Awesome. You can start by killing yourself.
I did the next best thing. I'm not having kids for this reason.
...overpopulation / surplus is a myth.
OMFG you couldn't be more wrong! :ugone2far:
Wow. Just wow. Where to start? You really stepped into it today...
Ever heard of the
Carrying Capacity of the Earth?
wikipedia said:
In a study titled Food, Land, Population and the U.S. Economy, David Pimentel, professor of ecology and agriculture at Cornell University, and Mario Giampietro, senior researcher at the US National Research Institute on Food and Nutrition (INRAN), estimate the maximum U.S. population for a sustainable economy at 200 million. According to this theory, in order to achieve a sustainable economy and avert disaster, the United States would have to reduce its population by at least one-third, and world population would have to be reduced by two-thirds.
Scientists and hippies alike have been
freaked out about this since the 1970s... It's been watched and studied a lot since then and the facts found have far exceeded all fears. This shit is happening fast.
You don't need to take INRAN's word for it, but basically we're already at 200% of how many people the planet can support without sustaining serious stress.
What kind of stress? All kinds. They've PROVEN dozens of cases of are already occurring, but common sense will tell you that all of these do:
The problems with overpopulation are very real, very serious, growing fast, and exist on many levels that will affect us all. Rich and poor alike will suffer, but most of all the quality of life for everyone on this rock will plummet, likely by mid-century.
For example, New York City has a population density of about 27,000 per square mile. So now take the total square miles of Texas, which is 268,581, then calculate the earth's population of 6,800,000,000 divided by 268,581, which equals a population density of 25,318 per square mile. So that means you can fit the entire population of the earth into the state of Texas with a population density lower than New York city. The landmass of the world is 732 times that of Texas.
Sounds like a good argument on the surface; Very seductive to those who aren't horrified by the tight living conditions of NYC as I am.
But it doesn't address the
real costs of NYC on the planet. In drinking water, in sewage discharge, in food production, in atmospheric gases, etc... NYC costs the Earth TOO MUCH to sustain as it is...
Humanity couldn't dream of surviving, at all, if suddenly we all had to live within the boundaries of Texas. Food & water would be too far away. It would be a 7-Billion player game of "Kill everything that moves."
Speaking of Texas, did you know that the stress we've placed on America's croplands (at least since the invention of liquid fertilizer) has created a drainage runoff problem so serious that there is a completely dead patch in the middle of the gulf of mexico so large that you could put Texas inside it?
It's a major reason we're running out of Tuna.
As far as natural resources go, I seriously think we will find a way to adapt. Even if we run out of oil, or copper, or whatever the fuck else we're running out of, there's way too many other sources of energy out there that aren't oil-based, but are totally being suppressed by those in power, such as the oil companies and the government. We will survive.
I agree with this point on Energy, because solar is so plentiful.
It's not energy I am worried about in the least, however.
Food and Water. That's the whole ball game. They're already being strained WAY, WAY, WAY TOO FAR.
I'll spare you the lecture on this exactly, there are many documentaries on both the world agricultural problems and the water crisis. Let's just say it's not looking good if we continue on our current path, even in the short-term.
By many estimates we (including the USA) won't be able to grow enough food anymore due to water problems by 2030... That's only 19 years from now! The need for more crops is killing us, starting with our groundwater supply. US Geologists say that the aquifers are in a sad state that has never been witnessed before in the Earth's history.
Anyway, Crowded cities are bad enough. I've been to a few southeast asian countries, and I've seen how bad pollution and overcrowding can be. Trust me man, you DO NOT WANT it to get worse than it is here now in the USA.
Things go downhill very, very quickly and unless you want the USA to look and smell like India, you better change that attitude quick and vote someone into office who gives a shit about the quality & quantity of your food and water supplies.
Oh yeah, and AGW too, because if we rise 3 degrees worldwide this Century like all climatologists are convinced we will, then the landmass of this planet will go down significantly, pushing all lowlanders inwards to make all countries far more crowded the hard way.
Currently a very large percentage of urban areas are in the lowlands that will be affected, including NewOrleans, Los Angeles, London, Mumbai, Miami, Bangkok, Sydney, and dozens of other huge cities. Perhaps 30% of the world's population!