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One option is to let people build only what they need. Laws which ban buiding anything which is under a certain size, are often a blatant attempt tpo change what are political swing ridings into right wing ridings , and concentrate left wing thinkers into left wing strongholds, where a huge left wing vote won't change the total number of seats they hold.<br />
The feds should outlaw municipal laws which forbid anyone from building a 300 sq ft home, anywhere in Canada , if that is all they really need.<br />
However people are gently tiptoeing around the real issue , there are simply too many people for us to continue congratulating people when they have their third child, instead of calling them the totally irresposible assholes that they clearly are.<br />
Patrick Watson of the Sea Sheppherd society said Green Peace are far too gutless to deal with overpopulation as THE cause of environmental problems, period.The world cannot sustain the huge overpopulation we have, indefinitely. We are living off the principle, not the interest.Living off interest is sustainable, principle is not.<br />
Brent
Brent |
I don’t quite agree with a lot of things being stated in this thread. I think the belief that we are at some kind of food/overpopulation crisis is a neo-Malthusian myth.<br />
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Here is my opinion, based on my own observations:<br />
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<ol><br />
<li>Humans produce way more food than what we need globally. Most of it gets sent to large urban centres in 1st-world countries where a lot of it is wasted.<br />
<ol><br />
<li>I’m in Winnipeg. There are dozens (if not hundreds) of grocery stores here, ranging from mom & pop stores to massive omnimarts. Each one is filled with food that will most likely expire on the shelf. Imagine what the effect is in really big cities like Toronto, Vancouver, or Los Angeles.<br />
<li>We have federal agencies that purposefully restrict the amount of food that our farmers grow to ensure that the agricultural market remains stable (i.e. that there isn’t too much or too little of one type of product produced, thus ensuring that supply and demand variables stay more or less constant). If we were on the verge of being unable to feed the population such caps would be unnecessary due to the demand for food.<br />
<li>I would imagine that most of our foreign aid in the form of food is either too little (because we restrict how much our farmers can grow), or ends up in the hands of corrupt 3rd-world political leaders who do not allow the aid to reach those who truly need it (a distribution of wealth problem).<br />
<li>Sadly, there may be organizations with a vested interest in ensuring that portions of Earth’s human population remain hungry. 3rd-world famines make good commercials for Foster Parents Plan and Christian Children’s Fund. Video footage of well-fed, healthy children would cause one to be less likely to cough up the “about the cost of a cup of coffee per day” to these organizations (not to accuse any organization in particular of corruption).<br />
<li>Last year I had the privilege of touring a Hutterite colony just west of Winnipeg and learned about how they are able to produce all the food they need as a community and still have enough left over to sell and enjoy large profits. Since they share all their wealth, they do not suffer from issues such as homelessness, poverty, or starvation. When their population starts getting bigger than the colony can handle, they split the population and half starts another colony elsewhere. The point is that humans can handle population growth if they do it intelligently, instead of cramming everyone into a city and importing their oranges from 1,500km away.<br />
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<li>Overpopulation on a global scale is at worst a myth and at best a distant-future scenario that future undreamt-of technologies may mitigate (such as colonization of the solar system or other solar systems).<br />
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<li>Human beings love to cluster around volcanoes, settle on flood plains, build on top of fault lines, and congregate along hurricane-prone coastlines. While problems of micro-overpopulation (too many people in one small are) are real, there is a lot more Earth to go around. For example, China may have the bulk of the world’s population, but it is smaller than Canada (size-wise) and still has a lot of wilderness. The fact that we all try to cram ourselves into tiny areas speaks more to our genetic fear of isolation than to the doom of overpopulation.<br />
<li>Allow me to perform a simple mathematical experiment:<br />
- There are roughly 6.6 billion on Earth<br />
- Canada has an area of 3,854,082 square miles<br />
- There are 2,466,612,480 acres in that many square miles<br />
- My home in Winnipeg sits on a 5000 square foot lot<br />
- Thus, there is roughly space equal to 107,445,640,000,000 Winnipeg city lot-sized properties in Canada (1 lot for each person in the entire human race with tons of room to spare)<br />
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While this does not consider the fact that much of Canada’s land area is water, you get the general idea; we haven’t begun to fill up the space that was given to us. We could put every human in Canada (or the US, or Russia) and use the rest of the planet as farmland to produce our food and still have tons of room to spare<br />
