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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

Argentina & Uruguay

 

 

In October 2011 our little group: Sonia, Craig, Wendy and Richard visited Argentina. We spent two periods of time in Buenos Aires; at the start and at the end of our trip; and we two nights at the Iguassu Falls.

Read more: Argentina & Uruguay

Fiction, Recollections & News

DUNE

 

Last week I went to see ‘DUNE’, the movie.

It’s the second big-screen attempt to make a movie of the book, if you don’t count the first ‘Star Wars’, that borrows shamelessly from Frank Herbert’s Si-Fi classic.

Read more: DUNE

Opinions and Philosophy

The Prospect of Eternal Life

 

 

 

To die, to sleep;
To sleep: perchance to dream:
ay, there's the rub;
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come
When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,
Must give us pause:
… But that the dread of something after death,
The undiscover'd country from whose bourn
No traveller returns, puzzles the will
And makes us rather bear those ills we have
Than fly to others that we know not of?
Thus conscience does make cowards of us all;

[1]

 

 

 

 

When I first began to write about this subject, the idea that Hamlet’s fear was still current in today’s day and age seemed to me as bizarre as the fear of falling off the earth if you sail too far to the west.  And yet several people have identified the prospect of an 'undiscovered country from whose realm no traveller returns' as an important consideration when contemplating death.  This is, apparently, neither the rational existential desire to avoid annihilation; nor the animal imperative to keep living under any circumstances; but a fear of what lies beyond.

 

Read more: The Prospect of Eternal Life

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