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Will Earth Expire By 2050?

_josh writes: "Will overconsumption force humanity off this planet in less than 50 years? It may sound sci-fi, but according to the WWF in this story at the Observer, it's entirely possible. Maybe now I can convince my brother not to buy that SUV ..." Take with as large a grain of salt as you think appropriate.

1,274 comments

  1. WWF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    A planet controlled by wrestlers? The devil, you say!

    1. Re:WWF by dfung · · Score: 0

      It was a shocking tale, that unfolded in the quietest of ways.

      An epidemic spread, wiping out all of man's politicians. Average people, missing their senators and assemblymen, started again with their closest substitute - professional wrestlers. It started with just a governor in Minnesota, but soon, wrestlers were everywhere.

      And then, they learned to say "no".

    2. Re:WWF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh yeah, and where are we supposed to find these two habital planets? and how can we lug all of us there, with enough resources to get us there? it'll take at least 50 years to get there, so should we leave now?

    3. Re:WWF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to know your specific contentions with the article. I thought it was valid. I think the problem is that whenever anyone points out the fact that we're running headlong into environmental disaster, I look around and all I see are people sticking their fingers in their ears saying 'La la la la... I can't hear you... la la la...'

    4. Re:WWF by Cappy+Red · · Score: 1

      The World Wildlife Federation knows not what they doomed themselves too...

      Still, World Wildlife Entertainment ain't such a bad name...

      *honk*

      --
      This is my sig. It's prescription, I swear. I need it for reading things... on the other side of things
    5. Re:WWF by electrick · · Score: 1

      The environment group sued the wrestlers and now they are no longer able to use the letters WWF. http://www.cosmiverse.com/tech08130101.html

      --
      "You sir, have just crossed my happy line..."
    6. Re:WWF by ozric2k1 · · Score: 1

      So the judge told them to get the "F" out.

  2. No by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

    It will probaly be earlier than that. Get it? Heheh

    --

    --

    WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
  3. You can't possibly believe this.... by graphicartist82 · · Score: 1, Funny

    It may sound sci-fi, but according to the WWF in this story...

    Everybody knows that the WWF is all scripted! None of it is real!

    1. Re:You can't possibly believe this.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to the results of a recent court battle, WWF does not stand for World Wrestling Federation anymore, but only for the Worldwide Wildlife Fund. The former World Wrestling Federation is now known as World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE).

      This has little to do with the above comment, but should be near the top of the comments in the discussion.

  4. WWF! by clinko · · Score: 3, Funny

    I always knew that wrestling was a sign of the end of the world. Now the WWF has confirmed it.

    1. Re:WWF! by iosphere · · Score: 1

      Not to nitpick, but I think now it's called the WWE or something. Not that I'm in to that sort of thing...

    2. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      go watch nascar you hick

    3. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, WWF = World Wildlife Foundation
      WWE = World Wrestling Entertainment
      Apparently there has been on ongoing court battle over who got to use WWF as their abbreviation, the wildlife hippies won. But their information is no more accurate than it would be had it been the WWE writing the article.

    4. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Screw court, they should take the dispute to the ring!

    5. Re:WWF! by FunkSoulBrother · · Score: 1

      thats right! The squared circle! Its gonna be pandemonium baby!

    6. Re:WWF! by BitwizeGHC · · Score: 1

      If it came to Triple H vs. a panda, my money is on the panda.

      --
      N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
    7. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yah, but Triple H against some stick-hippie vegan?

    8. Re:WWF! by zerocool^ · · Score: 1, Offtopic


      Yeah, basically the courts told them to get the F out.

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    9. Re:WWF! by pizen · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      If it came to Triple H vs. a panda, my money is on the panda.
      Especially if it's the Giant Panda that is always attacking Brent in PvP.

    10. Re:WWF! by EugeneK · · Score: 3, Funny

      WWF has now confirmed : Earth Is Dying

      Yet another crippling bombshell hit the beleaguered Earth community when the WWF confirmed that the Earth will be uninhabitable by 2050. Coming on the heels of a recent National Academy of Sciences report that the average temperature has risen yet again, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. The Earth is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Galaxy-Wide species diversity test.

      You don't need to be a Kreskin [amdest.com] to predict Earth's future. The hand writing is on the wall: Earth faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for Earth because Earth is dying. Things are looking very bad for Earth. As many of us are already aware, Earth continues to lose species. Extinction flows like a river of blood.

      The rainforest habitats are the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of their area. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time species black rhino and tiger only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: Earth is dying.

      Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.

      Earth leader Bush states that there are 7000 species left. How many mammals are there? Let's see. The number of mammal versus amphibian posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 mammal species. Rainforest reptile posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of amphibian posts. Therefore there are about 700 rainforest reptiles. A recent article put mammals at about 80 percent of the species market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 mammal species. This is consistent with the number of mammal Usenet posts.

      Due to the troubles of the rainforests, abysmal slash and burn agriculture, the drug war and so on, Columbian rainforests went out of business and was taken over by Brazilian rainforests who sell another troubled rainforests to international logging interests. Now Thai forests are also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.

      All major surveys show that Earth has steadily declined in wilderness and species. Earth is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If Earth is to survive at all it will be among human dilettante dabblers. Earth continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, Earth is dead.

    11. Re:WWF! by thales · · Score: 1, Insightful

      WWF wrestling is more beleavable than the WWF Tree Huggers.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    12. Re:WWF! by spectral · · Score: 2, Funny

      And I suppose you just put RAM memory and a NIC card into your computer last week too?

    13. Re:WWF! by linzeal · · Score: 1

      mod parent up you dirty-caveman hippies !!!

    14. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...which you bought with money withdrawn from an ATM machine after typing in your PIN number?

    15. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Modded down? That was fucking hilarious, and on topic even! Mod the above "BSD is dying" troll-in-sheep's-clothing up into the stratosphere of +5, Funny where it belongs.

    16. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those are redundant, even... you said "...which you bought with money withdrawn from an automatic teller machine machine after typing in your personal identification number number?"

      That's what I call FUBAR.

    17. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, some of us chose not to blow ourselves up amidst crowds of children.

    18. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So are random access memory memory and a network interface card card...

    19. Re:WWF! by emmons · · Score: 1

      This just in from the MRD (Ministry of Redundancy Department) Department...

      --
      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    20. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      insightful? how 'bout -1 Twit.

      Who the fuck is modding around here...?

    21. Re:WWF! by andfarm · · Score: 1
      --

      TANSTAAFI: There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free iPod.

    22. Re:WWF! by coastwalker · · Score: 1

      I dont think that calling people names will necessarily prove your belief by categorising the people as unlike you. Its always easy to call on emotions in order to get people to group together and fight - see historical data on Hitler.

      Rational people will consider the information as well as the media characterisation of its source.

      WWF - The wildlife lobby bring you information about damage to the environment which threatens the survival of your species.

      WWF - The wrestling entertainment gives young boys role models of posturing fighters who act out agression without actually harming each other.

      Strikes me that whichever WWF you 'believe' they are both engaged in valuable educational social activities.

      Maybe you shouldnt take the posturing of the westlers too much to heart, your arguments might become more persuasive if you came down off that branch, stopped shrieking and pulling faces.

      Primates have to move on if they want to continue to be the dominant species on this planet.

      --
      Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
    23. Re:WWF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (let's finish this thread)
      World Wrestling Federation wrestling is more beleavable than the World Wildlife Foundation Tree Huggers.

      (somehow, it does not work as planned..should have been "than the World Wildlife Foundation foundation)

  5. World will end January 19 2038 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    It is fairly well known that the world will end at midnight on January 19, 2038.
    I'm waiting for my PDP-11s to explode then although I'll be in my 70s

    Thomas Dzubin

  6. You consumption weenies better watch out! by metalhed77 · · Score: 4, Funny

    cuz i'll take you down in a steEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEL CAGE!

    --
    Photos.
  7. Wrestlers? by _ph1ux_ · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    What do wrestlers know about the overconsumption of resources and its effect on habitable planets?

    1. Re:Wrestlers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You pledge allegiance to a piece of cloth? Not ideals? Not values?

      Poor son-of-a-bitch Nationalist.

    2. Re:Wrestlers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america and to the republic for which it stands

  8. Another option? by stirfry714 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the article:
    The report offers a vivid warning that either people curb their extravagant lifestyles or risk leaving the onus on scientists to locate another planet that can sustain human life. Since this is unlikely to happen, the only option is to cut consumption now.

    Okay, does this strike anyone as leaving out the most likely option? It's highly unlikely we'll massively change our ways. It's also highly unlikely that we'll colonize other planets in the next 50 years.

    What's that leave? Simple! Massive resource wars! Woohoo!

    It just amazes me that the whole article ignores the inevitable outcome... we'll all fight over dwindling resources, thus thinning the population down to sustainable levels.

    1. Re:Another option? by Peyna · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Someone figured that out a long time ago actually. Thomas Malthus, back in the early 1800s said that basically the human population is increasing at the same that food supplies are, but at a much greater rate. Thus, there are three inevitable population checks. Famine, War, and Disease. These will take place when we run out of resources. They'll kill off enough people that we can survive just a bit longer to do it all over again, wheee.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:Another option? by stirfry714 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly. It seems like we'd have a lot more luck if people would just start figuring out the most humane way to "thin the herd" in advance, instead of pretending you can stop me from buying that nice huge plasma-screen HDTV I saw today. *Drool*

      This reminds me of an econ assignment in high school that I "failed". We were given a set number of resource units, and told to distribute them throughout the town. Most people gave food to everyone, TVs to most everyone, and luxury cars to a few. I gave two or three luxury cars and TVs to a few people, and let something like a third of the town starve to death.

      I defended my homework as a more realistic portrait of the world than any of my neo-socialist classmates, but I still failed since my solution wasn't "nice". So sad...

    3. Re:Another option? by crawling_chaos · · Score: 5, Interesting

      And as someone else noted up-thread, Malthus "proved" it would happen in his lifetime. It didn't. We get this every so often, and I generally file it with the "Christ is coming back and the world is going to end next year, so you better repent now" freaks. Same thing, different words.

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
    4. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      figuring out the most humane way to "thin the herd" in advance,

      I vote that we start with you and the other human-hating, freedom-hating, and Western Civilization-hating greenies.

    5. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would guess he probably didn't account for wars and famines, epidemics, etc. that would happen independent of the resource problem or for political reasons.

    6. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think your failure in that assignment is indicative of your overall lack of worth, and I'll be sure to make sure you're screened out in the most humane way. Instead of you starving to death, we'll kill you and eat you.

      Sound fair?

      And why on Earth would anyone want a luxury card in that circumstance? Honestly, if you're going to allow the elite to survive, at least give them useful things.

    7. Re:Another option? by Tackhead · · Score: 5, Insightful
      > This reminds me of an econ assignment in high school that I "failed". We were given a set number of resource units, and told to distribute them throughout the town. Most people gave food to everyone, TVs to most everyone, and luxury cars to a few. I gave two or three luxury cars and TVs to a few people, and let something like a third of the town starve to death.

      *evil grin* - well-done! (I'd have tried to set up an auction system within the confines of the game. Them that has, buys. Them that can't buy, starves, leaving more for the rest of us! ;-)

      In History class in high school, we had a teacher who broke us up into groups to play "Diplomacy", two moves a day, for a week. I started out as Britain - good mobility, but horrible logistical problems.

      First move: Tell the French I won't take the English Channel if they don't, because Germany's the real enemy.

      Actual move: Take the Channel, of course.

      France to teacher: "That wasn't fair!"
      Me to teacher: "Hey, Fog of War, these things happen, right?"
      Teacher to class: (Brief explanation of the object lesson - things like this might be accidents, but might not be, and it's up to the players to judge their risks accordingly when they decide whom to trust.)

      Second move: Apologize profusely to France in private and to players I see France hanging around. Blame the Germans for tricking me into thinking he was going to go after the Channel despite our agreement not to. Suggest he take North Africa while I withdraw from the Channel and head towards Denmark.

      Actual move: Figure he's fallen for it again, and invade France. Yup, he fell for it again. Oldest trick in the "Diplomacy" playbook.

      France to teacher: "That's not fair!"
      Me to teacher: "Napoleon said God was on the side with the greatest battalions. Voltaire disagreed and said that God wasn't on the side with the largest battalions, but with the best shots. Thanks to my opponent not listening to his generals or his philosophers, now I have both."
      Teacher to class: "Some of you weren't paying attention last turn. 'Fair' is determined by who can do what, to whom, when, and with how much materiel. [...and with that, he had an easy segue into WW2 history and Barbarossa...]"

      The game got easier from there. By the end of the week, over half of Europe was mine. 2/3 of the class was at war with me and losing badly due to infighting amongst themselves, and the other 1/3 had been eliminated.

      > I defended my homework as a more realistic portrait of the world than any of my neo-socialist classmates, but I still failed since my solution wasn't "nice". So sad...

      Bummer about your econ teacher. I was lucky enough to have a cool enough History teacher that I got an "A" for my treachery :-)

    8. Re:Another option? by stirfry714 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yes, I had a cool history teacher who let me get away with things like that, but other teachers were not so great...

      My econ teacher (referenced above) was also my government teacher. We had a Mock Congress. I chose to be a Republican after losing a week-long fight to be a Libertarian ("No, we're only doing the two real parties", she says).

      So I'm the Senate Minority Leader, with 22 Republicans (this is Northern California). I manage to get my friend elected as the Senate President Pro-Temp, primarily by telling all the Democrats I knew that I would *hate* for her to get elected - so they voted for her.

      She then turns around, and to be "fair", gives the Republicans HALF of the committee chairs. Not none, like in real life, or even 20% as a fair ratio, but 50%! As you can imagine, the committee chairs killed every single Democratic bill.

      When we got to the floor, I used every trick in the book to kill bills. I made sure my two whips were the student body leader and the football team captain and suddenly Democrats were defecting left and right. I even pulled off a fillibuster.

      End result: Two bills passed that Senate. And they were both Republican bills. That's with 22 out of 100 members... pretty darn successful.

      And my grade? I got a D. Why? Because, in the words of the teacher, "I wasn't being cooperative and participating in a constructive manner.."

      I was the MINORITY leader!! Since when am I supposed to be cooperative?!?!?!

      Anyways, sorry for the long rant, but some of these teachers... some of them are great, but others just need to learn about the real world before trying to teach it to others.

    9. Re:Another option? by PacoTaco · · Score: 2
      *evil grin* - well-done! (I'd have tried to set up an auction system within the confines of the game. Them that has, buys. Them that can't buy, starves, leaving more for the rest of us!

      Only the "haves" have the luxury of joking about mass starvation.

    10. Re:Another option? by CharlieG · · Score: 2

      Ah,
      So, you have discovered part of the bias in teaching, huh?

      Very good, you have learned the real world lessons, not the lessons of the "world the way it should be"

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    11. Re:Another option? by TheOnlyCoolTim · · Score: 3

      How do you play this game? Could you give me a a link?

      Tim

      --
      Omnia vestra castrorum habetur nobis.
    12. Re:Another option? by Mahtar · · Score: 1

      It's admirable that you find time to criticize people on /., when you're obviously so busy solving the problem of world hunger.

    13. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay. What is the point of this story, besides a feeble attempt to show off how smart you were in school?

      You are an asshole, and assholes win in this world...I guess that is the moral.

    14. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your ignorance will not stop it from happening nor will lack of attention. Its a simple matter of addition and subtraction. The earth can only support a maximum number of people and be a balanced environment and we are well past that now. The population is growing at 2x every 35 to 40 years at its current rate. There is only so much natural resources and most are are the type that cant be replaced in a persons life time or even hundreds of lifetimes. Take oil for example, it takes hundreds of thousands of years for the plant and animal material to become what we know as crude oil yet we buy big ass suvs and suck every drop of gas from the tank every few days and think nothing of it cause in our minds there will always be more. Man has depleted thousands of years of oil in a hundred years and killed so many animals to extinction the natural order of the environment no longer is. Unless more poeple pull their heads out of their ass (like you) we are doomed to live a very horrible life in a few short years or even worse our children will have to live those lives thanks to our stupidity and uncaring attitudes.

      Its time for the oil companys to stop buying off congress and let new fuel sources be developed and used rather than the types we comsume now.

    15. Re:Another option? by Kwantus · · Score: 2, Informative

      Now even the US DoE is saying it can happen in our lifetime.

      http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/petroleum/pre se ntations/2000/long_term_supply/sld012.htm

      It's a little hard to ignore when all credible tunings of global models and fiddling what humans can control of those within even fanciful bounds of political acceptibility, predicts overshoot and collapse this century.

      The US decided in 1974 (report for NSSM200) that the world's population was unsustainable (specifically, a threat to national security), and (very likely) engineered AIDS as a fix (since it was clear birth control programs would be anti-American in the practical sense that the US couldn't use all the resources any more).

      Malthus may have been a little premature, probably not accounting for the way technologies would stretch the distibution of wealth, but that doesn't make him wrong in the important part: that there's only so much to go around and an exploding global population is going to crash and burn, no two ways about it.andwhere it counts.

    16. Re:Another option? by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Moron. Why engineer a disease that takes so long to kill people, who are burning resources the whole time? Hell, AIDS may not even show up for 10 years. As far as efficient killers, it doesn't even rank. There's a whole hell of a lot better ways to go about it.

    17. Re:Another option? by bmud · · Score: 1

      Only the "haves" have the luxury of joking about mass starvation.

      He's not joking.

      Don't effuse that socialist indignation at inequality. "Lets steal from the rich to support the non-productive poor. While we're at it, let's pretend it's fair."

      Men producing wealth is not repugnant. If they produce enough to live in "luxury," congradulate them. Those that are incapable of producing starve.

      You receive what your efforts are worth. Some will _choose to starve_ for a myriad of radical reasons. Others will starve due to ineptitude. Show me the injustice.

    18. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what are you doing about mass starvation hanging around Slashdot? Matter of fact, you have a LOT of work to do. There are many other forums and many contexts therein where such proclamations are equally appropriate (that is in not at all in the given context) that are missing your "world-changing" pleas for people who are just discussing topics and relating silly anecdotes.

      Why not go talk about world hunger in a Britney Spears fan forum, or talking about how it is so selfish to be engaging in mindless video games while people are starving around the globe in, let's say, a Neverwinter Nights server, or maybe asking on a Linux help message board how these people have the time to waste talking about a computer OS while we have all of these starving people around the world. Obviously, these people have budgeted there time, and perhaps they find the time to HELP in between with a charity contribution, I don't know. But I doubt these knee-jerk proclamations to everything they say with no regards to the context are going to convince people who aren't involved in some way to help. You are just going to piss people off.

      If you want to say something about world hunger or some such, and it must be on Slashdot, you better write an interesting story and submit it, and have it either spark the attention of an editor, or be on-topic on a board like Slashdot and show how and what technologies could help aleviate world hunger, or post a reply to someone who did post such a story. Yeah, it doesn't happen much, but there are MANY venues for it, so there isn't much need for a Slashdot article about it, is there? Or do you only read Slashdot?

    19. Re:Another option? by thetbone · · Score: 1

      "Its a simple matter of addition and subtraction. The earth can only support a maximum number of people and be a balanced environment and we are well past that now."

      So, enlighten us, what is this maximum number the earth can support? I want a NUMBER. And if you can't give me one, how do you know we are past it?

    20. Re:Another option? by Equinox · · Score: 1

      Hey now...I only read Slashdot. If you look close, there's easily a day's worth of the most intelligent flaming I've ever seen. Where else can you find someone calling someone else an ass, only with 20 character long words in Latin?

    21. Re:Another option? by dr.g · · Score: 1

      "The population is growing at 2x every 35 to 40 years at its current rate..."

      Yes, and we know that rates can never change, therefore, as you so...ah...what's the word? "STUPIDLY" state: It's a simple matter of math. Just adding and subtracting, right?

      Only...people who did that same math with the birthrate data available 40 years ago got it way the hell wrong. Just like Malthus. How could that have happened? Could it be that the world you are trying to analyze is actually NOT a static system? Birth rates, changes in longevity, death rates...all change, and what is more, they change in ways that YOU (in particular) will be unlikely to anticipate.

      Make no mistake...EVERY-FSCKING-THING in the Guardian is leftist claptrap. Always and without exception. There's your static system.

      --
      "To be fair, I was left completely unsupervised." ~Anon
    22. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, Sir, are SO full of shit. Not only are you an obvious selfish asshole, but also an ignorant one. No one (well, ALMOST no one) is lazy and stupid enough to starve, but a billion are simply POOR enough. Just because we, the westerners, choose to have our coffee, steaks, cars etc etc etc... (ad nauseaum)

      The world is limited. How come you folks think it's resources are practically unlimited and only limited by one's wits and productivity?

      Helloooo! Wake up ferfokssake! This is a real world we live in with millions of real people dying because of the politics our democratic western nations practice. Not because they're stupid, but because of US (both in the meaning of 'us' and 'the US').

      Your argument that people "choose to starve" or are "inept" are, basicly, _RACIST_. You're suggesting that millions and millions of Africans, South Americans and Asians are dying because they're inferior to White Christian Americans.

      F*ck you very much!

    23. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Malthus claimed that either the population would expand until people starved OR people would become immoral (I forget the actual term he used). In his mind, birth control was immoral, so he wasn't all that wrong after all.

    24. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Voltaire disagreed and said that God wasn't on >the side with the largest battalions, but with >the best shots.

      Really? Where does he get this from? Just read Candide. I think it is safe to say that God isn't on either side.

    25. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but Malthus didn't take into account development of more efficient produce methods. If you don't take those into account, Malthus did actually prove his theory.

      If you read the article, you'll see that in this article, it is stated that this whole 50-year thing is a prediction based on the methods of producing energy not changing. Interestingly enough, Malthus spoke of a food shortage, this is about an energy shortage.

      The goal of this article is not to piss you nationalist Americans off (because in the end, you're all fascists anyway), it is to warn of a possible development, which can be avoided by developing other economically and ecologically viable ways of producing energy.

      Truth is, nobody expects the Americans, excuse me, Citizens of the US (because Canadians are not inherently evil) to actually admit they're being resource-hoggers and start doing something to change it. The funny thing is, that about the whole world acknowledges these issues by now, and the whole world is trying to think of ways to avoid them, while in the US, people buy bigger cars and worry about some idiot from Worldcom, Enron or another non-issue. Or start discussions about History classes and Malthus.

      Oh, and I apologize for the remark about fascists. Paul Verhoeven proved that Americans don't take kindly to this kind of open criticism.

    26. Re:Another option? by Tablizer · · Score: 2

      (* The game got easier from there. By the end of the week, over half of Europe was mine. 2/3 of the class was at war with me and losing badly due to infighting amongst themselves, and the other 1/3 had been eliminated. *)

      Sounds like you got a better real-world education than I did. We were told to play fair.

    27. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without getting caught? Hardly. AIDS is a very effective, efficient killer in third-world countries. It's doing a helluva job of "population control" in Africa; in some countries, the infection rate is as high as 40%. It's estimated that at least half the population of the continent as a whole will be infected by 2010, and the population will be rapidly decreasing by 2020.

      Not that I'm complaining, of course. Someone in my country sat down, and, thinking about _my_ generation, said, "How can we make life better for these people?"

      They came to the conclusion that killing what will probably be billions of people was the way to do it. That presents a unique moral dilemma.

    28. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your assertion is flawed -- they're inferior to non-Christian Americans too.

    29. Re:Another option? by Jeremi · · Score: 2
      You receive what your efforts are worth. Some will _choose to starve_ for a myriad of radical reasons. Others will starve due to ineptitude. Show me the injustice.

      Sure. Imagine that when you were an infant, your parents were killed in a flood, leaving you to starve to death shortly afterwards. Would you say you "chose to starve to death", or were you simply too inept to survive? Would you say your death was "just"? If so, please give me an example of something that would be "unjust", because I don't think you know what the word means.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    30. Re:Another option? by Dwonis · · Score: 2

      I agree with most of what you said, but it's still not racism.

