cope with the changes), and those that have not (which will be permanently locked out), meanwhile nothing much changes for various hunter-gatherer tribes that are still living (as long as their ranges are not encroached, which is debatable), and with resource wars being fought at the perimeter, and with occasional vengeance attacks by terrorists claiming to represent the locked-out nations.
The above scenario, "rising tide of entropy," will probably persist for the remainder of the 21st century and into the 22nd, until such time as either a) the world gets serious about reducing population and achieving equitable distribution of resources, or b) we learn how to do magic (A. Clarke, "any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic") and start doing magic on a large scale.
Given the likely future, survivalism isn't paranoia, it's the opposite of defeatism.