In this case it is rational to be optimistic.Maybe global coordination really is an impossible situation to bring about, — Janus
I wouldn't bet on that. :joke:in which case this thread will probably peter out pretty quickly; since people generally don't wish to contemplate intractable problems. — Janus
In this case, it is rational to be pessimistic. — Wheatley
Did you expect this thread will last for a while? I'm just curious. — Wheatley
Edit: I don't want this to be all personal. Peace! — Wheatley
Even if this were generally accepted, do you think people are capable of caring sufficiently beyond their immediate friends and family and their current lifestyles to make the necessary sacrifices, even if there was a realizable plan in place that could identify just what needed to be done? — Janus
I'd love to hear what the brightest minds have to say about our greatest problems and the one greatest problem that is behind them all; overpopulation.
Any organised and state sponsored attempt to keep these people from procreating, can only look like fascism and if we're talking globally, it can only end in global bloodbath. — sucking lollipops
it must come from the bottom up; which means that people must come to understand and care about the real situation — Janus
you can't decrease the population or it's rate of growth without significantly affecting capitalism itself. Capitalists relations (and thus capitalist profit) rest on the existence of a reserve army of unemployed workers. — sucking lollipops
There's an overpopulation problem simply because most parents are shitty parents and they should have not procreated in the first place. — sucking lollipops
If there is to be a solution, some real positive change, it seems to me it must come from the bottom up; — Janus
The abuses of population control show what can happen when women’s health is second to other, more powerful, agendas. China’s one-child policy, while somewhat relaxed, still strictly regulates and restricts fertility, particularly in cities.
That has nothing to do with womens’ health, it simply reduces child birth numbers.
In some states in India, two-child norms keep people with more than two kids from sitting on local governing boards or from receiving government benefits.
That is obviously about controlling the birth rate. Though not getting on local governing boards isn’t going to affect many. “Some states” doesn’t tell me much.
Romani women in Central Europe, and women living with HIV in parts of Africa and Latin America, undergo forced and coerced sterilizations.
That’s about health, not population.
A 2014 audit of California women’s prisons found that tubal ligations were performed for the purposes of sterilization, sometimes without the consent of the inmate. — StreetlightX
Probably the most humane way to address overpopulation is simply honesty and truth. You start out with enough to survive, then are shown, the only way I can afford to bring in another kid is by hard work and education and will be there to ensure he is raised right. There is a safety net. For emergencies or severe misfortune. It is not a bed to take a nap on willy nilly. You contribute to society, you earn more. The more you do the more you get. Etc. — Outlander
That's not what he's talking about by sterilization. :rofl:Stopping the spread of HIV is about health. You can lump it in with population control if you want but that’s stretching it. — Brett
And not only is 'overpopulation' a totally bogus problem, — StreetlightX
You had said that the population control measures in China were putting womens’ health second to population control, but I don’t see how having only one child is a threat to womens’ health. — Brett
Yeah, if you can't even be bothered to type a phrase in google — StreetlightX
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