    31. Re:Another option? by WhiteKnight07 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Basically the artical overlooks the fact that as technology advances human ingenuity causes the amount of resources required to maintain a given lifestyle for a single individual to go down. Thus the population does not outstrip the resources available to it. But rather, simply makes more effecent use of them as needed.

      --


      We're going to make information free Mr. Anderson, whether you like it, or not.
    32. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, enlighten us, what is this maximum number the earth can support? I want a NUMBER

      I don't know about the original poster, but I doubt if the Earth could reasonably support more than about 14 Trillion (not billion, trillion) people with a decent standard of living. Of course, this would require a level of technology not currently existing. More realistically, and at current technological levels, the Earth probably could support more than about 200 Billion people. It would require some changes in agriculture, but nothing that could not be done today if it were necessary (which fortunately, due to the sparsely populated Earth, is not).

      People who live in cities seem to think the Earth is crowded. And when they travel, they usually travel to other cities, getting the (decidedly false) impression that the Earth is crowded. It would be humorous if it weren't so sad...

    33. Re:Another option? by plumby · · Score: 2
      Men producing wealth is not repugnant. If they produce enough to live in "luxury," congradulate them. Those that are incapable of producing starve.

      If this was a totally level playing field then you might at least have some kind of point. But it's not. Large amounts of people in the world are born into an environment where they don't have an opportunity to try to get wealthy. They are too busy trying to find their next meal. If you'd been born poor in somewhere like Rwanda (or Afghanistan, or Ethiopia, or one of many similar countries around the world), do you think you could have stood a chance of getting to the comfortable life that you have now?

      Anyway, do you really believe that a society where the few who are (for whatever reasons) capable, and inclinded, to grab as much wealth as they possibly can with no regard for others is really the society that you want to live in?

    34. Re:Another option? by subtleluck · · Score: 1

      ok lets face it teachers are stuipid, i mean they are teachers, i.e. they couldn't get a real job, ok i'm exagerating here, but seriously i've only had a SMALL share of GOOD teachers in high school and in college. I mean you would think the college teachers would be better but in truth they aren't, although the percent wise there are more better proffs in college from my experience. most of them don't really care to teach in college cuz they are too busy with their research and the ones that teach H.S. are just plain dumb, which is another reason we have a problem of dumb illiterate fucks accusing h.s. kids of "hacking" when all they did was open up a shell and use "talk" or some trivial shit like that. what can we do about it, ABSOLUTELY NOTHING (my opinion only :) ), suck it up and live with it, the system is not getting better. thank god for the internet, at least one can get a real education these days. (also proves that GRADES don't mean shit)

      just my $.02

    35. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have a problem with the D grade? Learn a little self awareness and realize that while you were showing off what you knew about govenrment it's fairly clear you weren't learning anything. Who knows what particular lessions this class was trying to teach, stupid or subtle you weren't listening and can not relay them. D is a more than fair grade for a dumbass show off.

    36. Re:Another option? by bmw · · Score: 1

      Actually, the fact that AIDS kills so slowly is exactly what makes it so bad. People may get it and not even know they have it for years, allowing them to spread it to others during that time. It's pretty scary stuff. I even hear that some countries have near 50% of their population infected now.

    37. Re:Another option? by Jedi+Creed · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you learned the best real-life lesson of all, then.

      Your quest for power, control, and victory was quite successful. Your quest to convince the teacher you deserved an A failed. And you failed in other ways.

      Perhaps the teacher saw that you were shooting for the wrong goal. When I see congresspersons working together, trying to overcome differences, listen to, and yes, be fair to each other, I feel hopeful for the country's future.

      When I see bickering, power plays, and pork barrelling, I conclude that some congressperson may have won the day, but the country was the loser.

      Were I that teacher, I would not have given you an A either.

      --
      Ready are you? What know you of ready? For eight hundred years have I trained Jedi. - Yoda
    38. Re:Another option? by Tackhead · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The Diplomatic Pouch is a good starting point.

      If a turn lasts an hour, you'll spend 40-50 minutes talking strategy with your enemies and/or allies. (i.e. doing "diplomacy" in the real-world sense of the word). This is the meaty (and the fun) part of the game.

      Then you write down your orders for your troops, and everyone reveals their orders at once (usually to cries of "you bastards!", "oops!", or both) When the orders are unsealed, it's deterministic - no random elements; things "work" or "don't work" based on whether you've been able to persuade your allies to go along with your plan, or misled your adversaries into traps.

      Real-world example - History of WW2/Europe written as though it were a game of "Diplomacy":

      Game begins in '39. Germany/Italy tells Russia they want Poland, but not to worry, that's as far as they'll go if Russia stays out of it. (Stalin to Hitler: "OK, we'll sign your non-aggression pact. You stay out of Russia, we let you take Poland.")

      Germamy is then able to concentrate on wiping out France in '40, and do serious hurt to Britain without worrying about an attack from the East. (DeGaulle to Hitler: "Oops.")

      Confident that Western Europe is now safely held, Germany goes for global domination (vs. splitting Europe between Germany and Russia) and backstabs Russia in '41. (Stalin to Hitler: "You bastard!")

      As a result, Russia/US/UK form an alliance which wipes out Germany/Italy in '44-45. (Russians take out Germans from Moscow to Germany, US/UK takes out Germans from France to Germany. UK takes over North Africa, and jumps from there to wipe out Italy. Mussolini to Italy: "Oops. *chokeswingswingswing*")

      Germany's toast. With only three players left on the board, US/UK briefly consider backstabbing Russia in '46, but choose stalemate instead of going for global conquest. (Players to each other: "Fuggit. We've had enough. Let's go for beers.")

      Game ends in '45. Europe remains split between NATO and the Warsaw Pact for 50 years.

      Thankfully, all three leaders in '45 were smart enough to realize the difference between bits of wood on a cardboard map and 50 million dead (on all sides) plus another 20-30 million to "finish the game".

      (And also thankfully, when you're playing Diplomacy, it is just bits of wood on a cardboard map, so you can just "go for world domination" with a clean conscience :-)

    39. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's so funny!

      You're complaining because you got fucked the same way you were fucking everybody else?

      Looks like you really deserved the D, or perhaps even an F! You ran around screwing everybody else and didn't expect to take it in the ass? You didn't learn fucking thing did you? Just like a fucking Libertarian in an econ class.

      Rember payback is a bith. It usually comes back worse than its given.

      Education should be free as in beer and religion should be free as in speach

    40. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sarcasm on

      I agree with you. 200 Billion, not one person more. You're a god. Thank you for the enlightenment.

      Sarcasm off

      The earth IS crowded. Perhaps you have not visited poorer countries, but there are people dying in the streets, people dying of hunger in Africa. You don't see it on the news anymore, since it's somehow not worthy of our attention anymore. But it's happening NOW, every day and every hour of the day.

      Yes, by everybody becoming vegetarian and bettering food-distribution, we can theoretically overcome hunger today. But that is not the real problem. The real problem is uneducated and poor people bringing in tons of new children into this world. It's not their fault, it's a way of assuring your old-age in a non-welfare society. It's been this way in America and Europe before we got rich.

      Then again, that is not the real problem. The real problem is that the poor countries are being kept poor, so that we don't have to share what we got with them. The REAL problem is our desire for new gadgets, expensive toys and entertainment, we don't really give a fuck about anyone else.

      And we think it makes us happy. THAT SHOULD make you sad.

    41. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Not that I'm complaining, of course. Someone in my country sat down, and, thinking about _my_ generation, said, "How can we make life better for these people?"

      They came to the conclusion that killing what will probably be billions of people was the way to do it.

      Well, that's what my favorite historical leader (who's name I won't mention for fear of setting off the "Godwin's Law" Trolls) tried to do. He wanted to make life better for his people by cleansing Europe of juden and slavs and gypsies, thus creating a true homeland for the Aryan Man. Had he succeeded Europe would today be the center of global civilization and the most advanced nation on earth--and it would have cost less in lives then what the U.S. is doing in the Turd World with it's AIDS virus! Ah well, I guess that the victors really do write the history books, eh?

    42. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you. However, there IS a big problem with having an exponential growth in a biological system. It shouldn't take a genius to point out that SOMETHING must happen to the growth, or SOMETHING really bad is very likely to happen to the population.

    43. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The WHO predicts that within 20 years most African countries will be gone because they will not have enough people to defend its governement against unfriendly countries near by.
      The WHO also predicts that the population in Afrika will decrease with 80%, only the wealthy that can buy medicine for HIV repression will survive.
      Ironically it is the US that should get most of the HIV to do any good, hopefully the HIV virus will transmute into something airborn; only then will our planet be saved from humanity.

    44. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You get what you pay for.

      proves that GRADES don't mean shit

      I suggest you try and get a job at McKinsey and Associates or Boston Consulting. Thensay that again.

      Perhaps you get get your education on / because we're all a bunch of fucking geniuses and are allways right.

    45. Re:Another option? by pumkinut · · Score: 1

      Jesus, people like you give stupidity a bad name. He was supposed to get things accomplished, which he did. He operated on "real-world" terms. So what if he didn't play nice and fair, last time I checked most things didn't operate that way.

      The teacher is fucking him over because she didn't like his tactics. Flagrantly biased grading like that is even worse than the poster's off-color actions. She was supposed to be teaching principles of economics and government, not giving them an ethics lecture. The poster was being thoughtful in planning, and creative in execution, both of which were not deserving of a D.

      Had the teaching prefaced both excercises with a warning that those who didn't play nice would not fare well, then the grade is justified. Simply not liking the poster's technique and punishing him because of it is wrong.

      The teacher obviously has her head up her ass, and a big fucking chip on her shoulder.

      BTW, your overuse of profanity and inability to spell or type does not give your opinion much credence. Proofreading is your friend.

      --
      "It's hard to be a man when there's a gun in your hand"
    46. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever hear of abortion?

    47. Re:Another option? by linzeal · · Score: 1
      "Men producing wealth"

      Wealth produces nothing in and of itself. That is the reason the rich are so useless. A person picking beans in kenya is worth more to the entire human race than 10,000 rich people.

    48. Re:Another option? by leereyno · · Score: 2

      You do realize that in order to teach school you pretty much have to be a left wing looney nowadays.

      Being a schoolteacher ranks up there with the profession of social work in terms of susceptibility to "liberal" bullshit. There are exceptions of course, but just how long do they last in the teaching profession? I know I wouldn't last a year in a system dominated by an intellectually bankrupt ideology.

      Lee

      --
      Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
    49. Re:Another option? by cobar · · Score: 2

      That reminds me of an excellent "peace in the Middle East" conference we once ran in History in high school. My group represented Israel, so we went and solicited aid from the United States and the Arab confederation. In exchange for returning the captured areas in Syria and elsewhere, they agreed to let us get rid of the Palestinians. The U.N. also agreed to let us manage our own affairs, so we had the support of all the other parties present.

      We then proceeded to pull out paper guns and assassinate the Palestinian delegates, followed by declaring the beginning of a World War III-ish jihad against them. Needless to say the teacher was not impressed and the conference was ended quite abruptly. I was proud of our success, as actually tackling the relatively intractable problems of the Middle East with a bunch of not particularly politically aware or bright students in a generic high school class is quite a bit more difficult and less exciting.

    50. Re:Another option? by cobar · · Score: 2

      One could argue that since he sought to be a Libertarian that he didn't want to see laws passed. The problem certainly is that everyone feels that the government can fix a problem that it should. By creating gridlock, you force coalition forming and cooperation so that all sides must be partially appeased for bills to pass.

      It's unfortunate that many congressmen don't work for the betterment of the country, but reelection is the name of the game. Likewise, power play politics are necessary. The lessons of the young Republican majority back in 1994 are enough to demonstrate that. They arrived fresh and motivated to do things different (welfare reform, balance the budget, make congress subject to the general public's laws) and because they failed to play the political game well enough (or overplayed), they lost the momentum necessary to cut through the bureaucracy and get things done. Gradually, they bucked up and rejoined the political process and began playing the game the same way as everybody else.

      There are only a few ways to address these problems: term limits, campaign finance reform, limiting federal powers. It is necessary to get new thinkers in who are more interested in ideas than the way that Washington works. Likewise, decentralizing power puts control closer to the citizens affected, reduces abuse, and simply means less government control of our lives.

      The problem is that every one of those is counter to what will get you elected. And with the critical mass of entrenched congressman, you would need a significant public movement to see such change. And striking laws from the books, doing less with government, and making people solve their own problems gets few people into office. Accepting term limits curbs the representative's ability to get the legislation you want passed and removes power from people who assumed their office because they wanted that power.

      Politics should not be a business one can spend their life doing. Politicians should have go back to the real world every now and then for a breath of fresh air and to have contact with the people they are making laws for. The entrenchment of power leads to people who have to think inside the box, rather than what the box should be. Bring politics to a local level where the ordinary guy has nearly as much ability to argue his points as the government official.

    51. Re:Another option? by scaryman · · Score: 0

      so tell me, by how much has the average consumption of resources gone down over the last 100 years as technology has advanced?
      and how come the US and europe with our advanced efficent technologies uses more resources per person than coutries with less efficent tech. ?
      when did our consumption of resources start decreasing?

    52. Re:Another option? by bankman · · Score: 1

      My econ teacher (referenced above) was also my government teacher. We had a Mock Congress. I chose to be a Republican after losing a week-long fight to be a Libertarian ("No, we're only doing the two real parties", she says).

      Brilliant teaching. Send her back to "democracy for dummies", but then again, too many people still believe that the US is the most democratic place in the world with only two major parties. Remember, that's only one more than in the former GDR (there were more parties, but since the elections were always rigged, all the non-socialist parties combined never got more than 2% of the vote. It's less obvious in the US, UK, Germany etc.).

      On the other hand, there is no system that I can think of, that I would describe as a functioning democracy, *sigh*. Karl Popper summed it up best when he said that the benefits of democracy are not that you can elect your government, but that you can _dismiss_ it.

      --
      I feel so sig.
    53. Re:Another option? by jolshefsky · · Score: 1
      Actually, as [possibly] engineered diseases go, AIDS isn't is fairly good. A friend of mine and I were talking about the worst ... best ... er ... most effective disease you could engineer. We concluded that one that was highly contagious for a long period, had a reasonably long incubation period (i.e. 5 years or so ... long enough for the contagious properties to take effect) then quickly deadly. AIDS misses the mark, because it is not highly contagious (as diseases go, it's not, believe it or not ... consider the flu by comparison) it does have a long incubation period, but it is not very quick about being deadly.

      Lovely sentiment, eh?

      --
      --- Jason Olshefsky

      Karma: Poser (mostly affected by adding this line long after everyone else did)

    54. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that comment is so completely short-sighted, myopic, arrogant and selfish you * MUST * be american...

    55. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If one of those 10,000 'rich people' invents a machine capable of picking beans at a rate of 10,000 Kenyans, who is more worthy? Himself, or the bean-picking Kenyans his invention will ultimately displace?

      The real issue that should be addressed are the circumstances around why the Kenyan wasn't able to design such a machine himself. The reasons, of course, are clear. The solutions are not.

    56. Re:Another option? by stefanvt · · Score: 1

      This reminds of a book we had to read in high school. In that book they put the whole African continent to sleep (through poisoned food relief) as it was deemed impossible to rescue.

      If we look at the world today this solution wouldn't work any more as Asia is also densely populated albeit that they don't have the same famine problems they have in Africa.

      I think it is time some governments start reconsidering their viewpoints about birth control.

    57. Re:Another option? by Lord_Slepnir · · Score: 1

      One time in history class we were studying labor negotiations. The deal was that we'd break into teams of four, with two management and two workers. My group was the 'left over' group and we had 5 people. Because on the 'contract' forms our teacher gave us there was only 4 slots for signatures, we were able to manipulate the three labor people. Two of them would say that they'd sign for X amount of money, then the third person would say that they'd sign for (x-1) amount of money, and so we'd tell the other two that the first one to agree to (x-1) amount would get his signature on the form, then the person who was slow would say he'd go for (x-2).....we actually worked the salaries down to $3 a day before the class ended and we had to sign contract. We lost two letter grades because we shafted the worers so bad.

    58. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rome?

    59. Re:Another option? by CharlieG · · Score: 2
      The world is limited. How come you folks think it's resources are practically unlimited and only limited by one's wits and productivity?

      Ah, the old "It's a fixed size pie" argument. The same one Malthus used, and the typical socialist one. It doesn't take into account productivity gains.
      One of the interesting factoids of the Colonial era is that the Spanish believed in the "Fixed Pie" argument, where the English believed in the "Increasing Wealth" argument (aka, a rising tide floats all boats). This lead the Spanish to go and grab as much gold as possible, exploit the locals, and massive inflation in Spain. In the meantime, the English expolited the resources and labor to create the Industrial Revolution, and improve everyones quality of life. It has been proven over and over again that the pie can grow and shrink. The WWF doesn't seem to understand that, and neither do you
      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    60. Re:Another option? by scaryman · · Score: 0

      how is this offtopic?
      i quote "So, enlighten us, what is this maximum number the earth can support? I want a NUMBER. And if you can't give me one, how do you know we are past it?"
      he wanted a number, i give him a number and it's off topic.
      he ask's a question that cannot be answered with an exact number and my karma heads towards the freezing point of helium, oh well , shit happens

    61. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It seems like we'd have a lot more luck if people would just start figuring out the most humane way to "thin the herd" in advance, instead of pretending you can stop me from buying that nice huge plasma-screen HDTV I saw today. *Drool*

      How about we start with you?

    62. Re:Another option? by colmore · · Score: 2

      I too played Diplomacy with my highschool history teacher. Sadly I didn't do so well, and neither did my teacher.

      Everyone was afraid of my teacher because he is a very smart man and military historian. Everyone was afraid of me because I was the only one who had played Diplomacy before. Nobody would form an alliance between either of us, and as England and Turkey we couldn't do much to help each other out. Diplomacy is a funny game, if you get known as being too good of a player (or even suspected as such) your chances decrease dramatically.

      --
      In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
    63. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The earth IS crowded. Perhaps you have not visited poorer countries, but there are people dying in the streets, people dying of hunger in Africa. You don't see it on the news anymore, since it's somehow not worthy of our attention anymore. But it's happening NOW, every day and every hour of the day.

      This is more due to a corrupt leadership that hoards the food for themselves than any perceived lack of resources. A starving populace is less able to revolt against tyrany than a well fed one.

    64. Re:Another option? by El+Puerco+Loco · · Score: 1

      The size of the pie is fixed, it's just that Malthus was not aware of the potential of some of out unexploited resources, namely oil. Basically, oil allowed us to expand food production far beyond what would have been possible without it. In a very real sense, oil is food. Once oil production starts to decline, prices for all goods including food will skyrocket, unless an energy source is found to take its place. the result of this is that nations like the U.S. will cease to be food exporters and countries that rely on imports of food will starve. it won't be the end of the world, just the end of a large portion of those who occupy it. as always, the market will correct itself.

    65. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree about the timespan thing, all those AIDS sufferers clogging up the healthcare system.

      I think AIDS is pretty clever contagion-wise though. By primarily transmitting through sexual interaction and mother-child the disease can be fairly isolated within economic, social and ethnic groups.

      If you're planning to reduce the population of the world you don't want to realese something like the 1917 flu that could get you and yours!

      ja1Z3d.

    66. Re:Another option? by carlos_benj · · Score: 1

      BTW, your overuse of profanity and inability to spell or type does not give your opinion much credence.

      Whereas your judicious use of profanity elevates your opinion to stratospheric heights?

      --

      --

      As a matter of fact, I am a lawyer. But I play an actor on TV.

    67. Re:Another option? by CharlieG · · Score: 2

      Wrong, it's not fixed - read Adam Smith

      This was said in the 70s too

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    68. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, this really was an object lesson in pragmatism. The real "real-world" terms are that the teacher is the source of all grades. If you want good grades, please the teacher. If you want to control which imaginary bills get passed, that's a totally different objective.
      You don't win Diplomacy by playing fair. Neither should you expect the teacher to play fair.

    69. Re:Another option? by MarcOiL · · Score: 1

      This shows your strategy wasn't as good as you think it was.

      Your strategy was good for the real Senate, but you were playing a mock-up.

      When you play any strategy game, you don't concentrate on the real world, but instead you try to win using the rules of the game.

      If you wanted to win, you should have played Democrat, increased the education budget 10x and give shelter to the poor decreasing the military expenses.

      That should've given you A+.

      --
      If I have posted far, it is because I replied to giants.
    70. Re:Another option? by carlos_benj · · Score: 1

      The size of the pie is fixed...

      Well, yes and no. The size of the ball is pretty well fixed, but this 'pie' can continually reproduce some of its resources (food) but not others (water).

      Once oil production starts to decline, prices for all goods including food will skyrocket, unless an energy source is found to take its place.

      And there's the key. These doomsayers paint a black and white picture and don't take into account other abundant resources. Just as oil upped production in the past, other technologies may very well allow us to increase yields in food supplies, tap solar, wind, geothermal, etc. for energy resources and many other possibilities we've yet to work out. Far too many variables exist for these to be hard predictions.

      --

      --

      As a matter of fact, I am a lawyer. But I play an actor on TV.

    71. Re:Another option? by BlueFashoo · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of my high school history class. We did the whole congress thing and somebody came up with a mandatory community service bill where everyone over some age was required to do 10 hours of community service per year. It was well intentioned but I immediately shot it down due to it being slavery and therefore unconstitutional.

      --
      Nice Marmot
    72. Re:Another option? by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      Yes... thank god for the internet, where one can learn perfect grammar, punctuation and spelling.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    73. Re:Another option? by bmud · · Score: 1

      Sure. Imagine that when you were an infant, your parents were killed in a flood, leaving you to starve to death shortly afterwards. Would you say you "chose to starve to death", or were you simply too inept to survive?

      I would say that your society made choices, the abundance of which are inspired by personal greed or religious fanaticisms that led to your demise. While the child isn't personally culpable, a person in the immediate vincinity is. Again, the blood is on the hands of a man who either chose the death or is inept.

    74. Re:Another option? by mofolotopo · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but that will carry a lot less weight without John Entwhistle.

    75. Re:Another option? by bluGill · · Score: 2

      Much as I dislike the man, all evidence suggest Stalin knew (or suspected) all along what Hitler was planning on doing, (after all Stalin was far more evil than Hitler) but pretended to go along with Hitler in the early years because he has more pressing concerns (like he couldn't have held Poland anyway, his army wasn't exactly the best)

      What became Nato suspected that the Warsaw pact would become evil, but they also didn't have the resources to be sure to win. Germany had to be defeated (the US could have perhaps stayed out, concentratin on just Japan...), because they were attacking. Russia did not attack directly, so they were not as great a concern even though Stalin was more evil. Of course like you said, but '46 everyone was tired of war, England had a country to rebuild, and most of the rest of Europe was in worse shape.

      Of course when playing a board game everything is difference. That million lives lost on paper is just on paper, it doesn't represent a few million crying relatives.

    76. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got a 'D' because you werent a team player and you abused the system. The object of the assignment wasnt to prove how to exploit the system to your own benefit..it was to show you how to work within the system to get things done. Now go back and learn to be a grownup you moron.

    77. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well, yes and no. The size of the ball is pretty well fixed, but this 'pie' can continually reproduce some of its resources (food) but not others (water).

      First, the ball is not fixed. Every time we make a hole or a hill we increase the surface area. And we can mine asteroids with a little effort -- a single asteroid has more carbon or metals than we have available on the Earth's crust.

      There is plenty of water, but it either is too salty or not where some people live. Salt can be removed. Pipes can move water. They just need some mix of land, resources and energy. Or just move everyone to Texas so there is less plumbing to do. Is it my fault that not everyone moves to Texas?

      Once oil production starts to decline, prices for all goods including food will skyrocket, unless an energy source is found to take its place.

