2manyrocks
Super Member
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2007
- Messages
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I have this creeping sense that we chase endless rainbows for greener grass, only to find out we are pursuing hollow dreams. .
The entire book of Ecclesiastes discusses this.
I have this creeping sense that we chase endless rainbows for greener grass, only to find out we are pursuing hollow dreams. .
The more apt question is not are there more hungry people in the world but is the ratio of fed people to starving people better today or yesterday?
Another question to ask is: If food production has dramatically increased, then why are there still hungry people? It's a rabbit hole. All we are accomplishing is increasing the real number of hungry people perhaps?
Notice I did not use "well fed" since one can argue that our diet of sugar and carb consumption is not well fed.
Agreed. :licking: :ashamed:
While there are some cases of artifical shortages caused by pure politics, like N. Korea as you said, many of the conflicts you noted have their roots in disagreement over resources. I agree the level and intensity of disagreement can be amped up by religious, political, tribal or ethnic differences.
We have fights everyday over water and land resources in our own country. We use lawyers and courts, rather than AK47's and machetes, as weapons.
The difference is when we perceive the fight is over something that one side or the other doesn't really need, they just want it. We call that political, greed or whatever. It is still a fight over a resource.
Arable land and water in climate zones which support agriculture are not becoming more plentiful. It's logical to assume that as the population expands, fights over those resources will intensify. They will become literal life or death wars. It doesn't seem like a problem we can 'farm' our way out of.
Dave.
I think that you hit on the key problem that I have with the whole "Green" "AGW" mentality.
For sake of argument lets call it the "Green" movement. "Lets save the trees, ocean, air etc. Okay?
In their attempt to save these things they have invented a whole new category of a thing called `'stewardship" That we as a "community" have a "duty" to later generations "save the planet.
Agreed?
I think up to this point you will not find too many people in disagreement.
My question to you and other "Greens" would be, Do your stewardship rights take priority over my property rights?
I think that you hit on the key problem that I have with the whole "Green" "AGW" mentality.
For sake of argument lets call it the "Green" movement. "Lets save the trees, ocean, air etc. Okay?
In their attempt to save these things they have invented a whole new category of a thing called `'stewardship" That we as a "community" have a "duty" to later generations "save the planet.
Agreed?
I think up to this point you will not find too many people in disagreement.
My question to you and other "Greens" would be, Do your stewardship rights take priority over my property rights?
The more apt question is not are there more hungry people in the world but is the ratio of fed people to starving people better today or yesterday?
No one has yet mentioned the effect on population growth that prosperity has. The more prosperous people become, the fewer kids they have, except where custom or religion mandates more. That's why most of Europe, the US and Japan have stable or declining populations. Until those 3rd world countries get their economic and political act together, we'll see starving kids on the tube. But the food exists, it just doesn't get to them.
At some point, if they don't learn to prosper, we could run out of our ability to supply food to the world, but prosperity is the key.
And imagine a world where prosperity is everywhere. OK, there will be a greater demand on some resources, and we'll have to learn to recycle more, but we'll have a lot more smart people, businesses and labs to help solve our problems. BTW, those solutions = technology.
I think that an atomic bomb would count as destructive rather than constructive.
Aaron Z
In the past, most of the locations with the poorest fed populations had plenty of food at the seaports. The problem was that the local corruption prevented the food from getting to the people who needed it. Back 30 years ago when people were starving in India, food was rotting on the docks.
Look at the really sad locations today, and you see the same exact problem: food is available, but restricted by local government corruption or thieving.
The problem is not an ability of the globe to grow food, it's an issue of distribution. Many areas of starving populations used to grow their own food until corrupt leadership or civil war destroyed the farm base. It has nothing to do with global environmental issues.