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Population

 

 

 

Finally we have to consider the impact of population.  And here A Crude Awakening is excessively diplomatic about the solutions, and perhaps over pessimistic about likely starvation and social collapse.  

There is no doubt that the world is presently overpopulated. 

Human beings have existed in our modern form for perhaps 70,000 years.  For all but the last 200 years the human population has been less than a billion and for most of recorded history has been less than half a billion.  We presently number over six and a half billion and it can be fairly said that human beings are in plague proportions.

Natural resources, of which coal and oil are just the tip of the iceberg, are presently being consumed at an unsustainable rate, without any concern for the future. 

Demographers now believe that the world population will reach nine and a half billion by 2050 but should then begin to decline.  Most western countries have already reached underlying zero population growth and continued population growth is due to ageing and immigration in these areas.  The single biggest factor in this has been the empowerment of women through equal education of boys and girls and giving girls control of their own reproduction.

There is every probability that the most populous country on the planet, China, will achieve a comparable standard of living and a ‘developed world’ demographic profile before 2050.  But there is less hope for the Indian subcontinent, Indonesia, the Philippines, Africa or South America where a large proportion of the population live in poverty.  Even developed countries often have a poor and ignorant underclass where population growth is often still out of control.

 

 

Poverty

 

 

As China’s experience demonstrates the practical solutions to poverty include some compulsion and some that reward desired behaviour.  These need to include modified ‘one child’ policies but have to be supported by policies to empower women to take control of their reproduction, including birth control knowledge and means, and abortion on demand.  Compulsory secular education, including basic science, needs to be enforced for all children between the ages of 5 and 15 preferably with opportunities provided for higher education, particularly for women. 

Undernourished and/or abused younger children need to be placed in crèches during the day where they can be fed and cared for properly while their parents work.  Unemployed parents need to be occupied while their children are at school, perhaps being given education in parenting or a trade, combined with work experience designed to increase their self esteem.

By these means we might hope to both, reduce or eliminate poverty and return the human population to a sustainable level of perhaps a few billion people by the end of the 23rd century.

But many of the high population growth countries and communities are in the sway of various cultural traditions and beliefs that are anathema to practical solutions, including female education and birth control.  Many of these traditions originally evolved to underwrite ancient hierarchical power structures. They are typically designed to create and support a supreme ruler and wealthy class and their priests and adherents inadvertently or deliberately perpetuate ideas that have evolved to maintain class distinctions and instil a culture of subservience.

 

 

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Travel

Southern Africa

 

 

In April 2023 we took a package tour to South Africa with our friends Craig and Sonia. We flew via Singapore to Cape Town.

 



Cape Town is the country's legislative capital and location of the South African Parliament.
It's long been renowned for Table Mountain, that dominates the city.

Read more: Southern Africa

Fiction, Recollections & News

The Royal Wedding

 

 

 


It often surprises our international interlocutors, for example in Romania, Russia or Germany, that Australia is a monarchy.  More surprisingly, that our Monarch is not the privileged descendent of an early Australian squatter or more typically a medieval warlord but Queen Elizabeth of Great Britain and Northern Island - who I suppose could qualify as the latter.

Thus unlike those ex-colonial Americans, British Royal weddings are not just about celebrity.  To Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders, in addition to several smaller Commonwealth countries, they have a bearing our shared Monarchy.

Yet in Australia, except for occasional visits and the endorsement of our choice of viceroys, matters royal are mainly the preoccupation of the readers of women's magazines.

That women's magazines enjoy almost exclusive monopoly of this element of the National culture is rather strange in these days of gender equality.  There's nary a mention in the men's magazines.  Scan them as I might at the barber's or when browsing a newsstand - few protagonists who are not engaged in sport; modifying equipment or buildings; or exposing their breasts; get a look in. 

But a Royal wedding hypes things up, so there is collateral involvement.  Husbands and partners are drawn in.

Read more: The Royal Wedding

Opinions and Philosophy

Manufacturing in Australia

 

 

 

This article was written in August 2011 after a career of many years concerned with Business Development in New South Wales Australia. I've not replaced it because, while the detailed economic parameters have changed, the underlying economic arguments remain the same (and it was a lot of work that I don't wish to repeat) for example:  

  • between Oct 2010 and April 2013 the Australian dollar exceeded the value of the US dollar and that was seriously impacting local manufacturing, particularly exporters;
  • as a result, in November 2011, the RBA (Reserve Bank of Australia) reduced the cash rate (%) from 4.75 to 4.5 and a month later to 4.25; yet
  • the dollar stayed stubbornly high until 2015, mainly due to a favourable balance of trade in commodities and to Australia's attraction to foreign investors following the Global Financial Crisis, that Australia had largely avoided.

 

 

2011 introduction:

Manufacturing viability is back in the news.

The loss of manufacturing jobs in the steel industry has been a rallying point for unions and employers' groups. The trigger was the announcement of the closure of the No 6 blast furnace at the BlueScope plant at Port Kembla.  This furnace is well into its present campaign and would have eventually required a very costly reline to keep operating.  The company says the loss of export sales does not justify its continued operation. The  remaining No 5 blast furnace underwent a major reline in 2009.  The immediate impact of the closure will be a halving of iron production; and correspondingly of downstream steel manufacture. BlueScope will also close the aging strip-rolling facility at Western Port in Victoria, originally designed to meet the automotive demand in Victoria and South Australia.

800 jobs will go at Port Kembla, 200 at Western Port and another 400 from local contractors.  The other Australian steelmaker OneSteel has also recently announced a workforce reduction of 400 jobs.

This announcement has reignited the 20th Century free trade versus protectionist economic and political debate. Labor backbenchers and the Greens want a Parliamentary enquiry. The Prime Minister (Julia Gillard) reportedly initially agreed, then, perhaps smelling trouble, demurred. No doubt 'Sir Humphrey' lurks not far back in the shadows. 

 

 

So what has and hasn't changed (disregarding a world pandemic presently raging)?

 

Read more: Manufacturing in Australia

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