      Oil production might not decline. Oil comes from a huge amount of carbon within the Earth. Right now we might be using it faster than it is trickling up. But those who know it doesn't come from fossils might find it in places where it wasn't being looked for in the past. We might find ways to speed up how fast oil fields are refilled. We might find a way to inject carbon far enough down to natural oil faster (faster than dumping carbon where it gets sucked into the mangle and comes back up in millions of years). We might use solar, fission, or fusion energy to cook carbon into fuel (if energy is cheap enough, we can pull carbon from the air to make the more portable energy source known as fuel).

    78. Re:Another option? by SEWilco · · Score: 1

      Of course, the Club of Rome in the 1970s knew where Malthus had made mistakes. According to their "Limits To Growth", we ran out of oil...um.. now. Good thing my wife filled up the gas tank yesterday.

    79. Re:Another option? by thetman · · Score: 1

      "The earth IS crowded"
      No it isn't.

      "there are people dying in the streets"
      Is this your proof that the earth is crowded?

      Eating meat is not the cause of hunger worldwide, it is corrupt and incompetent leaders.

      "The real problem is that the poor countries are being kept poor"
      True in a sense, but who is keeping them poor? Developed countries according to you I bet.

    80. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The population is growing at 2x every 35 to 40 years at its current rate....thanks to our stupidity and uncaring attitudes.

      Uncaring? What mother wants to have ten children because only a couple will survive?
      Stupidity? No, ignorance. What reduces birth rates is education. Birth rates drop whenever education improves.

      ...it takes hundreds of thousands of years for the plant and animal material to become what we know as crude oil

      Oil comes from deep in the earth, from carbon outgassing from the huge amount within the Earth. Coal comes from fossils. Oil and methane have the wrong chemical content to be from animals and plants. And maybe it takes millions of years, or maybe it takes months -- once oil precursor starts trickling up we don't know what happens. We do know we can make artificial fuel with a cheap enough energy source.

    81. Re:Another option? by Zordak · · Score: 1, Troll
      ok lets face it teachers are stuipid, i mean they are teachers, i.e. they couldn't get a real job
      Please, please, please tell me that this is a troll. If not, has it ever occurred to you that perhaps the root of your poor educational experience is not that you have had bad teachers, but simply that you are stupid?

      a problem of dumb illiterate fucks
      Perhaps you feel that being able to spell "31337 h4X0r" constitutes literacy? Whatever your definition is, it obviously does not include a firm grasp of the English language. For all of your ridicule of educators, I certainly hope that you are literate in some other language, because if you are not, I'm afraid I'll have to repeat my assertion that you are stupid.
      also proves that GRADES don't mean shit
      Despite your stunningly well-constructed argument, I'm not quite sure what it is you believe "proves" this. At face value, it would appear to be simply a convenient argument for someone who is accustomed to receiving poor grades, but still likes to imagine he is somehow intellectually superior. Do you realize that while you sit and whine about how your report cards do not accurately reflect your intelligence, the content of your whining removes all doubt? You are, indeed, a perfect example of the sad, degraded state the world would be in without good teachers. Next time you feel inclined to post, perhaps you could keep your "$.02" to yourself and put it in a piggy bank. You can get a good used grammar book for around $10. I'd leave calculating how many posts you would need to keep to yourself before you could afford a grammar book as an exercise for you to complete on your own, but I don't want to strain your intellect, so I'll offer you this hint: The answer is 500. I'll be looking forward to an intelligent comment from you sometime after your 501st inclination to post.
      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    82. Re:Another option? by Comatose-M · · Score: 1

      I know it's too late to do anything about it now, but if this should happen to anyone reading this in the future, explain to your teacher that you thought you were taking a politics class, not a class on how to hold hands and cooperate.

    83. Re:Another option? by Peyna · · Score: 2

      Eating meat is not the cause of hunger worldwide, it is corrupt and incompetent leaders.

      While it may not be "THE" cause of hunger worldwide, it is quite well known that meat-based diets sustain far less people than grain-based diets. Thus, if the entire population were to switch to a grain-based diet, the earth could likely support more people. If you want real population control, force everyone to eat meat, or even better, cannibalism. Get the least bang for your energy buck!

      --
      What?
    84. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While it may not be "THE" cause of hunger worldwide, it is quite well known that meat-based diets sustain far less people than grain-based diets

      Not only is it not "THE" cause of hunger, it isn't even "A" cause of hunger. Never; not a single time in history has eating a meat-based diet caused a famine. Ever. Humans need meat (or at least animal products) to survive. Those that do not eat animal products begin to suffer from B-12 related issues (vision loss, neural degeneration, insanity, etc).

    85. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you. 200 Billion, not one person more. You're a god.

      Yes. Yes, I am. But 200 Billion is only to support a comfortable standard of living; if you're willing to put up with a bit of crowding (for example, an urban environment for the majority of the population) the number would be somewhat higher.

      Thank you for the enlightenment.

      I think you're mistaken. You're not on my list of enlightened people.

    86. Re:Another option? by Peyna · · Score: 2

      *ahem* BS. You can survive without any animal products. B12 exists in soil, and this is how many other herbivores get their B12, by eating plants directly out of the soil. It is entirely possible to sustain oneself without ill health effects without eating any animal products. (Except maybe a few microorganisms/small animals that may be in the soil).

      --
      What?
    87. Re:Another option? by ahde · · Score: 2

      What's wrong with a person picking beans in California? I'll tell you what's wrong. He's Mexican and you're racist. Because there are Mexicans in your hometown, and maybe you don't like their food or their music, or their dirty clothes or their criminal activity. They're too real to be romantic.

    88. Re:Another option? by ahde · · Score: 2

      I was proud of our success, as actually tackling the relatively intractable problems of the Middle East with a bunch of not particularly politically aware or bright students in a generic high school class is quite a bit more difficult and less exciting.

      Now you know how the real Israeli's feel dealing with the rest of us.

    89. Re:Another option? by ahde · · Score: 2

      human population has the potential to grow exponentially. That's a fact. In fact, it's held true over the long run in most times and places. It's part of the state of being alive. Probably inherent in the definition of being a living organism.

      But what do we eat? (Hint: it isn't gold, or oil)

      That's right kids. Other living organisms. Plants and Animals. Which, coincidentally or not, also have a tendency to grow exponentially.

    90. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so tell me, by how much has the average consumption of resources gone down over the last 100 years as technology has advanced?

      So tell me, why do you assume that consuming fewer resources is GOOD? It isn't.

      and how come the US and europe with our advanced efficent technologies uses more resources per person than coutries with less efficent tech. ?

      Because they're illiterate barbarians and we're not.

      And before you start going off about "racism", you'd best look at which one of us wants to not only keep the Third World down, but drag the West down to that level as well.

      I'd be overjoyed to see the Third World living a Western lifestyle.

      Too bad the Greenies won't let them have it. They're always going off about the joys of the "simple life", frothing about "consumerism", and equating deprivation with a moral life.

      Yet I don't see many of them emigrating to Haiti or Pakistan. I wonder why that is?

    91. Re:Another option? by manyoso · · Score: 2

      Damn, are you a dense motherfucker! The poster was trying to point out that the guy didn't _learn_ a thing, because he assumed the teacher would "play fair". Well, guess what, as he should have learned by the way he played the game, life _isn't_ fair! The teacher didn't play fair with his grade, just as he didn't play fair with the game. Ironic isn't it?!

    92. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ironically it is the US that should get most of the HIV to do any good,"

      Is this just general hatred of the US? It certainly has no basis in fact. The US, like most developed countries would have negative population growth without immigration.

      Do the math. 5% of the world population using more than their "fair share" of resources, or 75% percent of the population growing at an exponential rate. Which is the real problem here?

    93. Re:Another option? by John,+the+HERO · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but plant products don't grill nearly as well. . . A nice rare veggieburger is not my idea of a good meal. :)

      Oh, I'm just looking to piss people off today. .

      --
      ACs, Trolls, Flamebaits, and Offtopics at +6 moderation.
    94. Re:Another option? by coastwalker · · Score: 1

      I'm gonna laugh my tits off from my wheelchair when the Chinese finaly put a man on Mars, melt the polar icecaps to irrigate China and accidentally flood the USA.

      Competition is what you want and competition is what your gonna get - just remember that your not guaranteed to win forever.

      Its also an interesting fact that most of the wars in the world are between countries with highly elevated numbers of people in the 15 - 25 age bracket. Young people have always been easy to motivate to fight - and conveniently they are expendable - For example just ask Iraq and Iran how many hundreds of thousands of youths they slaughtered in their WW1 trench war style confrontation from a few years back. Cut back the overpopulation problem nicely though.

      --
      Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
    95. Re:Another option? by coastwalker · · Score: 1

      Well said. Made me laugh too

      --
      Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
    96. Re:Another option? by coastwalker · · Score: 1

      Rather teaches the lesson of what strategy is all about. It starts with planning, first define an objective then determine the optimum course to achieve the objective.

      The boasts here telling stories of how political role playing games were won by deceit show only one thing. The primacy of win at all cost philosophy. Which in this case has actually blinded the participants to the meaning of the word 'win'. Winning a political role playing game means getting re-elected and trying to make some effort to improve what you have been put in charge of. Running a large business similarly means earning a big fuck off cut for yourself whilst trying to improve the function and value of the business.

      Without the improvements then politics and business decline. Doesnt anyone know about the decline of the Roman Empire? Strikes me that without some pretty sharp changes the whole American dream thing is going to ooze down the drain. Maybe we would be better off with absolute dictators like Sadam Hussain - its far more likely that he would have the boss of Enron shot for disgracing the country than 'democracy' is going to imprision any of the wrongdoers at Enron

      --
      Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
    97. Re:Another option? by Jedi+Creed · · Score: 1

      Flagrantly biased grading like that...

      But then, what grading it not biased? Thirst for power does not make a good politician. Working for consensus, playing fair, etc, are things I look for in one.

      It seems your definition of fair grading would be: get as much power as possible.

      Where the teacher might have been looking for something like: Act like a good politian; make the world a better place.

      You might argue: but he gave the class a real-world lesson about how dirty politics can be. I would add that a classroom is also a part of the real world. The D might have been a little excessive, but since when are we required to separate ethics from politics?

      --
      Ready are you? What know you of ready? For eight hundred years have I trained Jedi. - Yoda
    98. Re:Another option? by Zordak · · Score: 1

      And still, I get moderated as a "troll." I suppose the illiterate must band together if they are to accomplish anything.

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    99. Re:Another option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with such thinking should be clear. Nerds are not the toughest, and after the fallout settles and the debris is left, the strongest men will eat while the skinniest(read: game players, coders, and the like) will be killed off by the big guys.

      Time to order that Bowflex...

    100. Re:Another option? by subtleluck · · Score: 1

      hmm..i'm glad you took the time out of your day to set me staight, however although well said interestingly your argument doesn't apply to me, that's not to say you don't make a good point. i have to agree with you that my grammer is SHIT and i can't spell to save my life, but there are these things called grammer checkers and spell checkers for things that are important, and slashdot isn't on that list, however if i was to nitpick about your grammer and spelling i'm sure i'd find some run on sentances here and there.

      I still stand firm on my belief that grades don't mean shit and teachers are (mostly) dumbasses as far as teaching is concerned. highschool teachers tend to be too dumb to teach well, and college profs don't care enough. as it happens my grades thoughout college were pretty good (3.3 with double major math/comp sci, [notice how english isn't one of em] ) BUT that is because i actually liked what i was doing, i learned everything on my own with only slight guidence from proffs, and some shitty proffs actually screwed me over in getting a good education. now take some poor schmuck who hasn't been motivated by any subject matter in his life (lack of any good teachers to motivate him) and doesn't care to learn on his own, because he's not motivated, well he's bound to fuck up in school all the way, does that mean he's a moron, NO. how often does this happen, YOU WOULD BE SURPRISED. the youth from poor families can't really be intellectually motivated by their parents, their parents don't know shit(and not cuz they're stupid), that's why they're poor, and no teachers to motivate them they are bound to fuck up, does that mean they're stuipid, NO.
      one of my college proffs (great proff) once told me, that most high school math teachers are college math majors who don't really like math, don't do good at it, but have nowhere else to turn for a job.

      lastly if you didn't notice, this whole reply is a giant run on sentance in case you think i didn't notice :), but i'm not publishing here.
      and perhaps you missed the point of this thead, the parent thread nicely pointed out how his teacher is a blatent idiot, all i did was agree that although it's rare for teachers to be THAT dumb, it happens. if you wanted to argue my point, perhaps you shoulda done it in a more logical, less name calling way.

    101. Re:Another option? by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

      You claim to be a Libertarian in a descendant post, but you're promoting Malthusian scenarios? Somehow I don't find that consistent at all.

    102. Re:Another option? by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      The US decided in 1974 (report for NSSM200) that the world's population was unsustainable (specifically, a threat to national security), and (very likely) engineered AIDS as a fix (since it was clear birth control programs would be anti-American in the practical sense that the US couldn't use all the resources any more).

      What nonsense. Nature has had deadly sexually transmitted diseases for millions (perhaps billions) of years, but of course it was the US government that created AIDS. Obviously it couldn't be nature. Do you think Ebola is a failed government attempt as well?

    103. Re:Another option? by lommer · · Score: 1

      You missed the best and most masterful act of diplomacy of that era:

      game starts in '37 with the spanish civil war. Hitler and the allies both swear that they will not intervene. In the end hitler orders german troops into spain to support Franco, then claims they were acting of there own free will.

      Hitler also remilitarizes the rheinland on a "militarize first, ask questions later." He states that it was germany's right, and sweet talks chamberlin into going along.

      Then Hitler has a conference with the other "big fish" and, agrees to be more pacifist in his policies if Czechloslovakia hands over the sudetnland to germany. Everyone agrees - Except for the czech's, but that doesn't matter because Hitler didn't invite them to the conference, and now the three big powers of western europe are telling them to do it.

      Then, to top it all off, he turns around and backstabs them all in '39.

      Really, when compared to a game of diplomacy, it was the prewar years and '39-'42, after that it was mostly fate playing itself out.

  9. I hope so by Glanz · · Score: 1

    ....so all this idiocy we call mankind will cease. I personally, can do without mankind, or if you prefer, humankind.

    --
    Rien n'est plus beau que le creux du 0.
    1. Re:I hope so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine, then kill yourself.

      But you're not taking me with you, angst-boy.

    2. Re:I hope so by TWR · · Score: 2
      Unless you're a typing monkey, I take it that you're going to kill yourself soon, yes?

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

    3. Re:I hope so by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 1

      Spend all your time with handkind, do you?

    4. Re:I hope so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mankind? I thought this was a WWF press release!

    5. Re:I hope so by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1

      Ahhh but with suicide you only kill yourself. Commit mass homicide and you've done much more for the reduction of mankind.

      Ok everybody, it's time again to spin the...
      Wheel! Of! Genocide!

      -Tyler

      --
      Happy people make bad consumers.
    6. Re:I hope so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, he's a dickhead. Look at his nym.

    7. Re:I hope so by Glanz · · Score: 1

      his was a free Apocalypse PR..

      --
      Rien n'est plus beau que le creux du 0.
    8. Re:I hope so by Glanz · · Score: 1

      Yep... Yo MaMa is exceptionally good at that!
      But in spite of that. I do not feel any pressure about the end of OURKIND. Good riddance!

      --
      Rien n'est plus beau que le creux du 0.
    9. Re:I hope so by Glanz · · Score: 1

      Well, between DICKHEAD and FARTFACE, duly pimpled by surging hormones, I prefer the first asshole, but then again, I should be kind to those who have genetic handicaps.. So I forgive your idiocy.

      --
      Rien n'est plus beau que le creux du 0.
    10. Re:I hope so by Glanz · · Score: 1

      Ohhhhhhhhhh
      The pain of it allllllllll!!!!!!!!!!!
      Thank you!!!!
      I'll do that right away!!!!!!

      --
      Rien n'est plus beau que le creux du 0.
  10. WWF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm. Just like a wrestling company to say everyone should use less so they become weak, then the wrestlers can take over. You know that's what they're planning.

  11. The response this deserves... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!!!

    Damn that lameness filter...

  12. predictions... by copycatjsh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    so let me think... first they said we'd be gone by 1985, then it was 2000, now its 2050? hrm...

    I love reading about our doom... its so funny.

    --
    I feel like I'm diagonally parked in a parallel universe
    1. Re:predictions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      get ready for -1 Troll moderation. You're not being sensitive to the needs of our Mother planet and will be punished by enlightened moderators enforcing the current political, nay, environmental correctness.

    2. Re:predictions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This must be from the enviromental witnesses.

    3. Re:predictions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know why people think that some large herd of humanity is any more prone to accepting radical environmentalism than radical conservatism. Both are stupid and the majority of people find them equally offensive.

    4. Re:predictions... by letxa2000 · · Score: 3, Informative
      so let me think... first they said we'd be gone by 1985, then it was 2000, now its 2050? hrm...

      WWF is another environmentalist group that takes turns with others in releasing "impending disaster" type predictions. This is still somewhat "hip" but I get the feeling that even the media is getting a little tired of the gloom-and-doom-oops-we-were-wrong-again.

      The good news is that, for the most part, no-one really listens to these fools. They see the panda logo, hear their spew, and then say "Oh, that's too bad" and buy an SUV. Good! That's about the level of importance that should be attached to their rhetoric.

    5. Re:predictions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually people have been prophesizing our doom since there were people. Its part ouf our nature.

    6. Re:predictions... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      It's sad that this sort of agendized research discredits the message of more clear-headed environmentalists. The report is just bad science. I mean, calculating the number of new Earths that would need to be colonized is just silly. Such planets just aren't out there, and certainly aren't accessible enough to make a meaningful difference. The authors of the study knew this, and were just using the idea as a cheap debating trick: Claim that these are the only two possible solutions, prove one unworkable, and then just leave people to assume that the other solution must be the only solution.

      But let's not forget that humanity really is doing things to the planet that have never been done before. Are we doing irreparable harm? Are some of our interventions actually beneficial to the environment? There aren't any certain answers (unless you talk to the WWF or Rush Limbaugh). But as our technological prowess improves, our ability to alter the planet will only become more pronounced. Reducing consumption is just a way of saying, "We've decided to proceed with caution.

      Now, environmentalists have been prophesying the collapse of the ecosystem for decades now. But are they predicting something inevitable (the volcano will erupt), something mythical (Jesus is coming, so look busy), or something possible yet avoidable? I don't think that we should put the brakes on all human activity every time someone paints a doomsday scenario. On the other hand, let's not turn buying an SUV into a courageous act of hope and optimism.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    7. Re:predictions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, you're totally missing the point.

      Previous "predictions" (including this one) were meant as warning calls that current trends can't continue.

      Let's *hope* that good old human ingenuity takes us much further than 2050, but Christ man, the Earth has FINITE RESOURCES. Obviously, population and consumption cannot continue current growth trends indefinately. Even if technological advances give us 200 more years of unfettered growth, it's eventually going to hit us, and no reasonable person thinks that starvation, disease, or warfare is something the human race should lead itself into knowingly.

    8. Re:predictions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only the ones we use right now are finite. There's always sun and wind, those things are eternal. Now, if only we had an incentive to use them... Well, we will eventually.

    9. Re:predictions... by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Claim that these are the only two possible solutions, prove one unworkable, and then just leave people to assume that the other solution must be the only solution.

      Exactly correct.

      But as our technological prowess improves, our ability to alter the planet will only become more pronounced.

      Perhaps. On the other hand, as our technological prowess improves I tend to believe that we will be able to accomplish more while at the same time affecting the environment less. History has shown that to be true.

      The WWF has provided two options: 1) Find two more planets to live on. 2) Reduce consumption.

      They've forgotten what is truly the most practical and probable solution: 3) Allow science to continue advancing so that we can accomplish more while causing less damage.

      Reducing consumption is just a way of saying, "We've decided to proceed with caution.

      True. Although I would again say that the end-goal should be increasing our efficiency so that we don't HAVE to reduce consumption. Reducing consumption is a stop-gap solution that offers a "quick fix" until technology can catch up and allow us to do what we want without causing serious damage.

      However, if reducing consumption causes serious economic problems that reduces the amount of money available to scientific research into increasing efficiency then I think the consumption reduction, in the long term, has done more harm than good.

      On the other hand, let's not turn buying an SUV into a courageous act of hope and optimism.

      My view is that simple economics will keep the proliferation of SUVs in check. There are only so many people that can afford to buy SUVs to start with, much less pay for the gas they consume, etc. We're in no danger of everyone in the U.S. driving a SUV. :)

  13. Humans begin moving to AI by metalhed77 · · Score: 2

    well yet another argument for the human race to move to machines instead of biological bodies, the tech (at least according to kurzweil if i'm not mistaken) is supposed to be ready by then right? then we'll just be bots mining silicon living in a virtual earth.

    --
    Photos.
    1. Re:Humans begin moving to AI by iamblades · · Score: 1

      Not much mining to do for getting silicon..

      Just go to your local beach with a dump truck. ;P

      --
      Shit adds up at the bottom...
    2. Re:Humans begin moving to AI by Jetboy01 · · Score: 1

      yeah, but wont we be using robotic artificial bodies?
      better not get too near the water

    3. Re:Humans begin moving to AI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This needs to happen and will happen. If we all shed our human forms and don a mechanical body (or augment it in someway) this will put all humans on a level playing field. No one will be smarter/faster/stronger than another. (Unless someone upgrades to the Pentium 5000, with Windows 2050)
      However what this will drive us to is a collective society working together. Until there is nothing left for people to take, we will be greedy/violent and self centered. Once everything valuable is gone and we all must work together to achieve the same goals, our society will make its next great leap.
      Yes it is borg like, but its very logical.

  14. 50 years? Or 5000 years? by Dr.+Eric+Peters · · Score: 0, Troll

    People have been saying that we will run out of fossil fuels and giving the estimation of "50 years" for nearly 100 years now. However, due to increases in technology in the area of combustion engines that allow them to use less fuel for the same amount of propulsion and in the area of drilling that allow drillers to extract fuels in areas never thought possible, we've been able to continually extend this number.

    It is highly unlikely that we will ever run out of fossil fuels on this planet when you consider a few facts:

    1. Less fuel is being used due to engine technology. (As I mentioned.)
    2. More fuel is being found because of drilling technologies. (As I also mentioned.)
    3. Hybrid vehicles. We won't even need fossil fuels eventually, and it will happen long before there is a risk of running out of them.

    So stop worrying! Just sit back, enjoy life, and stop thinking about running out of fossil fuels. It's not going to happen!

    1. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This thing isn't really all that different than the wall street analysts telling you when to buy and sell your stocks. Create hype, fear, and play on ignorance to hope people in this sound bite driven society and they keep you poor, scared and ignorant for future ploys.

    2. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by SpatchMonkey · · Score: 1, Insightful

      On the other hand, you could look at it like this: if they hadn't done the research and made such predictions from it, it may very well have happened like that as we would have taken no steps to prevent it.

      Similarly, the Y2K bug was hyped for a reason - to get people doing something about it so it actually went smoothly in the end. Without the hype, we probably would have problems much worse than automatic web pages printing '19100'.

      Analyzing the future, and publishing the results, generally changes the described outcome as people do something about it.

    3. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Absolutely not true. Our fuel consumption is growing at an increasing rate. We could use less fuel- but we definitely are NOT.
      2.) This may be true- but keep reading.
      3.) This is not happening fast enough, and the engines already in existence can keep chugging away for years.

      Stop worrying about running out of fossil fuels? Well, there are worse things than running out of fossil fuels- like not running out of fossil fuels! If we continuted even at our current rate of consumption (remember, it is increasing, the rate of increase is increasing- so this is not likely) it is still too much for any natural means to return the pollutants to their source.
      I agree that we are not going to 'run out'- but I think that if we don't make huge changes, things will get pretty uncomfortable.

    4. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two words: Nuclear Power.

    5. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by bleckywelcky · · Score: 2


      Um, a little optimistic without looking at the whole situation?

