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Gouda wrote:Why all the secrecy? “They wanted to speak rich to rich without worrying anything they said would end up in the newspapers, painting them as an alternative world government,” he said.
DoYouEverWonder wrote:Instead of worrying about controlling the population, they should try learning how to share, since they're the ones tying up most of the money and resources.
The "Good Club" moniker stood out for me also when I read this article elsewhere.
This is why I totally reject good vs. evil dichotomies, in all their forms, even by people I consider to be well-meaning. "Good" (if that even means anything) is too easily hijacked by predatory, vicious, demented persons and organizations.
C.f. Christianity.
smiths wrote:lets get real about this topic
they are almost certainly lying nasty duplicitous scums with a warped evil agenda but ...
over-population is the biggest problem there is,
not one of the major environmental and energy issues we face doesnt have its roots in over-population,
if you cut the worlds population by a third tomorrow the most pressing dangers with regard to food and water security, deforestation and fossil fuel burning would be ameliorated
we need to be able to disentangle sane ideas from their evil sources
another one is global institutions, yes we can all agree that a rockefeller inspired world government is a nightmare,
but many of the environmental and institutional issues we face can only be resolved with global frameworks administered by global bodies of some sort
i think some of the knee jerk reactions are dumbing us to the realities of how you actually try and organise 6 billion people on a struggling planet
barracuda wrote:I dunno, I'll take a stab at it...smiths wrote:lets get real about this topic
they are almost certainly lying nasty duplicitous scums with a warped evil agenda but ...
over-population is the biggest problem there is,
Why? It seems that by referring to the issue as "over-population" you have framed the issue completely before there has been any discussion whatsoever. The issue is, baldly, "population". The question of "How many humans can the planet sustain?" has a variety of possible answers dependant upon what variables one allows and what is considered adequate in terms of your definition of sustenance. I have seen a huge range of takes on the answer to this. For example, the World Wide Fund for Nature considers authoritatively in it's Living Planet Report that the human "ecological footprint" had exceeded production by about 25 percent by 2006. Yet it is also apparent to me that the WWF is a quasi-colonial armof the fascist British crown seeking to hoard prime real estate and militarily strategic resources for the purpose of empire. It's almost as if the U.S. Army reported that the world population needs to be cut by two thirds, and provided a handy plan for doing so.not one of the major environmental and energy issues we face doesnt have its roots in over-population,
I'd say these issues have root in exploitation and waste. Capitalism? Maybe. Too many poor people? I doubt it.if you cut the worlds population by a third tomorrow the most pressing dangers with regard to food and water security, deforestation and fossil fuel burning would be ameliorated
If food and water and forests and fuels were properly produced and used, not wasted in the indulgence of the shabby luxury considered by the west to be the "standard of living", the population "problem" would be equally amerliorated. Blithe commentary on some fantasy of the seamless, painless rapture of two billion people is just that.we need to be able to disentangle sane ideas from their evil sources
Of which de-population and ideas like pan-global autonomous individual motor vehicular travel are in the latter category.another one is global institutions, yes we can all agree that a rockefeller inspired world government is a nightmare,
but many of the environmental and institutional issues we face can only be resolved with global frameworks administered by global bodies of some sort
i think some of the knee jerk reactions are dumbing us to the realities of how you actually try and organise 6 billion people on a struggling planet
On this we are in complete agreement. The predicament is the "how". Somehow these schemes always have an undecurrent of "we" form global administrative bodies, while "they" need to depopulate.
Nordic wrote:Love ya, Barracuda, but that seems simplistic, which is a bit odd, since the truth is actually far more simple than that.
We are in the midst of a mass extinction. Caused by humans. We are destroying the rain forests of the planet, which can only lead to pure misery for billions of people.
So it doesn't really MATTER who's rich, who's not, who's wasting the resources ..... ALL ARE GUILTY. In Haiti, the poor people cut down whatever trees they can find and burn them, in order to turn them into charcoal, because charcoal is one of the only things they can sell.
As one tiny example.
Then you've got businessmen bulldozing huge tracts and planting palm oil plantations.
Then you've got Monsanto .....
I mean, really, the only way to really look at it is TOO MANY PEOPLE.
The world could absorb a great deal of what we might call the "evils" of humanity if there weren't so damn many of us, rich and poor.
But it can't any more, and it hasn't been able to do so for a generation or more, and it's going into a positive feedback cycle, only to grow exponentially worse.
Easter Island comes to mind, a completely denuded wasteland with a few dazed skinny souls who can't remember how their grand culture disappeared.
The earth is just another Easter Island.
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