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<li>Plagues and sickness are generally caused by unclean living conditions, lack of basic personal cleanliness, unfettered sexual contact, pollution, and inadequate treatment of human waste. Most, if not all illnesses could be avoided by maintaining a clean (but not sterile) environment and ensuring that people are a little better-educated.<br />
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<li>A lot of the effectiveness of past plagues in our history stems from our ancestor’s ignorance surrounding disease. Today we know that rodents and other animals can carry disease (or carry insects such as lice which can transmit disease) and we have the capability to greatly reduce our contact these creatures and to avoid providing them with environments where they can proliferate.<br />
<li>I would be far more worried about military (or dare I say the word, terrorist)-engineered bio-weapons than another Black Death threatening our population.<br />
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</ol><br />
Getting back to the topic of suburban sprawl I would argue that it is a problem caused by two main factors: the belief that living in the suburbs is the “ideal” that we should all strive for, and that poor city planning and lack of enforcement of housing standards (especially in Winnipeg) leaves pockets of dilapidated neighbourhoods that, while cheap to live in, are so filled with crime, filth, and poverty that no one who can afford better is going to live there. If you’re worried about where the next plague is going to come from, that’s where I’d recommend looking.<br />
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Despite my classification of suburban sprawl as a “problem” in the last paragraph, I don’t necessarily consider it a bad thing. Like I’ve pointed out, we’ve got plenty of space to spare. The fact that it puts a greater reliance on us using our polluting vehicles isn’t a problem of urban sprawl; it’s been the suppression of (or lack of interest in) non-polluting energy sources. There are probably more philosophical or sociological issues related to suburban sprawl, such as the lack of a sense of community and the disconnectedness from one’s community, but that’s a problem that exists even in the city and has more to do with our culture than our geography. I guess a big issue with it is that most 1st-world governments expand exponentially with suburbia, and I think we all can agree that increasing the size of our already bloated bureaucracy is hardly a good thing (I’d be more inclined to believe that systemic bureaucratic failure has been the cause of previous civilizations’ failure than overpopulation). In summary, I would say that the real problem is not suburban sprawl itself, but the inability of our society to effectively cope with it.<br />
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Before I end this rant, I’ll just touch on a few of the other topics I’ve read here:<br />
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Do I think Canadians should be having more children? Yes. Do I think our current culture and social systems support the idea of us having more children? No. That’s why the immigrants who come here end having just as many children as we do, if not less. State-imposed daycare is not an answer (how does it end up being different than residential schools – you turn your children over to the state and it’ll raise them for you while you work? We know how wonderful that is). A real social and culture paradigm shift is required to re-establish conditions where having large families works in our society. Unless we fix these issues at the core we’ve ultimately engineered our society into extinction.<br />
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Do I think we should be allowing more immigrants entry into Canada? Of course! My ancestors were immigrants to this land (I’m a 4th or 5th generation Canadian) and I would not have the opportunities I have today if they were turned away at the border. Immigration brings fresh ideas, fresh blood, and diverse genetic material (an excellent source of plague avoidance, by the way). I say that we should take in immigrants and refugees and instead of dumping them in cities where many of them feel isolated (socially and economically), we give them larges areas of rural land and allow them to construct their own communities outside of our cities, persuading them to farm and even letting them live their traditional way of life. Thousands of Ukrainians and other Europeans did that one hundred years ago and it didn’t destroy Canada then and it won’t destroy Canada now. Their communities will simply add to our mosaic and probably end up being a tourist destination for Canadians and foreigners. Not to mention the fact that more people means more spending which means a stronger economy.<br />
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That’s just my two long, rambling cents on the topic. Thank you for reading this far. Feel free to point out where I’m wrong; I’m here to learn.
Clayton Rumley -------------- http://www.claytopia.net |
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