      However, due to increases in technology in the area of combustion engines that allow them to use less fuel for the same amount of propulsion

      I'm sure you knew that despite the technological advances in combustion engines, making them more efficient, we continue to consume more and more fuel every day? The point is that it doesn't matter if you have 1 engine and it consumes 1 unit of fuel and you modify it to only consume .5 units of fuel if you just turn around and sell 10 more engines... you are consuming 5 times as much fuel as before despite the technological improvement.

    6. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by The_dev0 · · Score: 1

      new-cu-lar... it's pronounced new-cu-lar... (Thanks Homer)

      --
      Never fight naked, unless you're in prison...
    7. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by DRAGONWEEZEL · · Score: 1

      Thats not what my econ teacher taught me. You can't sell 10 engines and then count on doubling fuel expense. That model would assume that all ten people drive the same distance to work, or have the same driving habits/style.

      Assuming that they did drive the same, you can't just cut fuel economy in half and expect to sell more engines. That would assume that everyone would buy a brand new car just because of fuel economy.

      And even if you did assume that people would buy twice as many cars if fuel was cut in half, then the actual emmisions would decrease as people would be giving up their smog causing cars for more efficient, and ecological ones.

      just my 2.5 cents

      --
      How much is your data worth? Back it up now.
    8. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by reactor · · Score: 1

      From http://www.moles.org/ProjectUnderground/drillbits/ 4_16/vs.html

      In a new study by the EPA, the average fuel efficiency for cars made in 1999 was only 23.8 miles per gallon, the lowest it has been since 1980.

      The study found that average fuel economy was highest in 1987 and 1988, when it reached an average of 25.9 miles per gallon. The figure has been falling since then, and has accelerated its downward rate in recent years.

      The 23.8 miles per gallon figure for 1999 cars represents a 0.6 mile per gallon drop from 1998 models - the steepest decline since the EPA began keeping records in 1975.


      We do indeed have the technology to lower fuel consumption, however, the SUV craze and a disregard for the enviroment in general have nullified whatever science has given us.

      The fact is, unless we undergo a radical change of mindset, we are going to experience a very different world within the near future. Science and technology will not be able to save us. In many cases, technological achievments only hasten
      our doom.

      But we won't be able to destroy the planet. It is really far more resilient than most people believe. Surely we will destroy ourselves and we will have instigated some major enviromental changes, but we won't end the planet. The Earth will regenerate and new species will flourish.

    9. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by demaria · · Score: 2

      I'd wager dollars to donuts that the fires in the US West are outputting more pollution than all the SUVs sold in the past 3 years.

    10. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by alfredo · · Score: 2

      The earth will replenish until the plate tetonics stop, or if we pull a Venus with runaway global warming.

      Mass starvation and disease will cull the herd before we get to the point of using everything up. Africa is already getting hit hard with AIDS. Add to the the destablizing effect that will have.

      As a species we always used up our local resources and moved on. Looks like we are running out of places to go.

      --
      photosMy Photostream
    11. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by ElectricRook · · Score: 1
      I'd wager dollars to donuts that the fires in the US West are outputting more pollution than all the SUVs sold in the past 3 years.

      At any one time there are about two dozen active volcano's spewing 30x more CO2 into the atmosphere than all human activities combined. Perhaps we should require discharge permits before allowing volcanism.

      STAMP OUT VOLCANISM. LIFE ON EARTH DEPENDS ON IT!

      --
      - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
    12. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      The problem is that these things grow (or slow down) at an exponential rate, so a LOT can happen in 50 years. Just look at what the Internet has grown into in just the last 10!

      So while they may have been saying that for the last 100 years, the fact that it can happen in the next 50-100 years is VERY real (provided the exponential growth rate continues).

      Now, hopefully prices for stuff will increase, which will cut down consumerism, starve some unproductive countries, and establish some sort of balance.

      The horrific thing is chaos, which makes it kind of hard to predict what may happen. We may never achieve this 'balance' and may simply run ourselves 'dry', at which point most of the world will be destroyed in a global war for resources (or something like A.I. [movie] version of events - without the aliens of course).

      From a more pragmatic perspective, nobody knows how the climate works, and they will NEVER know! The earth could enter an ice age in the next 50 years, without us intervening or not. I think the issue these scientists (form the article) are pointing out is that we've destabilized the balance in the ecosystem, which is probably a bad thing (but nobody really knows if that destabilization may actually save us from something even more horrific).

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    13. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by junkgrep · · Score: 2

      You're forgetting that with cheaper fuel efficiency, people will also drive more. Probably not so much as to completely eliminate the benefits of the fuel efficiency on oil reserves, but certainly quite a lot. Also, people who couldn't afford to own cars at all will buy them.

    14. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Less fuel is being used due to engine technology. (As I mentioned.) 2. More fuel is being found because of drilling technologies. (As I also mentioned.) 3. Hybrid vehicles. We won't even need fossil fuels eventually, and it will happen long before there is a risk of running out of them. Well done on being wrong on almost every point. Vehicles are actually using more fuel than 20 years ago, largely due to the rise of SUV's and partially due to the fact that as something becomes cheaper in real terms (petrol/gas) more of it gets used. Ie use the car to nip up the road to buy a loaf of bread. Secondly more fuel is NOT being found because of drilling technologies (drilling technologies help you get the fuel out for a start, not find it). You're completely wrong anyway. For every ten barrels of oil being drilled only one is being found. Since all (or nearly all) the easy oil has been found and drilled already only harder to extract oil is left which is significantly harder and therefore more expensive to extract. The world "huberts peak" is being approached. This is when the world hits the problem America hit in the 70's - the one where they were using more oil than they could produce locally and had to start importing it. Only, the world may have a problem importing it from elsewhere. As for hybrid vehicles - don't rely too much on that saving the day. They'll happen when the oil price starts rocketing, not before. Plastics, most industrial fabrication techniques, jet engines and many more things rely on oil, and oil IS running out. More info www.simmonsco-intl.com has a lot of research papers online. Educate yourself.

    15. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just look at what the Internet has grown into in just the last 10! [years]
      Grown, yes.
      Become better, no.
      [Off topic, this reply: yes, too, maybe]

      Nearly 10 years ago (ISTR 1993 was when that eternal september started), the internet was an information network and a means of communication.
      The amount of growth over that period is filled nearly completely by corporations, companies and individuals using it for advertizing purposes.

      The information that used to be there is still there, but for a small (but growing) part of it you have to pay now, and as a communications medium it's become even more of a mess than it already was back then (the only thing you had to worry about in the beginning were a few flames and trolls, today 60% of the mails I receive are mail worms, 30% is spam, and 8 of the remaining 10% would easier be handled over the phone).

      The only positive change: I only pay twice as much for cable access now as I paid for phone access 8 (9?) years ago.
      Oops, did I say positive? Broadband has become a necessity, loading all those banners, ads, unnecessary decoration of sites and unwanted mail attachments over a phone line would mean a significant decrease in (perceived) speed.
      The real speed at which a website is loaded hasn't changed, so I only pay twice as much, and get a pile of spam (in my eyes banners and pop-unders belong in that category too) for it in return.

      _Who_ is paying for all those ads? Don't make me laugh. Or cry.
    16. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by cp99 · · Score: 1

      Or perhaps we should take realistic measures, such as cutting human caused CO2 levels (which does make up a significant proportion of atmospheric levels, and also does have a significant effect on the enviroment)?

      --
      Warning: Some ideologies on the Net are smaller than they appear.
    17. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by mikerich · · Score: 1
      While I agree that some of the early predictions of total oil production were well off the scale, those predictions were made in days when we really didn't understand the processes behind the formation, trapping and extraction of oil. We do now have a good model of all three.

      Geologists are near unanimous that oil is produced from the decomposition of plant remains (only Thomas Gold seems to hold out for an abiotic source, but his 'evidence' is lacking). We understand how these remains are converted into oil by heat and pressure. There is a minimum depth to which sediments must be buried before the oil generation process starts. We also understand that there is a maximum depth after which oil molecules are thermally cracked into natural gas. This 'oil window' allows us to demarcate areas of the planet where oil could have formed.

      We understand traps that hold oil. The planet has now been pretty much entirely surveyed for such structures. There are very few provinces where undiscovered oil is likely to exist in quantity - the Central Asia, Middle East and South China Sea are the most likely regions for more discoveries.

      We have mathematical models showing the distribution of sizes of oil fields. Put bluntly, the big ones are in the Middle East and there is next to no chance of finding large new fields in the US and Europe. We can predict the size and distribution of new fields with some accuracy.

      Therefore we can start to draw up models of oil reserves for the entire planet. Indeed this has already been done by geologists, starting with Doctor M King Hubbert, whose 1956 model predicted US oil production would peak in the early 1970s (it peaked in 1970). His model has also been used to predict production in Europe and global production. In each case the model seems to hold.

      Hubbert predicted global oil production would peak in the 2000 to 2010 range. Most geologists now concur with this figure - but some are arguing that the World reserves have been grossly inflated by countries trying to maximise production quotas, (some estimates put the inflation of reserves at 180 billion barrels - about twice the reserves of Kuwait) and production may peak in the 2003 - 2004 time frame.

      If the Hubbert model is correct, then we are in a nasty situation, even grossly increasing the amount of oil in recoverable reserves, say by 500 billion barrels (that's more than twice the reserves in Saudi Arabia), only defers maximum production by ten years. And there is no belief that these sort of reserves exist.

      On to your other points. We are using more fuel each year. Whilst an engine of a given size is becoming more efficient, more people are driving cars, more of them are driving cars more frequently and more vehicles are being built that have larger engines consuming more fuel. World fuel demand is rising. And the fastest growing section of demand is air travel which uses prodigious amounts of (untaxed) fuel.

      Hybrids are a good idea, but they require liquid fuels. Oil is the best fuel - it is incredibly energy dense and convenient. Alcohol is less energy dense (and may not make economic sense when you factor in the energy costs of production) and the alternative fuels are environmental disasters. Oil shale and oil sands need huge amounts of energy to become usable, consume vast amounts of water in the process and pump incredible amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere.

      We will have to get really radical. But first, the problem is that the developed economies are being forced to import more of their oil from the Middle East. It is the single largest reserve in the World and will become increasingly important as the Alaskan, Texan, Mexican and North Sea fields run down. In a few years the UK will become an oil importer once again (with god knows what consequences for our already horrendous trade deficit); imported oil is already the US's single largest bill and will continue to rise no matter what happens in the Alaskan National Reserve. China is demanding more oil imports as is India, and we all know what happens when things start to get scarce...

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    18. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does everyone assume that the only reason we need fossil fuels is for cars? We need them for hundreds of products that YOU use every day. Ever hear of plastic? That's made from fossil fuels.

    19. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by evilviper · · Score: 2
      the Y2K bug was hyped for a reason - to get people doing something about it so it actually went smoothly in the end. Without the hype, we probably would have problems much worse than automatic web pages printing '19100'.
      You are an American (I am too). Why do I know that? Because outside of the US, there was pratically no uproar about Y2K. In fact, the same people that are UFO fanatics, Conspiracy Theorists, etc, were the ones claiming that the world was going to end.

      Secondly, you are not a very smart American. It takes a *special* kind of person to believe that just because a date is wrong something catastrophic is going to happen.

      No matter what the Slashdot front page says... No matter what the people with vested interests in panic said, Y2K was not a problem at all... Only the USA spent great gobs of money on upgrading systems. The rest of the world didn't do a damn thing about it until afterwards, and the rest of the world has not had any serious problems.

      No Russian nukes automatically launching, no pacemakers shutting down, no toasters attacking people... NOTHING. NOTHING HAPPENED, NOTHING WAS AVOIDED.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    20. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by colmore · · Score: 2

      Wood ash and smoke are different kinds of pollution, and typically stay airborn for a far shorter period of time than the chemicals that make up "smog"

      But that's not the point.

      He was talking about oil consumption, not air pollution, and the fires in the US West aren't consuming (much) oil.

      --
      In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
    21. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by SpatchMonkey · · Score: 1

      You assume incorrectly, I'm from and I live in the UK. And it was hyped over here too.

      Note also that "problems much worse than automatic web pages printing '19100'" did not equate to "nukes automatically launching .. pacemakers shutting down .."

      Although I didn't mention it in my comment, I was primarily thinking of financial institutions when writing that.

    22. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by ErikZ · · Score: 2

      Eh, I'd like to make an adjustment to "So stop worrying!"

      It's ok to worry, but stop freaking out. It's not constructive.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    23. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Y2K may have been overhyped, but it was a serious issue. If all the problems I fixed in 1999 had hit all at once in Jan 2000, maybe the world wouldn't have ended, but what passes for my social life would have.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    24. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by DRAGONWEEZEL · · Score: 1

      perhaps, but the cheaper eficiancy will cost more. A hybrid prius is 6** a month on a three year loan. This is an astronomical price for a poor/lower middle class person to pay.

      --
      How much is your data worth? Back it up now.
    25. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by jafac · · Score: 2

      No Russian nukes automatically launching, no pacemakers shutting down, no toasters attacking people... NOTHING. NOTHING HAPPENED, NOTHING WAS AVOIDED.

      My company just discovered a Y2K bug two months ago in one of our customer databases. 50,000 contracts with no valid start date. Ugly. We went through our stuff with a fine toothed comb in 1999 -
      To say that nothing happened is false.
      In fact, you could even blame the dot-bombs on the drop in IT spending caused by post Y2K era corporate budgets.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    26. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by evilviper · · Score: 2

      Yes, you were inconvienced until you dealt with a problem. I did not mean a literal "nothing"... What I mean was, nothing on the grounds of serious problems were avoided by the billions in Y2K hype and spending.

      This includes the changing of ammounts in bank records (e.g. You loose your life savings), the disabling of water, electric, or natural gas services, security systems from failing to function, our computer programs scrambling our financial records and documents, or our toasters rising up and killing us all.

      I did not mean that nothing adverse happened as a result of Y2K, only that no serious damage was done. Indeed, if you go back to all the propoganda on TV, in papers, or even if best selling books, you will see tons of 'experts' claiming many of the very things I mention above. Any way you look at it, I seriously doubt you can justify the money spent on Y2K perpared-ness by private companies, and the government.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    27. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "1. Less fuel is being used due to engine technology. (As I mentioned.)"

      Hold on there, slick. Number one isn't true at all. According to the DOE, we're using more oil now than ever in the past thirty years (odlest stats I can find), and the DOE projections show us consuming more, not less, as time goes on.

      check it out:

      http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/images/oil_prod uc tion_and_consumption-n.jpg

    28. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Cybrex · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right. The Club of Rome has been predicting the imminent depletion of our resources for quite some time now, yet their predictions never come to pass. The reason? They don't take technological innovation into account. Paul Zane Pilzer has a lot to say on that subject.

      Technological advances will continue to buy us "just a little bit more time" until nanotechnology kicks in. After that, I imagine that the only practical limitations on physical resources will be artificial- the haves deliberately keeping the have nots from having access to the means of fabrication and the freedom to use it.

      It's gonna be a hell of a ride, folks. Hope that organizations like the Foresight Institute succeed in intelligently shaping policy before it's too late.

      -Cybrex

      --
      Boundless Expansion, Self-Transformation, Dynamic Optimism, Intelligent Technology, Spontaneous Order- BEST DO IT SO!
    29. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To a point, I totally agree. The net was a nicer quieter place not too long ago (well... maybe long ago, but it sure doesn't seem like that long).

      But the whole idea is the illustration of the speed of growth. Junk mail has grown VERY fast (which illustrates that exponential growth rate can be really fast).

    30. Re:50 years? Or 5000 years? by bleckywelcky · · Score: 2


      No, I was not trying to say that people will buy more because the fuel usage decreases for any given engine. I was saying that we are buying more and more cars anymore, anyhow. How many 16 year olds had cars back in the 1950s, none? How many 16 year olds have cars now, all of em? The local high school is jam packed with kids parking there anymore. I see kids driving beat up junkers that they picked up for a couple hundred bucks and other kids driving pimped cars that their parents bought for them. Again, back in the 1950s how many families had more than 1 or 2 cars? Not too many. How many families today have a car for every person in the family or more? Lots. Not only does everyone have their own, but nowadays a lot more people are driving cars just for fun, off-roading etc.

      I was saying that every year people buy more and more cars, and cars are running more and more of the time, and that emissions released will actually still increase despite the fuel usage of engines being decreased. No economics here, just social trends.

  15. WWF? by andres32a · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    WWF as in "World Wrestling Federation"???

    1. Re:WWF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why on Earth did you waste a +1 on a post showing that you hadn't read the article?

    2. Re:WWF? by Anonymous+Squonk · · Score: 1

      There is no World Wrestling Federation. The World Wildlife Fund laid the smack down on them in court, taking away their right to use the initials "WWF"

      The newly renamed World Wrestling Entertainment now uses the initials "WWE", so there is now only one WWF of consequence in the world to deal with.

    3. Re:WWF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or read the comments. Thats only the 3482793rd comment on that.

      2387492 comments on WWF to go. Weeeeeeeeeeeeee!

    4. Re:WWF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The word is acronym you retard. Something tells me they'd need to become dictionary.com to meet your needs.

    5. Re:WWF? by alizard · · Score: 2
      The editor probably mistook slashdotters for a literate population with a general understanding of some sort of the world beyond the computer and cyberspace. It probably didn't occur to him that there would be people here who actually would not know that WWF would stand for World Wildlife Fund in this case.

      Much less that the majority of people who did know believe that global warming is "junk science" and that running out of finite resources of known size is impossible based on pronoucements of well known scientific authorities like Rush Limbaugh, George Bush, and Pat Robertson.

      Reading the posts to this thread, I wonder if there shouldn't be a basic.science.slashdot.org or a regular series of "Science 101" postings for the people around here who either cut or managed to avoid any science classes that didn't start with the word "computer".

      However, I believe that most slashdotters who are ignorant of everything but computers take pride in their ignorance and really don't want to do anything about it. The good news... when they post on public policy issues of any sort, it's generally apparent that they are noise, not signal.

  16. World Wrestling Foundation? by unformed · · Score: 3, Informative

    Piece of advice: when writing a topic, any use of acronyms that have a high possibility of being misunderstood (ie: World Wildlife Fund) should be explained, so as to prevent people from being mistaken.

    I, for one, have -never- heard of the World Wildlife Fund before this, and I'm sure there are others like me, who thought why the fsck are we believe the World Wrestling Foundation these days?

    1. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by delta407 · · Score: 2, Flamebait
      why the fsck are we believe the World Wrestling Foundation these days?
      A better question is "why the fsck should we believe the World Wildlife Fund"?

      "Forests have dwindled by 12 percent." Yeah, get over it. People cut down trees, and 88% isn't exactly dwindling, especially given that in the past 30 years the human population has doubled. The article makes it seem that forests are the only things that "absorb carbon dioxide emissions". That's a load of crap; algae are responsible for the majority of carbon-dioxide recycling, and it's always been that way.

      Sure, you can hug your trees, but know your facts. (Hug your librarian instead.)
    2. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Issue9mm · · Score: 1

      Well, considering the WWF (wrestling) no longer goes by that acronym since they were wrested of it by the WWF (wildlife), I would have thought it pretty safe.

      The WWF (wrestling) is now going by WWE (World Wrestling Enterprise or Entertainment, or something), until they can find some legal claim to take back their WWF acronym.

      That said, I'm a contributor to the WWF (wildlife), so perhaps I'm biased.

      -9mm-

    3. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, have -never- heard of the World Wildlife Fund before this

      Then you are extremely ignorant. It's a shame you have wasted useful brain activity on wrestling rather than the environment, too.

    4. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by jeffehobbs · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...all we really need to do is create a few more peons, build a couple farms, a lumber mill and find another gold mine. No sweat.

      ~jeff

    5. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or we could all just set up a Marxist Utopia, like the ones that killed nearly 50 million people in the Twentieth Century.

    6. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by nettdata · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's a load of crap; algae are responsible for the majority of carbon-dioxide recycling, and it's always been that way.

      Which is PRECISELY why I haven't cleaned out my fridge in over 3 years... I'm just trying to do my part for the cause!

      --



      $0.02 (CDN)
    7. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Disevidence · · Score: 2

      Why not just use Wisps? No need to cut down trees then.

      --
      Think nothing is impossible? Try slamming a revolving door.
    8. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wisps will harvest 5 wood in the same time a peon will harvest 15.

      Fuck the trees.

    9. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Disevidence · · Score: 2

      If your inclined, get a Goblin Shredder. Tree 0wnage.

      --
      Think nothing is impossible? Try slamming a revolving door.
    10. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by TheOnlyCoolTim · · Score: 3

      The liberal greenie Night Elves can't use Goblin Shredders, it goes against their "Principles."

      However, when the shit hits the fan, they have no qualms about knocking down huge areas of trees just to summon a few temporary weak fighting units.

      Tim

      --
      Omnia vestra castrorum habetur nobis.
    11. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by marko123 · · Score: 1

      True to form, when the WWF (Wrestling) had to change their name to WWE, their first fight series was called, "Get the F out!"

      Gotta luv their marketing hubris.

      --
      http://pcblues.com - Digits and Wood
    12. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do they conflict, they are in completely different industries. One is lowbrow entertainment, the other is lowbrow fear-mongering, and biased 'research'.

      I'm actually supprised that this wasn't covered on slashdot, as it is the case of a legitimate tradename being strongarmed away from a legitimate enterprise.

    13. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by codemachine · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the wildlife fund was offered a good sum of money to back off of the WWF acronym so that World Wrestling Entertainment could still use it. To me it would've made sense to take the money and change the acronym, since people know the wildlife fund by the panda logo, and wrestling by the WWF acronym, which is quite apparent from this thread.

      But instead they strongarm the wrestling company to give up the WWF initials, giving up the chance to get a nice 'donation' in the process. If a multi-billion dollar entertainment company's money is too good for the World Wildlife Fund to take, then I'll consider any measly potential contribution from me to be unwanted as well. Stupid tree-huggers.

    14. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on now, you're not gonna tell me you never saw that cute panda bear.

    15. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by wheany · · Score: 1

      Guess what people in Finland, or other countries where Wrestling (as in "sports entertainment") is not shown, think when they hear WWF?

      Please note: USA is not the world.

    16. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no longer any such entity or organizatino as the World Wresting Federation. To end a court case between the two, they changed their name to World Wresting Entertainment and is now the WWE. So when you hear WWF now, you can be sure it's the World Wildlife Fund.

    17. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by colmore · · Score: 2

      Good point except

      Algae are dying faster than the trees.

      Surface pollution in coastal waters is rapidly killing off perhaps the most important component of the global ecosystem.

      --
      In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
    18. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by SparafucileMan · · Score: 1
      Except once you get more than 40-50 peons harvesting simultaneously, the gold mines disapear real fast, and you either have to go conquer your neighbor before you use up your stores or start the game over.

      Warcraft, microcosm of the universe.

    19. Re:World Wrestling Foundation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Piece of advice: when writing a topic, know what the acronym actually refers to-it was the World Wrestling Federation. Sorry, I actually watch wrestling (if you can smell what I am cooking!). Now it is the WWE(World Wrestling Entertainment). It was only a few weeks ago that the World Wildlife Fund won its case to be the exclusive owner of the acronym WWF.

      The World Wildlife Fund has been around since 1961. It is The largest privately supported international conservation organization in the world and directs its conservation efforts toward three global goals: protecting endangered spaces, saving endangered species and addressing global threats.

      I have been reading a lot of comments on this article that basically brush off the claims of the article as reactionary and doomsdayish-without-basis-in-fact. Also there are the typical environmentalism as liberal propaganda posts. Maybe if we all had to see species on the verge of extinction or going extinct everyday the article might hit a little closer to home. It is easy to sit in front of the monitor all day and not feel any connection to the outer world (i sure know what that is like). But hey, even if they are totally wrong, how does it hurt any of us to do the little things like consuming less, recycling, and reusing that might make a differenct. I ride my bike everywhere and I don't miss having a car at all. Why not take a precautious approach, especially when it might mean a better life for our children and grand children.

      Anyway, I guess it doesn't matter. What is going to happen is going to happen.

  17. lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by S.+Allen · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    this has been predicted by tree-hugging morons every decade for the last god-knows-how-long. get over it. it's not "damning" because it's not true.

    1. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Badanov · · Score: 1

      I have to concur. Every study of dire predictions in the last 30 years have been proved wrong. And the greenies who publish this propoganda don't let truth get in the way of their politics or their pushing of 'pro-green' policies.

      --
      Dawn of the Dead
    2. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by bug1 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yea, those damn "tree-huggers"....

      I remember in the 70's them "tree-huggers" something about CFC's from aerosol cans destroying something called the ozone layer.

      How ignorant are those "tree-huggers", i can see the ozone layer so how can it be destroyed ?

    3. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're absolutely right. this ozone nonesense is bullshit.

    4. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get your facts right befor you post again. The decreased use of CFC's has not changed the expansion and contraction of the ozone layer one bit. The fact is that people jumped to conclusions with too little data; time has shown them wrong.

    5. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by TWR · · Score: 2
      In the 70's, it was global cooling that was going to kill us all. Now, it's global warming. What happened?

      The guiding principle of the environmental movement is: claim EVERYTHING is going wrong. Eventually, you'll get something right due to sheer volume, and you can pretend that all the other predictions you made never occured. Psychics and other flim-flam artists work the same way.

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

    6. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by thales · · Score: 2

      So, The National Enquirer is right every once in a while with their psychic predictions for the New Year, but that dosen't make them reliable. Of course they probelly have a higher accuracy rate than the tree huggers.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    7. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Yorrike · · Score: 2
      Ah ha. You do realise that the ozone layer around the poles depletes naturally, don't you? CFCs, Methane, Bromide and other nasty pollutants do increase ozone depletion, but they do not cause it.

      Ozone is created when ultra violet light hits oxygen, causing 3 O2 molecules to form 2 03 (ozone). O3 is not stable, and degrades to 02 rather quickly. During the Antartic and Artic winters, ultra violet light is scarce, as there are months of complete darkness. This is why the holes are largest in early spring (after the month long nights).

      Yes, there are polluting factors that increase the ozone depletion, but the Tree-Huggers have pulled you in with their scare mongering. Look at the science as well as the claims and you'll see it's NEVER as bad as those Greenpeace and WWF nutters will have you believe.

      Remember that tales of blood, death and destruction get you air time and government funding.

      --

      Looks can be deceiving. Or CAN they?

    8. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, youre saying that just because some "tree-hugging moron" predicts that the current levels of high consumption will destroy the Earth, then it will never happen? If they said that tobacoo kills, then it would become a lie?

      Im not saying that they are always right, Im saying that they arent always wrong. Ill have an opinion on the subject when I see the scientific proofs that theyll provide. Until then, quit trolling about something you know nothing about (and, apparently, dont want to know about).

    9. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Latent+IT · · Score: 2

      God, it's like, 95F in the shade in NYC. I wish like hell it was global cooling. That ice age coming in 2050 sounds a hell of a lot better than sweating to death. Glaciers move slow enough for me to get out of the way. =(

    10. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Yes, there are polluting factors that increase the ozone depletion, but the Tree-Huggers have pulled you in with their scare mongering."

      You seem to cast this off as insignificant. It is not. The introduction of pollutants into the atmosphere has a profound effect on ozone.

      O2 + hV -> O + O
      O + O2 -> O3 (which you already mentioned)

      BUT, here come the pollutants:

      O3 + NO -> O2 + NO2
      NO2 + O -> O2 + NO

      O3 + NO2 -> O2 + NO3
      NO3 + hV -> O2 + NO

      And here's where CFCs come into play:

      CFC + hV -> Cl
      Cl + O3 -> O2 + ClO
      ClO + O -> O2 + Cl

      The above reaction can destroy 100000 O3 molecules before it stops. That's from just ONE CFC molecule.

      Don't think it's not doing anything up there.

    11. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by ChannelX · · Score: 1

      the EPA disagrees with you. Do a little bit of reading and you'll find out that yes, we are causing ozone depletion. I guess you're one of the folks that still believes that DDT isn't bad for us either.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    12. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Yorrike · · Score: 1

      Did you read my post? I'm not saying that the pollutants we're putting into the air are not causing damage, what I'm saying is the ozone hole is naturally occuring. The pollutants are causing damage to the ozone layer, but they are not causing the ozone hole on their own.

      --

      Looks can be deceiving. Or CAN they?

    13. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by plastercast · · Score: 2

      Fuck. Id say the AC up there just kicked your ass :-)

    14. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by ElectricRook · · Score: 1
      Yes, yes, yes... Some one finally get's it right. You forgot the part about the "polar vortex". That's where the air at the poles tends to circle the poles and staying in the shadow of the earth. Shaded colunms of air receive no UV light, and hence no new O3 (ozone) is created. The O3 in the shaded colunm decays. And you have the famous "Ozone Hole".

      Scaring US citizens into calling their congressmen, is a fantastic way of making money.

      --
      - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
    15. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by cp99 · · Score: 1

      And may I inquire as to your facts and figures as to why this report (the peer reviewed scientific paper which the WWF based there report on) is lying with statistics and isn't true?

      Or haven't you got round to reading it yet?

      --
      Warning: Some ideologies on the Net are smaller than they appear.
    16. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? Every study proved wrong?

      Proved wrong for *you*. Not proved wrong for *other people* in *different countries*.

      We've seen massive rises in poverty-related disease (AIDS), environment-related genocide (Rwanda). We've seen entire countries flooded. We've seen populations explode, freshwater sources decline, migrations increase and increased desertification.

      This is happening now. The report suggests that if current trends continue, it is going to get much worse.

      It is very easy for us to sit back in our fortressess in the USA and Europe and say nothing has happened to us. The richest are *always* the last people to feel the effects. This is not the case for other places in the world.

      I amn amazed at the complacency and ignorance displayed by the supposedly well-educated people on this board. Absolutely amazed.

    17. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by cp99 · · Score: 1

      Ah ha. You do realise that the ozone layer around the poles depletes naturally, don't you? CFCs, Methane, Bromide and other nasty pollutants do increase ozone depletion, but they do not cause it.

      The ozone layer is a approx. equilibrium (ie. the rate that it is being reduced is approx. equal to the rate that it is forming). By adding CFCs etc (which catalysis the breakdown of ozone) to the upper atmosphere, one decreases the ozone concentration, therefore a person would be entirely correct in saying that CFCs and the like cause ozone depletion.

      --
      Warning: Some ideologies on the Net are smaller than they appear.
    18. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by syn3rg · · Score: 0
      So...
      Cl + O3 -> O2 + ClO
      ClO + O -> O2 + Cl

      According to you it's the Cl molecule that causes the damage.
      The LARGEST sources (tons/year) of atmospheric Cl are volcanos and the oceans (by a ratio of 10000:1).

      --
      The contents of this message have been doubly encrypted by ROT13
    19. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, of course. The tree-hugging morons are just a bunch of greedy bastards that, in actuality, want big houses and servants to work and drive for them so they can explore their wilderness from the peace and quiet of their SUV. HMmm...

      Let's look at people's fucking motivations for a moment. What do the the "tree-huggers" have to gain through their doomsday predictions. Many of them are bright and easily capable of becoming a cog in the technological wheel, but _choose_ not to. Their campaigns have, just as the suffragette movement, the abolitionist movement, been effective and changed things.

      Let's compare this with the motivations of the people whose ads you see 2000 times a day. They are trying to "get to the top". YOu can be absolutely sure that everything they say has been in their self-interest. The oil industry has no motivation to look in the longterm ... the CEO's are rich enough to bail at any time and live in a villa in Mexico.

      So, of course, the want you to buy without question, produce tons of waste (it's good for the economy, just like the Exxon Valdez oil disaster) and burn as many fossil fuels as possible.

      But, hold on, it's obvious these tree-huggers just want gov't funding .... Those lazy asses are just thinking about themselves - right - right?!

      Believe what you want to believe you fscking greedy, lazy bastards. The majority of the world's population is starving, air quality (and asthma) have never been worse, 20 (peer-reviewed, scietific) reports come out every week saying we should improve, and _most_ people are _worse_ off than ever.

      Stop subscribing to the myths propagated by those who want your money. Start considering those who don't.

    20. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by ChannelX · · Score: 1

      Yes. It is a naturally-occuring process. However the ozone hole is as large as it is with the help of humans. http://www.atm.ch.cam.ac.uk/tour/part1.html

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    21. Re:lying with statistics, preaching to the choir by Yorrike · · Score: 2

      Exactly, it's an equalibrium, whereby UV light is a component, no UV, no reaction, it's basic chemistry.

      --

      Looks can be deceiving. Or CAN they?

  18. Bah... by southpolesammy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Let's see...a scientific analysis of resource consumption based on the decline of animal population over the past 100 years, plus a very relevant hectare/person statistic. Sounds like excellent research to me...

    If they really want to be taken seriously, quote the actual usage of arable land per person in each country. Countries like Ethopia and Burundi will be astronomically high, while the US will be very low comparatively. The truth is that those countries are overpopulated based on their own resources and require outside assistance from countries like the US.

    Overall, if worse comes to worse, don't fret for the Earth. Nature is self-regulating and will find a way to keep man's progress in check. More likely, if such a scenario is possible, man will make himself extinct before the effects can jeopardize the world.

    --
    Rule #1 -- Politics always trumps technology.
    1. Re:Bah... by whiteranger99x · · Score: 5, Funny

      This reminds me of what George Carlin said in one of his stand-up shows...

      "It's a self correcting system...The Planet is fine.....The PEOPLE are fucked!"

      --
      Join the TWIT army now!
    2. Re:Bah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A caluclation based on the amount of land used by each person based on their lifestyle, or their "ecological footprint" are available at redefining progress
      To calculate your ecological footprint go here.

    3. Re:Bah... by OctaneZ · · Score: 2

      The truth is that those countries are overpopulated based on their own resources and require outside assistance from countries like the US.

      This is completely True, These countries, and many more, are overpopulated, and "Aid from the US" is NOT helping. Sure it may make us feel good to think that we are feeding a starving individual, but in truth we are exacerbating the problem. These people live in a land that CANNOT support them. Yes I know we are working on things like miracle rice, and irrigation, but those are not so1lutions.

      Water will soon come to the forefront as a tradeable limited commodity on the open market, there simply is not enough of it to go around, and irrigation is not a good use for what we have.

      By preserving this individual you are allowing them (and I know this sounds really bad to many of you) to have children, thus continuing the famine for another generation. While it may not seem like a pleasent idea, all species (except humans in western cases) will reach equilibrium with there environment if "nature" is allowed to run it's course.

      We have overextended ourselves as a species, and while technology has done it's best to keep us afloat we are dangerously over our carrying capacity on this planet.

    4. Re:Bah... by thetbone · · Score: 1

      You are wrong on most of your points, but don't worry, you are in the majority.

      "These people live in a land that CANNOT support them. "

      Wrong. The problem is not the land, it is the leaders of the land. Move the equivalent population of westerners into this land and they will do very well for themselves.

    5. Re:Bah... by OctaneZ · · Score: 1

      While a western governement would improve the situation, the leadership alone is not to blame. I agree with you that many leaders in these countries have done little for their people. However I am not wrong in saying that the resources in these countries SHOULD and do (when not aided from outside sources) limit the population in the area. A population of westerners would fair far worse under the circumstances, as they would have no knowledge of the land, and not recognize what few resources there were.

    6. Re:Bah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Compare the standard of living of Israel (populated by ex-European Jews for the most part) with that of their neighboring Arab countries who have been there for centuries.

      It's clear that Western civlization trumps a "knowledge of the land" every time.

    7. Re:Bah... by Latent+IT · · Score: 2

      I have a problem with their math. I told them I live in a multi-story apartment building, less than 500 square feet. I use energy saving lightbulbs. They didn't ask, but I have no AC. My electric and gas, even at summer rates is completely rock bottom. They say I use 4.5 acres to support my shelter alone, and that there are only 4 acres of useful land per person. What the fuck are they smoking? How come we're not dead already, then? And what the fuck do they gain by trying to make me feel guilty for living like a hot sweaty mouse in a hole in the wall? Oh, right. They want a frigging donation.

      Good for them.

    8. Re:Bah... by OctaneZ · · Score: 1

      yes, so does a limitless supply of capital and goods from the US that makes it possible.

    9. Re:Bah... by thetbone · · Score: 1

      Oh really?? Then why do western aid organizations have to go down there to show them how to farm?

    10. Re:Bah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And do you happen to know WHY the third world leaders do nothing for their own people why they live in luxury themselves? They get their "fair compensation" for letting multinationals strip the country of it's resources and put the workforce into sweatshops. The corrupt and inept regimes in the third world are often erected by the western world in order to get access to the resources. The role of the third world in N.W.O. is to supply resources and markets. "What Uncle Sam Really Wants?" (http://www.zmag.org/chomsky/sam/sam.html), Noam Chomsky:
      'The Third World was to "fulfill its major function as a source of raw materials and a market" for the industrial capitalist societies, as a 1949 State Department memo put it. It was to be "exploited" (in Kennan's words) for the reconstruction of Europe and Japan. (The references are to Southeast Asia and Africa, but the points are general.) '

    11. Re:Bah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The assumption is that your home is built using concrete, an extremely enery consuming material to manufacture.

    12. Re:Bah... by flippet · · Score: 1

      Aargh, all of a sudden that philosophical tome of Jurassic Park springs to mind, with Malcolm talking about how we won't destroy the planet, we'll just destroy ourselves...

      --
      "Cattle Prods solve most of life's little problems."
    13. Re:Bah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      quote the actual usage of arable land per person in each country. Countries like Ethopia and Burundi will be astronomically high, while the US will be very low comparatively. The truth is that those countries are overpopulated based on their own resources and require outside assistance from countries like the US.

      Looks like Swizerland, Hong Kong or even Japan would fare rather low with this criteria.

      What counts is the global ratio of resources/population, not that of a single country.

    14. Re:Bah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >"It's a self correcting system...The Planet is fine.....The PEOPLE are fucked!"

      Reminds me of an old joke..

      Two planets meet in orbit.

      "Hi! How are you?"
      "Awful."
      "What's up?"
      "I've got the humans!"
      "Ow, sorry to hear that, they're bad. But they go away after a while all by themselves."

  19. Maybe Malthus was right by Ramesh+Diltan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The population is growing at a rate much higher than the Earth can sustain. I suppose we can look back to the cynical economist Thomas Malthus to see what will happen. He predicted that, since the population grows exponentially and the food supply only grows linearly, famine and disease will be the ways in which the population is kept in check. This may very well happen, but I don't believe Earth will expire by 2050. I have befriended a number of economists over the years, and they have stated that the food supply has always grown faster than predicted. Interesting topic, though. R.Diltan

    1. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Except that population is not growing at all in any civilized countries.

      It's only in breeder infested third world countries where you are still seeing a population explosion.

      I'm not trolling, it's true.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    2. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The population is growing at a rate much higher than the Earth can sustain.

      No, it isn't. The developed countries are actually LOSING population.

      The best way to cut back on population growth is by high technology, the very thing the greenies are trying to stop.

      There's plenty of food to go around. It's just poorly distributed, and equitable distribution requires 1) Cheap energy and 2) the rule of law.

    3. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by WetCat · · Score: 1

      You just forgot AIDS... it's now in China and Africa...

    4. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Ramesh+Diltan · · Score: 0

      Actually, the population of Brazil is growing, and it is among the MOST civilized countries. I resent this statment. Please retract it.

    5. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by SpatchMonkey · · Score: 1

      If you research further, you will find that the HIV virus causing AIDS has very tenuous links, and in fact might not even true. Most of the so-called research into it was heavily biased so as to award further funding. Details available here.

    6. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Is it just growing, or exploding? A reasonable rate of growth is expected as a country moves into an industrialized society.

      My point is, once the desperation of having more kids so you can get more people to do farm work is past, populations usually stops growing so fast.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    7. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it only requires the rule of law.

    8. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Kwantus · · Score: 1

      Yup. and this is exactly why the US infected them with AIDS (it could produce enough drugs to keep its own people alive while keeping the price too high for the poor). The 1974 report for NSSM200 made very clear that regulating population by birth control was political suicide especially when The American People realised it required lowering their own consumption... so Washington cranked up its biological and war engineering. It's perfectly obvious.

    9. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't something more quick to kill be more effective, assuming the conspiracy is as you suggest?

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    10. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's funny, do you know how incredibly difficult that would have been? Do you know anything about the AIDS virus, and the number of distinct strains, thus the amount of incredible money that people might missed being used for its secret research? I contend we did not have the proper RNA sequencing technology at the time that it would be even REMOTELY possible to do such a thing. Hell, even the 3d visualization tools would not have been available (can you even conceive of the AIDS virus' intricate structure??) We have enough trouble just splicing stuff into viruses today.

      Morons.

    11. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know who will be right in this argument, but I will say that the world will be very different from when I was young. As to wether it is better or worse will be for those who are living then to decide.

      Michael G. Skuczas

    12. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Kwantus · · Score: 1

      No, things like Ebola kill too quickly, in fact; they are noticed and stopped before they spread far. As we have seen.

    13. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Kwantus · · Score: 1

      Take it up with the `morons' at the Nat'l Academy of Science:

      1986 According to the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (83:4007-4011), HIV and VISNA are highly similar and share all structural elements, except for a small segment which is nearly identical to HTLV. This leads to speculation that HTLV and VISNA may have been linked to produce a new retrovirus to which no natural immunity exists.

      http://www.healthnewsnet.com/humanexperiments.ht ml

      (Not also the mention of `ethnic weapons' designing going on in 1970)

      Take it up with the moron who claims to have the documentation: http://boydgraves.com/

      *Personally*, I'm not quite `aboard' with the `Us engineered HIV' - yet (and I implied so elsewhere). But I'm a LONG way from dismissing the possibility; enough Washington evil has been proven beyond doubt that I mark them capable of attempting ANYthing. And there is no denying that whether or not the US made HIV, it's been exploiting it (wringing its hands while extending patents and keeping prices high) to reduce the population of Africa and Asia.

      as for the incredible amount of money (i assume you meant to say): I think incredibly larger amounts of money have disappeared into other military projects (eg CIA's blackbird, stealth bomber). so? The Fed, literally, has a license to print money. The gov't needs more, it prints it, and worries about backing it ... whenever. Later. Next administration. Money is no object for the US (although value IS).

    14. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Kwantus · · Score: 1

      Further to the `incredible amount of money': in House appropriations committee hearings, 1969 July 1 (HB 15090, pg 129) `it would probably be possible to make a new infective microorganism which could differ in certain important aspects from any known disease-causing organisms. Most important of these is that it might be refractory to the immunological and therapeutic processes upon when we depend to maintain our relative freedom from infectious disease. A research program to explore the feasibility of this could be completed in approximately 5 years at a total cost of $10 million.'
      Like most gov't projects it was probably finished wildly overbudget; on the other hand, M$10 is only a little more than you've given to Israel alone every *day* for 30 years.

    15. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Kwantus · · Score: 1

      Late and overbudget indeed; according to Graves in what appears to be a press release by Rep. Trafficant the `cancer virus' program that made HIV took 15 years and a half-gigabuck.

      http://www.apfn.org/apfn/aids.htm

      Still cheap next to a lot of US gov't military stuff.

    16. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Kwantus · · Score: 1

      And regardless of the mounting evidence the US engineered HIV, and regardless of what it's doing about HIV now, there's no denying US muckamucks like Kennan, Kissinger, Nixon, McNamera have been Malthusians for at least 30 years. That's the real point: even if the theory is all wrong (like the old-testament theory of why Jews `belong' in Israel), there are powerful people that believe in it.

    17. Re:Maybe Malthus was right by Kwantus · · Score: 1

      one more comment. Apparently Sagal asserts that it would have taken about 6 months to splice up HIV with the known '70s technology, and a good technician just a week or two with what we have today. The latter is an assertion relatively easily tested.

      http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/Urgent_ Ac tion/AIDS_Contract.html

  20. That's funny... by corebreech · · Score: 1

    I was going to say the same thing, but now that you've beaten me to it, I realize that it wasn't very clever after all.

    1. Re:That's funny... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it WOULD have been funny if YOU had said it first! No doubt.

  21. In a related story... by plastercast · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The Chicago Trib is running this story on the shrinking of various glaciers around the world that is also pretty terrifying. Perhaps its time for Bush to reconsider Kyoto?

    1. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean Kyoto that was voted down 98 to 0 in the Senate? Is that the same Kyoto that allows other nations to pollute at will, and be exempt from its restrictions? Is that the same Kyoto that does nothing about the rampant smuggling of ozone depleting freon across European country borders? Or the Kyoto that would effectively shut down much of industry and growth to achieve the unachievable? Do we close the borders and institute population control a la China style to reduce a growing population? Or does the growing population allow the US to increase its allotment of emissions? Ooooohhhh. The same Kyoto that does not take into account the large forest land in the US that absorbs carbon dioxide, a gas that feeds trees and was not a pollutant until the wackos took over the media? The same Kyoto that slams US industry, and US living standards that so many other countries are jealous of, and should be trying to achieve through fair competition instead of regulation? The same Kyoto that blames global cooling (whoops, I mean global warming!) that so many scientists can't agree on? The same Kyoto that scientists are failing to predict the weather next month let alone the next century? The same Kyoto that when scientists feed random data into their weather models, they sometimes get more accurate results? The same Kyoto that when scientists feed past weather data into their computer models, they get past weather baselines wrong? The same kyoto...

    2. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is the latency of the environmental system? If the glaciers are already melting, it is very likely too late to do a damn thing about.

      Re: Kyoto: Let the E.U. can take the lead for once. So far only Romania is actually LIVING by the Kyoto Protocol.

    3. Re:In a related story... by cheezedawg · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      First of all, Bush has nothing to do with Kyoto. Congress must agree to international treaties, and the Senate voted it down something like 99-0 back during the Clinton administration.

      And don't be fooled that Kyoto is the answer. Kyoto is nothing more than an attempt to cripple the US economy to allow other nations to catch up. And it is hidden behind a solution to a "problem" that scientists can even agree exists (global warming).

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    4. Re:In a related story... by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      For one, it'd be too late now to do anything - any changes we made now wouldn't have any real effect for several hundred years.

      What people also like to ignore when talking about "global warming" is that the planet doesn't stay constant anyways - it fluctuates. There was an ice age 10,000 years ago - if that'd been now, would we have been fighting "global cooling"? Probably. Global warming may be happening, but it would happen anyways - the planet does it whether humans are around or not.

    5. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush shouldn't *have* to reconsider Kyoto. Capitalism works best when the consumers demand things like low polution.

      The fact that the American Monkey-President refuses to sign something doesn't stop consumers from getting what they want.

    6. Re:In a related story... by plastercast · · Score: 2

      Perhaps it is to late to fix what is already in the air, but that is no excuse to make things worse for the future. If you concede that there is already a problem, then why make it any worse than it might already be?

      Also, while everyone else might not be living Kyoto, if you judge it by how much we are polluting vs how much Kyoto levels call for, the rest of thw world is destroying us.

    7. Re:In a related story... by plastercast · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, capitalism doesn't work when you are dealing with externalities such as pollution where costs are externalized. Its econ 101. In addition, to quote Chomsky, if car company 1 puts 50% of its resources into developing a cleaner car for the future, and car company 2 puts those resources into lowering the car's cost, who do you think will be out of business and who will be still selling the pollution cars?

    8. Re:In a related story... by plastercast · · Score: 2

      One, the latency effect, according to NPR, is between 70 and 100 years, not hundreds. Second, just because our actions would take a long time to come to be 100%, that doesn't mean we should damn the future with our sloth. _If_ we can agree that there is a problem, then we need to answer it.

      Second, while it is true that the climate goes through shifts, "global warming" refers to an abnormally quick shift in temp. in terms of hundreds of years as opposed to thousands. This is not a natural thing.

    9. Re:In a related story... by Jacer · · Score: 1

      not true, the temperature difference (on average) between now and the ice age is only some 7 degrees IIRC, but i have no idea on which scale that was measured, it being a scientific paper i was reading, i would assume kelvin

      --
      --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    10. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuckwits like Chomsky always have a reason why capitalism==bad and communism==good.

      Of course, it's getting harder and harder for them to distract their dupes from the stench of the 50 million corpses that their theories produced in the 20th Century.

    11. Re:In a related story... by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 2, Troll
      First of all, Bush has nothing to do with Kyoto. Congress must agree to international treaties, and the Senate voted it down something like 99-0 back during the Clinton administration.

      More fool congress. Actually, America was nearly kicked out of Kyoto by the rest of the world, as your diplomats were constantly harrassing the others and making things difficult - ie opposing any attempt to reach a resolution. They said outright in fact, "we're not going to go with this, as it'd damage our economy". Needless to say, that attitude pisses off pretty much everybody who isn't American.

      And don't be fooled that Kyoto is the answer. Kyoto is nothing more than an attempt to cripple the US economy to allow other nations to catch up. And it is hidden behind a solution to a "problem" that scientists can even agree exists (global warming).

      WTF? What kind of stupid paranoia is that? Last time I checked in fact the dollar was a 1:1 parity with the Euro. We're doing just fine thanks, and this mindless protectionism is just a feeble excuse to not change your ways. America preaches free trade to the rest of the world, but the moment other countries threaten its economic interests, suddenly it's all trade barriers and diplomatic sabotage.

      What, the US steel industry is inefficient? That's OK says Bush, we'll just impose huge trade barriers and flood Europe with cheap foreign steel to protect voters in the rust belt. The rest of the world is developing digital TV faster than us? That's ok, we'll just invent our own (inferior) transmission systems to give US manufacturers a boost. But the moment the rest of the world attempts to do something about global warming, suddenly it's us who's attempting economic meddling.

      Do you guys realise just how much respect America lost abroad when it pulled out of Kyoto? At least here in England Bush is a laughing stock, most people are of the opinion that he's simply in the pockets of american business. There are people here who HATE his guts because of what happened to Kyoto. It wasn't much, but it was something, and it was sacrificed because American voters didn't want to give up their lifestyle.

    12. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is the US' 54% of the global CO2 contamination a minor contribution?

    13. Re:In a related story... by wheany · · Score: 1

      when scientists feed random data into their weather models, they sometimes get more accurate results?

      Well, that is pretty much the nature of random data.

      When scientists take random data, they sometimes get more accurate values for sqrt(2) than 1,414.

    14. Re:In a related story... by plastercast · · Score: 2

      Its not. Thats my point. Perhaps I should have been clearer. If you compare the US's current levels to Kyoto levels, and then do the same for most of the other UN countries, the US is far behind (that is, there is a bigger difference). It seems we agree.

    15. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >At least here in England Bush is a laughing stock, most people are of the opinion that he's simply in the pockets of american business. There are people here who HATE his guts because of what happened to Kyoto. It wasn't much, but it was something, and it was sacrificed because American voters didn't want to give up their lifestyle.

      Don't presume so much about Americans.

      There are plenty of us here who hate Bush, but are afraid or feel guilty to say so, since anyone who disagrees with Bush is "siding with the enemy".

      I'm perfectly willing to change my lifestyle SOMEWHAT to accomodate the environment, especially since I'm young enough to know our treasury will be useless against the kind of damage like Florida, Boston and (oh yeah) DC becoming flooded by rising seas.

      I'm ignoring the environmental issuses here to present climate disaster as a financial issue. That's not because I am heartless -- although I *would* prefer it if we develop more "smartly" -- planned development that does not race to consume the last unpaved acre of land.

      I think the US population could be educated by REAL "leaders", and find a way out of the environmental mess without killing the economy. However THAT would require a huge bitch slap to the #1 source of pollution -- oil energy. You won't get that kind of action from an oil barron president, and when the "next guy" is elected, he'll be so far BURIED in Bush's budget defect he'll be powerless to change anything except plug some leaks in the boat.

      Anyways... it's not the American public's fault (except for being unquestioning sheeple). The government only listens to those who give them the most money... the Saudis, Taiwan, British Petrolium, and the Carlysle Group. We're almost powerless to reform our own government.

    16. Re:In a related story... by yelligsc · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of people here who hate George Doubayah. Hes way too into war and big business for me.

      Scott.

    17. Re:In a related story... by lordarthur · · Score: 1

      Actually EU is not doing any better here. The steel industry have been protected from imports from eastern Europe.
      As an example there have been special Trade Agreements for steel betwenn Czech and the EU but it have have been canceled quick as the market got flooded with cheap steel from there.
      Same for agriculture: The barriers are very high for exports into the US or EU. But it is just a problem for the 2nd/3rd world.

      Most people in the EU are getting angry just because the US shouted at loudest "free trade" but just in cases where it didn't hurt.

    18. Re:In a related story... by MrResistor · · Score: 2

      At least here in England Bush is a laughing stock, most people are of the opinion that he's simply in the pockets of american business.

      That's pretty much the concensus among everyone I know here in the states.

      it was sacrificed because American voters didn't want to give up their lifestyle.

      It would be more accurate to say that it was sacrificed because American businesses didn't want to deal with the design and retooling costs to make their products more efficient/less polluting. The belief is that there isn't any profit in effieciency. This is short-sighted, of course, and the same sort of backwards reasoning that gave Toyota and Honda the huge American market they now enjoy, but that's pretty indicative of American business history.

      The voting public is pretty well divided on the subject. I'm not trying to say that the American people are not at least partly to blame, but it's important to remember that Bush actually lost to popular vote. It's also important to point out that efficiency is important enough to the American people that gas mileage is included on every window sticker of every new car for sale on every car lot.

      Don't write off the US just because our politicians are morons. Europe isn't exactly a shining bastion of rational politics either.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    19. Re:In a related story... by marick · · Score: 2

      "What, the US steel industry is inefficient? That's OK says Bush, we'll just impose huge trade barriers and flood Europe with cheap foreign steel to protect voters in the rust belt."

      Actually, worse than that, it's making retrofitting the Bay Bridge much too expensive. I fear the next big earthquake around here could make All Tomorrow's Parties" a reality.

    20. Re:In a related story... by cheezedawg · · Score: 2

      Actually, America was nearly kicked out of Kyoto by the rest of the world

      So the "rest of the world" wanted to kick us out of something we didn't want to be a part of in the first place, but they didn't- so why are you pissed again?

      WTF? What kind of stupid paranoia is that? Last time I checked in fact the dollar was a 1:1 parity with the Euro.

      The exchange rate of the currency is not a direct or very valid measure of the relative strength or size of an economy (exhange rates are mostly determined by comparing interest rates of the countries). If you want to compare, look at the GDP. And if you don't think Kyoto is anti-American, then why does it focus on the US while allowing other major polluting countries (China, India) to go unchecked?

      Do you guys realise just how much respect America lost abroad when it pulled out of Kyoto?

      I lived in Europe for a few years, so I do know what it is like there. America can't win with the EU. To you, we are these hegemonic bullies that can't keep our noses out of everybodies business, but the minute something happens (like Israel entering the West Bank), the EU is complaining that the US isn't doing enough. Damned if we do and damned if we don't.

      There are people here who HATE his guts because of what happened to Kyoto.

      As I was saying, they are hating the wrong person then. Kyoto was unanimously defeated in the US senate back in 1997 (more than 3 years before Bush took office).

      Pres Bush is not saying that he wants to screw the environment- he is saying that Kyoto was a horribly flawed solution to global climate change. You can read his response to some members of the Senate here:

      http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/03/20 010314.html

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
  22. Other factors. by Matt2000 · · Score: 2

    Not to dismiss this study out of hand, but this prediction has been made in the past many times, most famously by the economist Thomas Malthus in 1798 entitled An Essay on the Principle of Population. Malthus predicted man would outgrow it's resources within ~50 years if strict population checks were not enforced. However, he did not take into account the pace of technological change and food production far exceeded his estimates for the time frame.

    It is very difficult to predict the future, especially almost 50 years out. As stock brokers are supposed to say "Past performance is no guarantee of future performance." Or something like that.

    --

  23. Hahahahahah by pryan · · Score: 2

    This is more than a little alarmist. There is a problem, however the quote

    "extra planets (the equivalent size of Earth) will be required by the year 2050 as existing resources are exhausted"

    is just irresponsible.

    1. Re:Hahahahahah by deadhammer · · Score: 1

      It is NOT irresponsible. It's scientific fact. Right now, today, if the entire of planet Earth were to consume resources at the level that we in North America are, to adopt a more "American" lifestyle, it would take three times the total sum resources of the entire planet to sustain us. Thus, right now, if the Republicans succeed in Americanizing the world (I'm Canadian but we're practically there already), we'd need three planets the size of Earth to sustain us. At our growth rate, it's not entirely inconceivable.

      --
      I'll be honest, we're throwing science against the wall to see what sticks. -Cave Johnson
    2. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Canadians actually consume MORE energy per capita than the U.S.

      2) There's plenty of energy around. It's just that the Greenies don't want us to use it because they view nuclear power the way that savages view evil spirits.

      To its credit, Canada is actually moving forward with nukes.

    3. Re:Hahahahahah by pryan · · Score: 2

      Most of the world doesn't consume like Americans and won't. It's silly to suppose that every single person in the world will consume as much as the highest consumers. If there's not enough resources to support everyone consuming as much as the largest consumers, then it won't happen. Even if they did, at most they would succeed in killing themselves off. The earth would go on.

    4. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, do you think the fact that Canadians live in a colder climate might have to do with the extra enery consumption?

      But if you look at the ecological foortprint (a measure of biologically productive space with world-average productivity) the average US resident out does a Canadian by 50% (a certain Dennis Leary song has been coming to my mind when ever I flip by CNN and see the 'elected' president of the US stumbling through another industry bought and written speech.) Now I pretty sure you've heard this all before but for the entire human population to survive on a US footprint they would have to occupy 4 worlds the same as Earth.

      Now I like the odd science fiction story, but I think people in the 1st world have put their faith into everything except the solution that involves themselves curbing their own consumption.

    5. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the Canadians should move out of their environmentally unfriendly country to curb their consumption?

      Maybe you should turn off your environmentally unfriendly computer, too. Please.

    6. Re:Hahahahahah by iamblades · · Score: 1

      Is it just me, or does it seem as though this research was just area of country divided by population?

      Or did they only count arable land and divide that by population for their statistics.

      Either way the article is extremely alarmist...

      --
      Shit adds up at the bottom...
    7. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ecological foortprint (a measure of biologically productive space with world-average productivity...for the entire human population to survive on a US footprint they would have to occupy 4 worlds the same as Earth.

      Pure snake oil.

      There are plenty of resources. Plenty of land. Plenty of energy.

    8. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "There are plenty of resources. Plenty of land. Plenty of energy."

      Oh, of course, but they all belong to america, right? And woe to those from other countries who want access to it? Fuck, you people are paranoid enough of higher skilled inviduals coming to your country to take your precious jobs away, let alone land, resources, or energy.

      Just because you look out in your backyard and it's all sunshine and daisies, doesn't mean it's that way everywhere.

    9. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Oh, of course, but they all belong to america, right?

      Canada, on the bottom end of the population scale, owns more land, energy, and resources than the US.

      We have forests and oil, for example. We have the second largest country in the world.

      Just something to chew on. And I'm sure that largest country in the world (it is still Russia, right?) would have a say in this too...

    10. Re:Hahahahahah by thetbone · · Score: 1

      "Oh, of course, but they all belong to america, right?"

      No, they are up for sale on the free market. They are owned by the producing countries. The US just happens to be able to buy more.

  24. WWF? by OakLEE · · Score: 1

    Oh come on I hardly think Hulk Hogan, Vince McMahon, and The Rock, et al can predict the fate of humanity.

    Seriously though, for us "crass" Americans, to whom WWF is an acronym for World Wrestling Federation, I think it would have helped if for someone to point out(especially an editor, you listening timothy?) that in this post refers to the World Wildlife Fund. In fact, I think in general it would be a good idea to clarify any algorithm which might not be popular in the Slashdot lexicon. That way, stupid comments like that above will not be made by the many of us (including myself) who prefer to spout our mouth off before reading the story.

    ________________________

    --
    The sun beams down on a brand new day, No more welfare tax to pay, Unsightly slums gone up in flashing light...
  25. Indeed, there is grave danger... by The+Man · · Score: 1

    that we will run out of salt. Move along, nothing new here.

  26. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  27. Assumptions by numbuscus · · Score: 1

    I guess, if you make the assumptions that population will grow at a continued rate, there aren't any major wars, some desease doesn't wipe out much of the Earth's poor population (no AIDS?), and that materials/food production technology doesn't advance any further than it has - then I guess you could come to this conclusion. I'm a bit skeptical, though, as I know their analysis probably made some of these assumptions.

    That doesn't mean, however, that we should keep up our current wasteful practices. I think more does need to be done to slow our usage of raw materials. Hell, if NASA can't even get a funding boost, how the hell are we going to be able to develope the tech to get us to other planets?

    Maybe the WWF should label the 'natural resource crisis' as some sort of terrorism so that Bush et al. will being pooring money into the 'Ecological Defense Fund for the Preservation of the American Way of Life through the Rape of Other Planets and Near Earth Objects'.

    My $0.02

  28. WWF = World Wildlife Fund by Thomas+M+Hughes · · Score: 3, Informative

    I quick search (and reference from my sibling) indicates that the World Wildlife Fund brought Suit against the World Wresting Federation in the British House of Lords (a case which the World Wildlife Fund won). Instead of fighting some more, the World Wresting Federation changed its name to World Wresting Entertainment.

    I also believe their new slogan is "Get the 'F' out."

    1. Re:WWF = World Wildlife Fund by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 2
      "I quick search (and reference from my sibling) indicates that the World Wildlife Fund brought Suit against the World Wresting Federation in the British House of Lords (a case which the World Wildlife Fund won). Instead of fighting some more, the World Wresting Federation changed its name to World Wresting Entertainment."

      It would probably be easier for them to change all their artwork and signs too ... on the computer design software just copy the top horizontal stroke of the E and paste it on the bottom. The physical signs probably only need a bit added on as opposed to total remanufacturing.

      It was kind of like when a certain Chinese Food restaurant called "China Town" in my former town changed names and management. The new name was "China Park" -- they only had to pay to manufacture half a sign. Alas, the food at the 'new' restaurant was not as good as at the 'old' one.

    2. Re:WWF = World Wildlife Fund by edwdig · · Score: 2

      The offical company name was always World Wrestling Federation Entertainment. No E in the logo before, no E now. They just got rid of the F, leaving the two W's for the new logo. Hence the saying, Get the F out.

    3. Re:WWF = World Wildlife Fund by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WWF has stood for the WorldWide Fund for Nature for many years now: at least since 1990 when I joined.

    4. Re:WWF = World Wildlife Fund by BigJimSlade · · Score: 1

      Instead of fighting some more, the World Wresting Federation changed its name to World Wresting Entertainment.

      Duh! If you had been watching last week, they explained it right before that big cage match with...

  29. Born on date. by glrotate · · Score: 1

    I just wish the Earth would have a Born On Date like fine beers do.

    1. Re:Born on date. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, I thought you said "fine beer".

  30. I can see it now.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please spare me the Wrestling jokes... The WWF mentioned is the World Wildlife Fund, a globally recognized environmental group that has done more for the welfare of the world than most anyone.

  31. the short answer: no by archen · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Expire is a pretty strong word. Will the earth exceed critical mass and humanity implode? Maybe. Maybe humans won't survive at all - but believe me, SOMETHING will survive.
    As the lyrics to an In Flames song goes:
    Species come and species go, but the Earth stands forever fast

    1. Re:the short answer: no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      but believe me, SOMETHING will survive.
      Not if we get sucked into the sun! (Because elephants and tigers and tree sparrows make the world go around, so if we kill all of them the Earth will suddenly stop spinning, and...)
    2. Re:the short answer: no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The In Flames are borrowing a bit: "Men come and go, but earth abides" -- Ecclesiates

    3. Re:the short answer: no by io333 · · Score: 1

      SOMETHING will survive

      BULLSHIT!

      The earth is TOAST!

    4. Re:the short answer: no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IN FLAMES!!!!

  32. Fuckin SUVs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Soccer moms of America and yuppie cockeaters need to belly up to the table and cut out the fucking consumption competition..

    1. Re:Fuckin SUVs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I vote we start with you.

      Turn off your computer. Get the electricity turned off to your house. Stop eating anything grown further away than you can walk.

      Hint: to someone in the Third World, YOU'RE the "soccer mom" who's "overconsuming".

      God, I hate hypocrites.

    2. Re:Fuckin SUVs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, I TRY. I live in a much smaller home than I COULD. I drive a two-door hatchback, though I could afford a Lincoln Navigator. I recycle everything I possibly can. I wear my clothes and shoes thread-bare. You don't know me, so don't judge me.

      However, I am 100% comfortable judging the idiots I see in the suburbs driving newly-leased, gas guzzling SUV's. I know the score. Everyone says they need a "safe" vehicle for their trophy wife and toddler-genius. Plus with all of those runs to Costco for carbohydrate-laden bulk foods, you need something to put them all in. I've heard all the sorry excuses and I'm sorry, about .001% of people who drive a Navigator actually NEED one.

      America needs to separate the NEEDS from the WANTS. It's time to fish or cut bait because the environment is going to shit. Americans elected Bush because he's a president that won't make us feel guilty about our sins. In fact, he'll encourage them, and try to make them cheaper!!

      I live as best I can, and I'll tell you, it ain't fucking glamorous. You must be one of those fucking Euros.

    3. Re:Fuckin SUVs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have a car and a house.

      You don't NEED either one.

      You live in a First World country, and as a result you consume many times the energy of someone in the Third World. The difference between you with your shitty econobox and someone with an SUV is vanishingly small.

      You're a fucking hypocrite who assuages his guilty conscience by choosing a convenient scapegoat. "Hey, it's not MY fault. It's the fault of all those SUV-drivin' Earth-hatin' yuppies!"

      If you REALLY want to save the Earth start promoting nuclear power.

    4. Re:Fuckin SUVs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, are you really stupid enough to believe you aren't a hypocrite?

      How about you separate your NEEDS from your WANTS? You still have a bigger house and a bigger car than you need (hint: you don't *need* either).

      Better yet, why don't you realize that once people meet their needs, they will go after their wants? That's why they are called "wants".

      Consumption is required for life to exist. Must suck to hate the very thing your life depends on.

    5. Re:Fuckin SUVs by netcoyote · · Score: 1

      All the worlds problems are caused by the SUV. We can ban SUV's, and save the world.

    6. Re:Fuckin SUVs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Wasting electricity to run a computer to no good end is another.

      I've got three running right now, and don't really care what you think because I doubt you can do that.

    7. Re:Fuckin SUVs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You try yet you still drive?

      If your parents had "tried" that hard you wouldn't even exist. If you really cared and truly believed your own bullshit you'd bike to work and not even own a car.

      Face it: the "sacrifices" you make and are so damn proud of stop as soon as they become truly inconvenient to you, like most "environmentally concerned" people.

      Your "sacrifices" involve driving a 2,500 pound car that gets 35 MPG instead of a 4,000 pound car that gets 21 MPG. Give up the car totally or shut your fucking pie hole.

    8. Re:Fuckin SUVs by wheany · · Score: 1

      Hey, I TRY.[...]I drive a two-door hatchback
      You must have written that wrong. You must mean you cycle, right?

    9. Re:Fuckin SUVs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I vote we start with you. Turn off your computer. Get the electricity turned off to your house. Stop eating anything grown further away than you can walk. Hint: to someone in the Third World, YOU'RE the "soccer mom" who's "overconsuming". God, I hate hypocrites.

      Aaah, I get it.
      You have no business telling someone they're eating too much, unless you deliberately starve yourself first so that you have a right to talk. If someone is using too much water on their lawn during a drought, you can't say anything about it unless you've stopped using water yourself. And if you think people are pigs and drive too many SUVs, you have no right to express that sentiment unless you first foreswear all technology and go live in a cave somewhere for a couple years. Otherwise, you're a "hypocrite".
      How convenient for you that anyone who meets this dubious standard isn't here to disagree with you, eh? You'd have to come up with another logical fallacy.

  33. Past predictions were all wrong, why believe this? by rbook · · Score: 5, Informative

    These are the same folks who predicted that the world would run out of food by 1980, then predicted we'd run out of oil by 1985.

    And of course Thomas Malthus predicted imminent mass starvation in the early 1800s.

    In the 1970s, they predicted:

    "The world as we know it will likely be ruined before the year 2000
    and the reason for this will be its inhabitants' failure to comprehend
    two facts. These facts are (1) World food production cannot keep pace
    with the galloping growth of population. (2) 'Family planning' cannot
    and will not, in the foreseeable future, check this runaway growth."

    "Agricultural experts state that a tripling of the food
    supply of the world will be necessary in the next 30
    years or so, if the 6 or 7 billion people who may be
    alive in the year 2000 are to be adequately fed.
    Theoretically such an increase might be possible, but it
    is becoming increasingly clear that it is totally
    impossible in practice."

    Except, here we are in 2002 and those 6 or 7 billion people are eating better than any of their ancestors in all of human history, even in the poorest countries.

    For more info, see The Ultimate Resource by Julian Simon, and The Skeptical Environmentalist by Bjorn Lomborg.

  34. Consumption vs. Morality by debrain · · Score: 2

    Earth's natural resources may run out in 50 years, but there's years left of resources for those willing to "consume" humans themselves ... When it's do or die, immorality is a selective advantage.

    On another note, I do take issue with the concerns for "overpopulation". The 1st world populations are not growing - it's the 3rd world that has the population problems; they are already existing beyond sustainability. The problem the 1st world encounters is consumerism, not overpopulation. One consumer in the 1st world can use more resources than hundreds of human beings in the 3rd need to survive.

    Also, coming from Newfoundland (just off the Grand Banks), the cod fishery was the life-blood of the economy there, which they use as an example of devasted Earth resources. There is now a moratorium on cod fishing, which also devastated that economy. Since the moratorium was instantiated, it is widely believed that the cod stock has partly recovered, and will continue to. So I am not so sure I buy their verdict, given this choice of example with contrary information they conveniently omitted. This is a little salt to their bitter assessment.

    Certainly, though, they are outlining important trends in the environment as a result of human presence.

    1. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by dpete4552 · · Score: 1

      Relevant reference: http://www.prb.org/Content/NavigationMenu/PRB/Educ ators/Human_Population/Population_Growth/Populatio n_Growth.htm

      --
      http://www.archive.org/details/ThePowerOfNightmares
    2. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by Pfhor · · Score: 2

      A family with 2 children in the US consumes the same as a family with 200 children in India. It would take 12.5 billion Indian's to consume the same as the 250 Million Americans.

      (Statiistics from my Contemp. Environment class, they are old, and I don't have the sources off hand).

      What scares me is the growing globalism. Not every country is like the US, but for some reason, we try to make every country to act like a US consumer, forcing goods on them, etc. So what if eventually, our consumer culture infects india's population?

      Don't save the environment, save the planet. Human's, animals, plants, the whole sort of them. A city is just as much of an environment that needs protection from toxins, pollution, chemical waste, bad water, etc. (actually more so, because of the population density) as a forest is. We need to realize we are part of this environment before we can save it.

      --end hippy rant--

    3. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, yeah, we're "forcing" consumer goods on them.

      Get back to me when YOU start living a Third World lifestyle.

      Of course that'll be kinda difficult, since starving, illiterate peasants don't have access to the Internet.

      Ever occur to you that consuming that much more than an Indian is a GOOD thing, and that starving like them is a BAD thing?

      You might ask yourself how you've managed to become so indoctrinated with the meme that Western Civilization is bad. It's nothing but the same ol' Puritan Original Sin doctrine dressed up in modern clothes.

    4. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by debrain · · Score: 2

      You might want to look up "How Much is Enough", by Alan Durning.

      You seem to be asserting that the only alternative to consumerism is self-annihilation, ergo consuming is not just for happiness (no matter how shallow) but survival. I suggest you look into alternatives such as biocentricity, stewardship, and Durning's espoused middle class.

      I believe that the difference between a consumer and the middle class is desire versus need. You don't need a $50,000 vehicle, but most would like one. And not because it is practical. Perhaps instead of looking outwards for completion, we should look inwards; consuming will not bring happiness, and I would argue (given more time) that it forces us to redefine "existence", otherwise half the "civilized" planet would cease to qualify.

    5. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by Pfhor · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nestle was boycotted by most of europe for a while before it was advertising in africa that it's baby formula was healthy and better for a baby than mother's breast milk. The result was children started to become malnurish as their impoverished mothers, wanting to do the best for their children, ONLY fed their children the expensive formula, and since they couldn't afford enough of it to be a suitable replacement for breast milk, the children were malnurished.

      You also do not realize how immune we are to our own culture. We all know to question advertisements, we are used to them, and they are just there to make money for the company. However, people in 3rd world countries who have never been exposed to the corporate advertising machine don't realize that they are being LIED to (many of these countrys do not have regulations against mis information / mis leading ads, because they are willing to take any money they can get).

      A companies only interest is in money. Making more of it, acquiring more wealth, and the end result is that the only way to regulate companies is through their proverbial wallet.

      That is why nestle has stopped its ads. It started losing revenue in first world nations because of it.

      Our freedom has come at the cost of others. Those others have started to strike back, and it is going to get worse. Realize the privileges that you have, and do something for the better, not for you.

    6. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      So you're suggesting that we all subscribe to some new age spirtual bullshit instead of buying the things that we want in order to find happiness?

      I'll pass. Give me the big ol SUV instead.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    7. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No need for "some new age spiritual bullshit" (notice: "spiritual", not "spirtual"), or any substitute. It's a matter of being at peace with yourself and the world. You'll find that you don't need all that shit to be happy.

      I know it's hard to undo all the consumerism hype we've been fed, but it's possible. Watching less TV is a good start.

    8. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might want to look up "How Much is Enough", by Alan Durning.

      Or I might not.

      You may be happy living in an unheated hovel, eating nothing but rice cakes and tofu. Knock yourself out. Don't expect me to follow suit.

      I'll note here that damned near every "anticonsumer" person I know has a car, a TV, a computer, and a large collection of CDs and videos.

    9. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that makes you happy, go off in a corner and meditate or something and leave the rest of us the fuck alone.

    10. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >

      200 times what? They don't eat 200 times the food. 200 times the clothing, i doubt it. 200 times the oil, well many indians have no electricity. 200 times the beef maybe, but then they are mostly not meat eaters there.

    11. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by debrain · · Score: 2

      I suggest you look up "Will to Power", by Nietzsche. Power is knowledge, and you are saying that you would rather be without knowledge, without power.

      It is one thing to have the knowledge, be aware of the options. Another to not know your options at all. I prefer the option to be happy and poor, but I do admit I like the option to consumer endlessly, too.

      There is a happy medium.

    12. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might start by asking why you want a SUV. If it isn't to make yourself happy, you may need to sort out your priorities. If it is to make you happy, consider asking how exactly it could make you happy.

      Don't ask, and you will suffer your entire life in ways you cannot imagine. This is the curse of the ignorant consumer.

    13. Re:Consumption vs. Morality by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

      You clearly haven't lived outside the first world if you think that America is forcing goods on our poorer neighbors. Most people in the third world would give anything to live in the United States. They know what they want for themselves and their children, and it isn't a thatched hut out in the middle of the jungle. They want Big Macs, Nike shoes, and Captain Crunch just like the rest of us.

      One hundred years from now the poorest folks in the world will probably live better than the richest of us now, and people will laugh at the 21st century environmentalists (like we laugh at Malthus) and cower over the predictions of their modern fear mongerers. Nothing changes.

  35. More Malthusian bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Let's see, who has an agenda that is based on the belief that humanity is despoiling the planet?

    And who really wants to decree that we use "too much" resources?

    And how many centuries ago was it the Malthus said we were all going to run out of food and starve to death?

  36. Oh, come on... by mikethegeek · · Score: 1, Troll

    This is crank "science" by the same bunch of idiots who said that we were going into an ice age back in the 70's, and who put in children's readers in the early 80's (I remember this in school) that you wouldn't be able to go outside in the 1990's without an oxygen mask.

    This trash is funded by the WWF. No wonder they wanted to divorce themselves from the wrestlers (now WWE), their science is just as fake.

    --
    === The price of freedom is eternal vigilance
    1. Re:Oh, come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "that you wouldn't be able to go outside in the 1990's without an oxygen mask."

      And you cant. Just go to Japan (or any other major country). It was probably because of them that we can breath fresh air today.

    2. Re:Oh, come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is crank "science" by the same bunch of idiots who said that we were going into an ice age back in the 70's, and who put in children's readers in the early 80's (I remember this in school) that you wouldn't be able to go outside in the 1990's without an oxygen mask.

      So these people must be crank "scientists" too?
      Its so evident that Mexico City and LA are positively beneficial to enhance lung function.
      http://www.coeh.ucla.edu/fairpol.html

    3. Re:Oh, come on... by shepd · · Score: 1

      >Just go to Japan (or any other major country).

      The US counts as a major country and as someone who vacations there often I've never felt the compulsion to purchase an oxygen mask.

      Now, if I were a heavy smoker, that might be different.

      >It was probably because of them that we can breath fresh air today.

      Nahhh, its because of the plankton in the sea which generates 90%+ of all the oxygen on earth. Wildlife has nothing to do whatsoever with oxygen except for the fact that it uses it up.

      If anything, the WWFs race to stop extinction has harmed the amount of oxygen on earth.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    4. Re:Oh, come on... by shepd · · Score: 1

      >Its so evident that Mexico City and LA are positively beneficial to enhance lung function.

      Well, if the air is so crappy in a city, why live there?

      I think those two cities combined make up (yes, this will require scientific notation) something like 10E-100% of the earth's surface. At this rate 10E-50% of the earth might be that bad by the year 2050.

      BFD.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    5. Re:Oh, come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If anything, the WWFs race to stop extinction has harmed the amount of oxygen on earth.
      Not that this is necessarily a bad thing. Oxygen is actually a metabolic poison (which is why the term most of us know as "corrosion", most scientists know as "oxidation") and is, on the whole, very bad for most things. That's why there are critters like us who can metabolize it, turning it into something non-toxic. Of course, if there weren't any creatures or other life forms to turn oxygen into carbon dioxide, and none to turn carbon dioxide into oxygen, then there wouldn't be a whole lot of life left on this planet.

      Hooray for self-sustaining systems.

    6. Re:Oh, come on... by wheany · · Score: 1

      think those two cities combined make up (yes, this will require scientific notation) something like 10E-100% of the earth's surface.

      Useless fact: if the above was true, the area of the cross-section of a proton would be 7.85e56 times as large as the area of Mexico city and LA. Or 78 500 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 time as large.

    7. Re:Oh, come on... by shepd · · Score: 1

      Good point.

      Maybe rather than their actual size, I was thinking about their importance to me, personally. :-)

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
  37. No by Stephen+VanDahm · · Score: 1

    Everyone knows that the answer to a question appearing in the headline of a Slashdot article almost always "No".

    Steve

  38. I'm gonna blame the president by TheCyko1 · · Score: 1

    Maybe now, or after the geneva convention, our good ol' president Bush will sign the Kyoto Protocal. After all, he was the only one who didn't agree to the terms of this movement, you can read actual agreement here:
    http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/1997/global.war ming/st ories/treaty/
    and here's a story about it:
    http://www.abc.net.au/rn/science/earth/storie s/s33 6357.htm

    --
    This message was brought to you by the death of 30 brain cells.
    1. Re:I'm gonna blame the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Refusing to sign that piece of shit is one of the few occasions when he's done something right.

    2. Re:I'm gonna blame the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush has nothing to do with the Kyoto Treaty.

      He doesn't like it, true, and he announced that he wouldn't push for it, but the Constitution gives the Senate the right to implement treaties, not the President. The Senate voted against it 95-0.

      As the other responder noted, one of the few instances of a sane decision coming out of D.C.

    3. Re:I'm gonna blame the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about you geniuses explain WHY opposing Kyoto is such a great idea? What exactly about the Kyoto protocol is bogus?

    4. Re:I'm gonna blame the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm... because it would cripple the economy of the United States?

      Nah, that couldn't be it.

    5. Re:I'm gonna blame the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'll worry about Bush's position on Kyoto when other countries stop talking about how great an idea it is and actually ratify it in a form with some real teeth.

      Because right now it's in a form that's as useless as tits on a bull because all enforcment is gutted, and still no one ratifies it - they just throw rotten fruit at the one national leader who's pointed out that the oh-so-popular emperor has no clothes.

    6. Re:I'm gonna blame the president by thetbone · · Score: 1

      "How about you geniuses explain WHY opposing Kyoto is such a great idea? "
      One of many reasons: it is bad for the economy. American discoveries help 3rd world people live longer.

      "What exactly about the Kyoto protocol is bogus?"
      The science.

    7. Re:I'm gonna blame the president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good, me too! I'm from FL but I know I didn't vote for Bush...hey maybe while he's taking care of the whole Kyoto thing he should think about getting the fsck out of office before he gets us all killed, what with his failures to keep nuclear missile production to a minimum and reducing pollution and fuel consumption so we have an Earth in fifty years...

  39. fear mongering by NixterAg · · Score: 1

    Sounds like more fear mongering from environmentalists. Carl Sagan, anyone?

    1. Re:fear mongering by Treylis · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you wanna know what's really bad about that? My voice and Carl Sagan's... completely identical. It's driven me nuts whenever certain people realize it, as the man needed to get a few headscrews tightened.

    2. Re:fear mongering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While Sagan had his faults, he did correctly predict that during the Gulf conflict the temperature would decrease due to the smoke from the burning oil wells blocking out the sun.

      This was confirmed by numerous scientists as well as weather satellites. The burning oil fires did decrease the temperature LOCALLY by up to 2 degrees.

      Granted, for a place like Kuwait to have a 2 degree temperature drop would be a good thing but overall not having sunlight is not.

    3. Re:fear mongering by NixterAg · · Score: 1

      How big is Kuwait exactly?

      He predicted that the Gulf conflict would have devastating effects on the temperature of the entire world...so his prediction was incorrect.

  40. Malthusian Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It sure is hard to permanently kill bad ideas. This particular one is like Jason; it just keeps coming back.

  41. Balderdash by benzapp · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I can't believe this article was posted. It is almost as bad as any troll. It isn't even an article, it is more the ramblings of a eco freak socialist. My god, we have been hearing these same apocolyptic predictions since the industrial revolution began.

    These zealots unfortunately suffer from the same problems as all zealots. They are irrational, and unable to see reality.

    Does any single sentence in this ridiculous article give any shred of proof to the assertion mankind can go extinct in 50 years? How did they come up with this number? Nothing but gobblygook to back up their outrageous claims.

    If anything indicates this story was not based on sound scientific evidence it is mention that the evil Republicans headed by George W Bush will cause the collapse of civilization as we know it because Bushie pulled out of the Kyoto treaty.

    Of course, the snivelling remark of every socialist was evidence the real nature of this article - and the environmental movement - in the following quote: "The report offers a vivid warning that either people curb their extravagant lifestyles or risk leaving the onus on scientists to locate another planet that can sustain human life"

    This assertion does not give any indication who suddenly posseses the ability to see the future, to know which technological advancements will be available tomorrow to deal with this problems. This article is based on the absolutely absurd notion that a) current consumption of natural resources by britons increases at certain rate per year. b) this rate will forever remain the same for all humans c) this rate of increase in consumption will ultimately apply to all humans who indulge in the capitalistic pig fest.

    Is it not logical to assume that history will continue to repeat itself? Technology will increase and solve these problems? As it always has? That we will ultimately kill the weaker persons who are stealing the natural resources to which we are the rightful owners?

    Of course, as socialists, they don't understand nature. Nature always forces shortages on populations, the result of this is natural selection, competition. Those humans that can survive win, those they cannot die. But for all their clammoring about nature, they can't for a second realize the real problem in this world is we keep too many people alive who otherwise should die. Death, that evil word, sends chills down the spines of do-gooders everywhere. It doesn't matter, when the population competition does get that fierce, we will just have another war. Nothing really starts wars EVER other than competition for natural resources. Let the blood flow!!!!

    --
    I don't read or respond to AC posts
    1. Re:Balderdash by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

      so what if you are the next to die? would you be worried? or would you be ok with it because too many people are alive anyways.

      i think you you would be at least a little bit worried. And dont say "it wont happen to me, it will only happen to brown people in other countries" because that's just stupid. I can give numerous examples where groups of people that have hoped to delegate misery and suffering to the unwashed masses have had their heads severed by those masses.

      So ask your self would you think it is unfair if you were the next to die as a result of over population.

      If you answer yes, then you shouldnt flame people that are at least trying to find another way.

    2. Re:Balderdash by Com2Kid · · Score: 2

      Who the fuck moderated the Troll/Dipshit +5?

      No, seriously, I want to know.

      Even if he is 'for real' (and by that I mean not trolling, he is STILL a dipshit), heck folks, do the math.

      More People, Less Resources, End result; well shit, that sucks.

      Simple, eh?

      The best way to go about and do things is to curb population growth (1 child per TWO PEOPLE, if you have your one child with a partner and then switch parteners, TOO BAD) for EVERYBODY in the whole world, and saying fuck it to human rights, forced sterilization after the first kid pops out.

      Of course some people will bitch "well what if the child dies??"

      Well too bad, just means the population will drop faster then expected, and that is a good thing.

      I am /SO/ going to go postal if I see one more damn Condo being shitted together in this city, yeesh! Those things look horrid and ARE horrid. Same with MiniVans, ick.

    3. Re:Balderdash by ChannelX · · Score: 1

      have you read the real report? Pass whatever judgement you want about the article about the report. However you have no idea what the real report says as of yet I assume. Read it then make your judgement. At any rate natural resources are being used up fast. The numbers are scary. If you want to live in denial so be it.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    4. Re:Balderdash by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      Most republicans don't actually come out and say that the poor people should be killed, congratulations on your honesty.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    5. Re:Balderdash by tres · · Score: 1
      Scary what one can justify simply by invoking the Other. Here, the other is a weaker theif of "our" natural resources. And as in all dichotomies built out of the Other, "us" is the stronger, is the better, is the rightful owner of everything we can forcibly take.

      As I observe nationalism swell in the US, I see more and more of these haunting reflections of worldview of Nazi Germany. It's a scary time to be here. The US seems on the brink of meltdown from within, and it's this idiot capitalist quasi neo-Marxist/darwinist pseudo theory of "survival of the fittest" at the heart of it all.

      Here, it's the greediest that go the furthest, it's those who have no morality that gain the most. From the self-serving fool who stole the presidency, to Bill Gates, Enron and beyond, the most "powerful" in this country are those who cheated their way into power.

      You sound like you've read too many Ayn Rand books, so let's get this out of the way first:

      Socialism != morality
      behavior != need
      The world doesn't boil down to economic theories. The reasons one does something can range beyond the one dimensional decimals of capitalism.
      Of course, as socialists, they don't understand nature.
      The implicit idea here, is that you understand nature and "Socialists" (whatever that means to you) don't. This is, of course, silly since nature is nothing but a reified idea. (I'll let you in on a secret, little guy, there is no "nature.")

      Nature always forces shortages on populations, the result of this is natural selection, competition.
      Nature doesn't do anything. Let's go over it again--nature is a reified idea which you've obviously gotten confused about. Life does not exist without death, that much we agree about, but that's not "nature."
      Think about it for a second: populations force shortages upon other populations, or environmental conditions force shortages on populations. The detail is the key. To arbitrarily group these two distinct causes into something called "natural" is the fault of your logic.
      But for all their clammoring about nature, they can't for a second realize the real problem in this world is we keep too many people alive who otherwise should die.
      I'll let this speak for itself. It's good insight into the lunacy of this worldview (so pervasive in the United States right now).
      Once people start talking about who should be alive and who should be dead, we're not too far from mechanized genocide.
      Nothing really starts wars EVER other than competition for natural resources.
      This statement is just as outrageous as the rest of the tripe you've written, but why don't you tell me a little about how you perceive every religious war ever fought, every war about ideologies.
      How was Vietnam was a competition for natural resources? I'm sure you've got your own domino theory.
      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    6. Re:Balderdash by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Fair is irrelevant. Fair is the word used by the weak in the face of strength. What matters is I preserve my own life, it is what all people do. I will not die because I will do whatever it takes to prevent myself from starving to death. In the end, if I fail, then so what. The purpose of life IS the struggle to survive.

      As far as your "masses" severing the heads of ... someone. This is exactly what I am talking about. Competition for scare resources can in extreme circumstances result in war. Do-gooders such as yourself may abused words like "fairness" and "justice", but the end result is the people who are hungry steal from those who have food.

      Socialists are nothing more than starved wolves, howling at the bone they cannot have.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    7. Re:Balderdash by benzapp · · Score: 1

      You call me a troll/dipshit, even though we both agree that there are too many people. On one hand, I believe technology will take care of most problems.

      You are right there is too much birth. But we will never control that. Just as a virus will grow in your body until you die or your immune system culls some of the infection, you cannot control people. They will kick and scream and fight, because they WANT to have children. Talk to any chick over 30. Half the people are women, do you REALLY think we will be able to impose such draconian measures? Of course not.

      I would much rather be free to do what I wish, and screw over some low lifes in another country. If you think for a minute me, or anyone else in a civilized country, will give up basic rights like reproduction to save some barbarian... think again.

      To your credit, a more intelligent post would have noted how industrialized nations have declining birth rates. Perhaps, poverty itself leads to outrageous birthing. Look at the french, who I personally despise, but their population is steadily decreasing...

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    8. Re:Balderdash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You and your "competition for scarce resources". Excessive competition is what makes resources scarce in the first place. A little bit of cooperation makes them abundant. Life is not a zero sum game.

    9. Re:Balderdash by benzapp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Scary what one can justify simply by invoking the Other. Here, the other is a weaker theif of "our" natural resources. And as in all dichotomies built out of the Other, "us" is the stronger, is the better, is the rightful owner of everything we can forcibly take."

      Yes, you should more carefully look at the wars you describe. I am being honest, you however are kidding yourself about a great many things. The stronger merely means one thing, those who can survive by overpowering others will. It is that simple. It is not right or wrong. You have constructed a false sense of morality that is a) not practical b) a tool of keeping the masses content as slaves. Socialism and religion are these tools. There will be a breaking point, the only question is when. At least I do not foolishly think we can provide for all people indefinitely.

      You sound like you've read too many Ayn Rand books, so let's get this out of the way first:

      Socialism != morality
      behavior != need

      As much as I admire Ayn Rands work, it is nothing more than pulp philosophy. Morality is in itself, a false construction. More than anything else, it is a tool created by the strong to trick the masses into devoting their pathetic lives to the service of their masters. You will find the vast majority of control is not exercised through death... Most people do not live because their blood is spilled, their minds are warped from the moment of birth to believe their place in life is to serve the state, their comrades, or a god.

      All human behavior is motivated by one thing, the will to power. It is all governing, and omnipresent all the time. The Socialist enjoys his control over others, the feeling of superiority he gets at naturalists like myself. The theists fullfills his desire for power every time he gifts an eloquent speech in defense of his god, and condemns heathens such as myself who consider him a quack. The bully on the playground, a little lad, fulfills his will to power every time be forces others to do whatever he wants them to do. The artist, free of political bullshit, experiences the will to power when he performs a brilliant piece of music on a violin or completes a beautiful painting. For those who lack the strength or ingenuity to do what they want, artificial constructs of morality are created. It is a tool of, for, and by slaves to overcome their masters. It is their attempt to experience power. But, because they know not what it is, they always fail. It is the slaves who will draw blood when the food runs out, not I. It is not right or wrong, it simply will happen. The Will to Power is human nature.

      If you have taken the time to read Ayn Rand, thats great. But I suggest you move yourself to the next level. I once thought as you, but it times to get rid of this morality system to which you hold dear. Nietzsche will provide you with a greater understanding of life.

      "Nature doesn't do anything. Let's go over it again--nature is a reified idea which you've obviously gotten confused about. Life does not exist without death, that much we agree about, but that's not "nature."
      Think about it for a second: populations force shortages upon other populations, or environmental conditions force shortages on populations. The detail is the key. To arbitrarily group these two distinct causes into something called "natural" is the fault of your logic."

      I cannot believe I am reading this in this condescending tone. This is the old nature or nurture argument. It has been going on for at least 200 years. Not even the sickest mind controlling communist will completely dismiss human nature. I suggest you analyze yourself and others before you make such dismissive comments, especially faulty logic. Nature does not "do" anything you are right, but it is a system of behavior of living things. All living things strive to grow. Try not eating or fucking for a week. First, you will eat until satisfied, then you will fuck. You won't be able to think of anyhting else. Your little mind that you perceive to be completely under your control is hardly so. Your body's first goal is to survive, then to reproduce. The goals are acheived by you striving to be better than anyone else. Happiness only occurs when you acheive superiority to others. A pack of wolves operates in the same fashion, a school of fish, or any other species. Even plants will grow until there is nowhere left to grow. Nature does not create food shortages, that is not my point. I apologize if that is the case. Human nature, and the nature of all living things, is to reproduce as much as possible, until all means of sustinence are used up. It is the excess reproduction of living things that causes food shortages.

      It is unfortunate you do not see that the population problem is simply humans behaving like every other living thing.

      Also Vietnam is an exception, but at the time, the French cared about Vietnam due to its abundant supply of natural rubber. One of the many factors of Germany's demise in WWII was its dependency on natural substances for military clothing and boots after the American liberation of the south east asia. A cynic such as myself would argue that Vietnam was about intangibles such as propoganda. A popular tool of masters going back for all of written history is to rally the people behind some war cause, if not for natural resources, than to at least keep them quiet and give them something to do. The more they hate some other group, the less they hate their own masters.

      Once again, in my defense against the socialist onslaught, I am not a Nazi, I personally do not belive in the taking of anything from anyone or the killing of anyone. What I do believe, is others will find ways to do this within their artificial morality. Socialists will steal from the rich. Fascists will steal from their neighboring countries. When push comes to shove, there will be a lot of stealing of food going on. But, not by me. It is important for all you wonderful socialists to understand NAZI is an acronym for the National Socialist Party. The Nazis WERE socialists. Germany of 1940 is just like Germany of today, without the antisemitism. Same corporate control by the state, same wealth redistribution, same lack of freedoms.

      Socialism is no different than nazism. They both steal, they both keep people chained in bondage to the state. The sooner we throw away our vicious tools of control, the sooner we can live a more peaceful life on this planet.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    10. Re:Balderdash by benzapp · · Score: 1

      This is true, but sticking a gun to someone's head and saying cooperate or die is not the answer. We need to acknowledge that humans operate as all living things do, they are driven to consume food, and have offspring. Whether in a communist nation or America, most people are obviously driven to have children. Most people cannot fathom the meaning of life outside of "raise a family". it is my assertion this is as strong a biological need as any other, but moreso in women. Biological urges of course can be overcome... but the means to that is still very much under debate.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    11. Re:Balderdash by tres · · Score: 1
      All human behavior is motivated by one thing, the will to power. It is all governing, and omnipresent all the time... The Will to Power is human nature.

      If you have taken the time to read Ayn Rand, thats great. But I suggest you move yourself to the next level. I once thought as you, but it times to get rid of this morality system to which you hold dear. Nietzsche will provide you with a greater understanding of life.

      You invoke Nietzsche as if he was being prescriptive about his philosophies. I've seen too many people try to follow the words of Nietzsche as if he were meaning them as an end in themselves. Let me describe it in a metaphor:
      Nietzsche leads a poor young man out of the house he once thought was all there was. Nietzsche leads him into the open world, with an endless deep blue sky above, and a lonely horizon all around. It's terrifying and exhilerating. He feels a new sense of power, like he's finally seen the truth. Having seen that the old house is just a small brokedown shack that his father, his grandfather & greatgrandfather also lived in, he burns the house down. He runs from door to door of the other little shanties, trying to burn them too, screaming between closed shutters, pounding on doors. He wants everyone to see the "truth" that he's found.

      But burning the little house down doesn't change anything, it doesn't give him any more truth than he had before he saw the little house from the outside.

      He could just have well left the little shanty standing. He could have walked back into the shanty--now knowing that the world he thought was "real" and "truth" doesn't exist, but rather is one amongst many realities and truths. But deep down, he still believes that there can only be one truth, he cannot live with the difference between the absence of "truth" outside the shanty, and the "truth" that is inside the shanty.
      He could just as well have gone back in. He could have been able to open and close the door any time, now knowing that the little shanty is not all there is--but that there are billions of little shanties that are all different. The irony is, his new truth becomes the absence of truth that exists outside the shanty; truth still exists just as much as it did before, only now, it is the absence of what was truth to him before.

      Nietzsche was only being descriptive of the world he saw. In The Birth of Tragedy, Nietzsche describes the Apollonian and the Dionysian. He does not put one at odds with the other, nor does he say that one is more true than the other, he describes the two forces. Neither is good, neither is bad, neither is the truth. They represent parts of a whole, a perspective of the world more lucid than either alone provides. It is easy to mistake Nietzsche as being prescriptive, or saying that we should be doing something, when, in fact, he merely describes the world we are terrified to look at. To interpret what Nietzsche as saying we should view human existence without the Apollinian moralities would be as foolhearty as trying to say that any morality is anything more than a synthetic lattice placed over the chaos all around us. It doesn't mean that the morality is any less meaningful, any less real than it was before, it's just a way to view that morality in perspective. I've seen too many people pervert the ideas of Nietzsche because they couldn't get past the idea that he wasn't trying to create a new religion, he wasn't trying to shepherd a flock.
      I cannot believe I am reading this in this condescending tone. This is the old nature or nurture argument.
      I don't think this has anything to do with nature vs. nurture. Really, what we're talking about is the fact that there is no "nature" to begin with. No natural, no human nature, no oversimple way of describing something far too complex for the human mind to describe in a single volume, much less a single word. The fact that the nature vs. nurture debate has been going on so long is just a product of that. It's easy to start thinking abstract ideas like nature or government are actually real entities.
      Nature does not "do" anything you are right, but it is a system of behavior of living things. All living things strive to grow.
      No, I'm sorry, nature describes an interpretation of behavior of living things. What is natural, what is nature are not the same for any two people because they are not real.
      It's funny that you invoke Nietzsche in one paragraph, and then refer to nature as a universal system in another.
      Your little mind that you perceive to be completely under your control is hardly so. Your body's first goal is to survive, then to reproduce. The goals are acheived by you striving to be better than anyone else.
      Why? Why are there many people simply content with what they have? Why are there so many people who don't need to strive, that don't need to achieve? Why are there "slackers," if striving and achieving is a natural tendency inherent in all people? Why are there celibates? Why is there fasting? I can go on and on finding things that fall outside the scope of that generalization, but I don't want to mire this in some off-course debate.
      It is the excess reproduction of living things that causes food shortages.
      I'd say that's one factor amongst many that cause shortfalls. But because that's the most visible contributing factor, it doesn't mean that we should start killing off people. The world you describe--the world of wolf packs, fishes, predators and prey haven't created anything; they are the same things that they were 200 generations ago. We are not. Without the structure of morality, a system where people ascribed to the same beliefs--there would be no population problem for people because people would have died out long ago.

      The Apollonian system that lets us believe that all human life is worth preserving is the same set of rules and guidelines that built the society you can be so comfortable in. It is the same system that gives you the luxury of theorizing about who should live and who should die.

      It is unfortunate you do not see that the population problem is simply humans behaving like every other living thing.
      I see at the heart of this, an argument that really is concerned about human beings--all human beings. I wish that it were as easy as burning down all the shanties, I wish it were as easy as "letting the blood flow," but it's not. The system of morality, of perception has brought our weak little species this far. Burning it down won't solve the problem, learning to live in a world where everyone understands that their reality, their good, their truth, their understanding are just their own cast reflection, is the first step.
      Also Vietnam is an exception, but at the time, the French cared about Vietnam due to its abundant supply of natural rubber.
      But, when you make statements like "Nothing really starts wars EVER other than competition for natural resources." It's my job to prove you wrong. Wars do start for other reasons. Vietnam is the most readily available example, certainly not exclusive.
      Once again, in my defense against the socialist onslaught, I am not a Nazi...
      The world is full of contradictions and unbeleivable ironies. I find it interesting that you've lionized Nietzsche and demonized "Socialism." I find it interesting that, in what I can interpret from your writing there's a dichotomy between Socialism and the freedom fighters in which the Socialists are the bad guys and the freedom fighters are the good guys. And in places where there are only bad guys and good guys--if you're not for me, you're against me.

      Just try to conceive for a moment that there is a group of others, neither socialist nor freedom fighters. These people don't swallow generalized ideologies whole, nor do they deomonize them as evil. Imagine that this group doesn't believe in either system.

      I find stark parallels between the ideologies you espoused in your first post, and the ideologies espoused by the NAZI party. It's funny that both of them should be derived from about the same place: a mistaken understanding of Nietszche. No, I don't think you're a NAZI, a facist, a consumer, a capitalist, a voter, or any other stupid label. I think you are a person.

      Socialism is no different than nazism. They both steal, they both keep people chained in bondage to the state. The sooner we throw away our vicious tools of control, the sooner we can live a more peaceful life on this planet.
      I hope that we may find that peace too, but I don't think that it is through bloodletting.
      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    12. Re:Balderdash by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

      "but the end result is the people who are hungry steal from those who have food."

      exactly and a good idea would be not to have hungry people. Your way of dealing with the problem is that you just arm yourself and protect yourself. Well if you have enough hungry people that usually does not work. And eventually you may decide that it might be a good idea to keep people content.

      By the way your statement about socialists is not entirely correct. Many socialists are well to do people that merely show care about their fellow human beings. Just because you do not have such feelings does not mean you should attack them.

    13. Re:Balderdash by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      Look at the french, who I personally despise, but their population is steadily decreasing...


      Thus, the entire troll moniker. You gotta learn how to make fun of the french in style.

      (not that they'd know anything about style but. . . .)

      I would much rather be free to do what I wish, and screw over some low lifes in another country.

      Ahh, it is not about legal laws, it is about moral and ethical codes. Your moral code allows you to fuck people over who are on the other side of the earth, thus the 'dipshit' moniker.

      I believe in devotion if life to doing that which is best for all; efficiency and all that.

      Well minus the veggie thing, vegetarians suck. A lot. I like meat damnit. My one vice. :P

  42. Committed to education by Inexile2002 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I disagree with what you did to that town, but you really need to admire your town's commitment to education. I personally wouldn't starve to death for anyone's homework assignment.

  43. Can't hear the message for all the screaming by tedDancin · · Score: 2, Informative

    Experts say that seas will become emptied of fish while forests - which absorb carbon dioxide emissions - are completely destroyed and freshwater supplies become scarce and polluted.

    This, of course, is based on 1960's factory emission averages, and projecting them 50 years down the track. Think about the advances in pollution contorl, recycling etc etc in the last 10 years. Those advances are happening at a steady rate, and aren't going to slow down. This means we will keep getting better at looking after the planet - NOT screwing it up like some want us to believe.

    Look at life in a positive light and we might finally stop bitching and get productive.

    --

    Ladies, form queue here -->
    1. Re:Can't hear the message for all the screaming by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      Look at life in a positive light and we might finally stop bitching and get productive.

      But if everybody did that, the professional-whiner class (environmentalist wackos, so-called civil rights "advocates," Democrats, etc.) would have to go get real jobs since nobody would pay any attention to them. Actually solving the problems they allege would put them out of work, so instead they troll with their tales of doom and gloom.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    2. Re:Can't hear the message for all the screaming by Ashcrow · · Score: 1

      "This, of course, is based on 1960's factory emission averages, and projecting them 50 years down the track. Think about the advances in pollution contorl, recycling etc etc in the last 10 years."

      Don't forget the higher level of pollution that each person creates in these times. We might be able to reduce pollution 50% but that hardly helps when each person creates 70% more than they did 60 years ago.

    3. Re:Can't hear the message for all the screaming by MulluskO · · Score: 2

      If absolutely everybody said that, the steady improvements would stop. I don't think industry would reduce pollution without the financial incentives ( fines ) that the whiners worked so hard to put into place.

      It is all moot, however, because the whining will never stop and full productivity will never be realized.

      --

      Too busy staying alive... ~ R.A.
    4. Re:Can't hear the message for all the screaming by Ender77 · · Score: 0, Troll


      Think about the advances in pollution contorl, recycling etc etc in the last 10 years. Those advances are happening at a steady rate, and aren't going to slow down. This means we will keep getting better at looking after the planet - NOT screwing it up like some want us to believe.

      WRONG, you forgot about the human greed factor which puts Business puppets(Bush) in places of power so they can kill any oposition to coporate wellfare(which usually means ANY environmental protection plans,technology, or efforts).

  44. not that simple by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

    As I said above, it is more a matter of economics. This isn't like the y2k bug where there is a definite cutoff date. And the y2k bug didn't make current machines decrease in usefulness (right up until the cutoff date; not counting that the hardware would have to be changed at that time).

    Land resources and several other natural resources will be conserved more/used more efficiently as it becomes economically advantageous to do so. Capitalism works that way, and the change will slowly happen with or without doomsday predictions. When wasting/using inefficent technologies becomes expensive, people will migrate on their own.

    --
    "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
    1. Re:not that simple by IkeTo · · Score: 1

      Unluckily, cost goes high only when resource depletion is near, and at that time the economy won't be able to stop the consumption. By then the only option is to kill 90% of the remaining population.

      It's never too early to worry.

  45. No. by e_n_d_o · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Earth will not expire in 2050. Simple economics will keep it from doing so. When certain resources become scarce, they will become expensive, and people will be forced to stop using them and seek alternatives.

    Interesting they compare the United States' use of resources to that of Burundi. This comparison is truly startling. For those who enjoy startling statistics, allow me to offer a few others:

    The population of Burundi is expanding at three times the rate of the United States. The percentage of people in Burundi infected with HIV/AIDS is 20 times that of the United States. The average lifespan in Burundi is 31 years shorter than that of a person living in the United States. The literacy rate of Burundi is 35%. 1 in 3000 people have Internet access. (Statistics courtesy of CIA World Factbook).

    Are you still interested in reducing your resource consumption by a factor of 24? Personally, I'm not interested in selling my pickup, as I don't think it has any connection to the fact that the number of black rhinos has fallen from 65,000 to 3,100. Considering that my "extravagant lifestyle" doesn't involve poaching, I don't think I can help.

    As an aside, this article brings one more thing to mind: every environmentalist needs to understand that he is not "saving the Earth." He is only saving himself and his descendants. The Earth will recover from every incosiderate act man has done to it in the blink of an eye (relative to its lifetime), and graciously replace us with other species if we destroy our way of life.

    And Timothy, you might want to encourage your brother to go ahead and buy that new SUV. If his current car is more than five years old, that new SUV will be adding less pollution to the atmosphere.

    1. Re:No. by Em+Emalb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Amen.

      Everyone needs something to believe in. If it worth-while to them, then they are gonna preach to the largest group they can get. The best way is to send tripe like this to a Publisher and let them send it off. I personally believe if we get to the point to where over-consumption is starting to strip earth of it's resources, one of three things will happen (probably the 1st choice is most likely)

      1:War
      2:Famine
      3:technology

      War, because well, if enough people want something, there will be fighting over it. Human nature.

      Famine, such as what we are seeing STILL in Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Rowanda, etc. Although I don't believe that is a direct result of not enough resources, it's human greed/power struggle again. The UN tried to help, ended up saying screw it, die if you want to, silly fools.

      Technology:
      An example used in an earlier post was CFCs. Well, they turned out to be bad, so technology allowed us to move past using them into more environment friendly products. You can also thank the 80's hair styles for a lot of that pollution. My god, 1 can of hair spray an evening is too much.

      I would like to see stats on whether or not paper consumption has dropped since the advent of the web and email. No one really brings it up. If anyone can find a link that would be cool if you posted it here.

      This is one case where I hope that the enviro-nuts are completely wrong....but I fear we DID head down the wrong track on a lot of things, luckily it appears we have righted the ship.

      P.S. get that SUV. Nice rides, and useful if you have a boat or actually use it for something other than a UAV. (Urban Assualt Vehicle)

      --
      Sent from your iPad.
    2. Re:No. by BurritoWarrior · · Score: 2

      Bravo! Well put. I agree with everything, except for the SUV. I think we give more than enough money to the Saudis and other, mostly corrupt, governments due to our overdependence on oil. Until we have alternatives, I think we should conserve - but for mostly other reasons.

    3. Re:No. by zerocool^ · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Essentially, population level fluctuates around a line called the carrying capacity, which is the number of a type of animal an ecosystem can support.

      Populations, however, do not reach the line by steadily growing in number and tapering off, treating the carrying capacity as an asymptote. Think of the line as a horizontal line on a graph, the horizontal axis representing time, the virtical representing population. Population grows with an exponential function until it overshoots the carrying capacity, then it starts to die off until it is below the capacity. The population level oscillates around this level with a logarithmic function, looking somewhat similar to a sine wave, and as time goes to infinity, the oscillations become smaller and closer to the carrying capacity.

      This is a fact of nature. It happens with mice, antelope, fish, bacteria, and apes. Why would people think it wouldn't happen to humans? Sorry, creation scientists, we're animals too, and though we use different resources, we're not immune to laws of nature because of divine providence.

      Some interesting things to note: The carrying capacity is not always constant, it changes, for example, over seasons. More animals die off in winter because of this function.
      Also, animals that take better care of their young grow the population graph somewhat slower - as it takes time to care for and train an offspring, you produce less offspring. Introduce a pair of mice to a situation where they are far below the carrying capacity of the environment, and they will reproduce extremely rapidly, overshooting the line by quite a lot.

      But, anyway, the long and short of this is that one, people have been predicting this for years, since at least the 50's. It hasn't happened yet. And so what if it does? It's a fact of nature. Live goes on, or the cycle of life does. I am unconcerned.

      My girlfriend is an animal science major, pre vet. We have some interesting conversations.

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    4. Re:No. by MulluskO · · Score: 2

      Actually I think there was an arcticle on slashdot about how the paper consumption rate has actually risen. To summarize, more business models based entirely on information and general economic growth. Another point in the article which lends itself more easily to to a neat and tidy mental picture is the fact that it is much more difficult to get on-paper data into a computer than it is to get digital data onto paper.

      --

      Too busy staying alive... ~ R.A.
    5. Re:No. by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 4, Insightful

      P.S. get that SUV. Nice rides, and useful if you have a boat or actually use it for something other than a UAV. (Urban Assualt Vehicle)

      I disagree. They REALLY aren't that nice, they handle like a cow, they accelerate like a brick wall, they stop like a falling piano, and they soak up gasoline like a sponge. Does that make them unuseful? No. Not at all. Granted, they're VERY useful if you tow a boat. Most people don't have boats. SOME of them have wonderful offroad capabilities, most don't. Esspecially not the really big luxury variety, which tend to do the worst off of the road. They only win awards for reasons like space for fitting your kids and groceries or number of televisions for the passengers, and not stuff like ground clearance or horsepower at the wheels. They can't be winning awards for those things, because if they WERE then the ones that would be winning you will strangely find are the ones that seem the least luxurious (the ones that have been around the longest).

      You see, you say "GET THE SUV" assuming everyone is going to use it the way you do. Here's a bit of reality that I'm going to stick in your eye like a hot stick sharped to a point. ALMOST NOBODY will use it the way you do. Almost everyone WILL use it as an Urban Assult Vehicle.

      I live in an area where people actually NEED these kinds of vehicles, and they STILL treat them like minivans.

      It makes me sick right up until I see that one with 6 feet of ground clearance, 4 foot tall tires, a ladder to climb into the cabin, and an inch of mud all over the entire thing. Then I can't help but smile.

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    6. Re:No. by pfalstad · · Score: 1

      bravo!

      People don't seem to realize that the reason there's so little investment in alternatives to oil, for example, is that oil is too cheap. There are lots of renewable alternatives to fossil fuels; it's just that they are more expensive, so nobody uses them. When oil starts to run out, it will become more expensive, and people will start to use alternative fuels, invest more in finding new ones, and/or conserve more, by simple economics.

    7. Re:No. by thogard · · Score: 1

      I figure the SUV is more of a moral question of do you want to continue to support the problems in the middle east. The oil consuption difference between using SUVs and not in the US is the difference of spending tens of billions every year in Middle East peach keeping and letting it all become Europes problem. Without SUV's the US wouldn't need to import any Middle east oil.

    8. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we know all this can't we just prevent it from happening? We can make ourselves immune from the law of gravity so why not from this law?

    9. Re:No. by linzeal · · Score: 1
      "Live goes on, or the cycle of life does. I am unconcerned."

      Why not just eliminate all organic life, end suffering and create a more robust and effiecient container for sentient life?

    10. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The population level oscillates around this level with a logarithmic function, looking somewhat similar to a sine wave, and as time goes to infinity, the oscillations become smaller and closer to the carrying capacity. ... Some interesting things to note: The carrying capacity is not always constant, it changes, for example, over seasons.

      I'd wager the thing people are worried about is when the carrying capacities change and the state of the populations and environment conspires to make the (say, human) population level dip down to zero. When that happens, the plot stops oscillating. Pesky extinction.

      I'd guess what some environmentalists are worried about is that we should be conscious of the forces (both human and natural) that makes the conditions more/less favorable for human extinction.

      And don't say it can't happen on a global scale. Earth's atmosphere was once primarily carbon dioxide and its life was anaerobic. Exhaling oxygen, most of those lil'doods breathed themselves into extinction. Though, it kinda worked out nicely for us in the animal kingdom.

    11. Re:No. by Yottabyte84 · · Score: 1

      Because that would eliminate sex!

    12. Re:No. by orkysoft · · Score: 2

      "In this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics!" -- Homer Simpson

      Seriously, what are you talking about? Do you think an airplane violates the law of gravity? It certainly does not, although it appears that way to the ignorant/anonymous observer.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    13. Re:No. by Skwirl · · Score: 1
      >I am unconcerned.

      How can you talk about human life so clinically? Every time that population growth tapers off, it's because human beings are starving to death.

    14. Re:No. by debrain · · Score: 2

      I beg to differ, on at least one point.

    15. Re:No. by linzeal · · Score: 1

      Just visceral sex.

    16. Re:No. by derF024 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      P.S. get that SUV. Nice rides, and useful if you have a boat or actually use it for something other than a UAV. (Urban Assualt Vehicle)

      my integra can tow a boat too (up to 1 1/2 tons), and get 28 mpg when it's doing it. i guarantee it rides better than the SUV, does better in bad weather and it'll get close to 40 mpg without a boat on the hitch. The integra is also a LEV (as is every car that honda makes.)

      now what's so great about these SUV's? oh yea, you're much more likely to flip over and die horribly in them, which, considering the people who usually buy them, isn't that bad.

    17. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever towed before? Just because a vehicle CAN tow 3000lbs doesn't mean that you want to tow 3000lbs with it. A 3000lb boat/trailer behind an Integra would be a nightmare. It would not get 28mpg (This is insane, an Integra gets barely more than that on the highway, and I speak from knowledge gained from several friends who own Integras, Civics, and RSXs...but don't believe me, check with the EPA).

      Try pulling a 3000lb boat up a slippery launch ramp in a front-wheel drive integra. Try towing it in a crosswind. Try stopping from a highway speed in an emergency situation. An Integra's brakes, transmission, and structure were not designed to tow a trailer weighing nearly as much as the car.

      BTW, the max towing figure assumes the weight of 180lb person in the car, and includes trailer weight.

      If you want to compare practicality, don't compare an SUV to an integra, compare it to a large sedan, wagon, or minivan. People who buy SUVs tend not to be compatible with small cars.

      Personally, I'd rather have a higher rollover risk than have to deal with the guilt and suffering that might result from having my boat push me into an intersection.

    18. Re:No. by TheOnlyCoolTim · · Score: 5, Funny

      One time there was this somewhat heavy snowstorm and I was riding up the hill to my house in a Dodge Caravan minivan.

      We passed by at least 5 SUVs of the type that are made and marketed to those who never take it on a rougeher road than their driveway, all stuck helpless in the snow while our fucking MINIVAN was having no problems.

      Tim

      --
      Omnia vestra castrorum habetur nobis.
    19. Re:No. by TheOnlyCoolTim · · Score: 3

      Actually, population tapers off much more in countries where everyone is fed.

      In countries where people are starving, the population growth is enormous.

      Tim

      --
      Omnia vestra castrorum habetur nobis.
    20. Re:No. by sabinm · · Score: 2

      While the AC's post may not be scientifically accurate, it is true that humans are some of the few species on earth that have evolved into flight. We are in a smaller group of vertebrates, and one of only two (bats and humans) that have true flight capabilities among mammals.

      It is not impossible that we could evolve further to overcome this overpopulation obstacle, although I am not sure what it would take for humans to "devolve" back into sea dwellers.

      It is interesting. Human Flight was the only voluntary evolution in the existence of the earth. It was a fairly calm and smooth transition with very few fatalities. IF the overpopulation is a factor, then most likely the world will evolve again, but in a forced and random pattern, like true evolution does.

      It would be interesting. With global warming, less food, less water, and less oxygen, humans might evolve to a darker skinned, narrow chested, extremely tall equator dwelling species.

      Or we just might force ourselves into the stars. We have the resources and the know how to do it. A less dense, taller, paler, broad chested (thin atmosphere) creature might be our ultimate nature. It all just depends on what path we take when we are pressed with a challenge. We might simply go to war and kill off most of the inhabitants on earth. If that happens within the next 50 years, then I'm betting on Sub Sahara Africa, The Mid West and SOuth west of the US, Brazil, and the New Republic of ANtarctica, founded by the descendants of the survivors of the wasteland called Europe. But lets hope for colonization or evolution. War is a terrible and counter productive thing. It's planned selection at it's worse. We'd probably ruin a lot potentital by not letting people die off randomly.

      --
      http://cincyboys.blogspot.com/ Everything Cincinnati. Including the word 'Finnih'
    21. Re:No. by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 2
      Essentially, population level fluctuates around a line called the carrying capacity, which is the number of a type of animal an ecosystem can support....Why would people think it wouldn't happen to humans? Sorry, creation scientists, we're animals too, and though we use different resources, we're not immune to laws of nature because of divine providence.

      Because humans have a nearly unique ability to modify the environment's carrying capacity through the use of technology. (I say "nearly unique" because there is limited use of tools documented in a handful of other species, e.g. chimps.)

      Were it not for agriculture, for example, we would likely have reached the planet's carrying capacity thousands of years ago. (Or more precisely, overshot the carrying capacity and experienced massive death by starvation etc. until the population had fallen to a more sustainable level.)

      That's not to say technology will enable us to grow the population and our consumption indefinitely... just that defining carrying capacity in the context of humans, which have repeatedly shown their ability to essentially change the rules of the game, is not easy.

      --

      "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
    22. Re:No. by lambadomy · · Score: 3, Informative

      The theory of carrying capacity as you state it has been around at least since 1798, when Thomas Malthus published his "Essays on the Principle of Population".

      The problem with the theory was, and will remain, the idea that resources really only grow linearly. Human agricultural technology has repeatedly increased the carrying capacity of land well beyond the expected linear growth that would have long ago resulted in us passing the expected carrying capacity of the land. Malthus himself seemed to expect to see us pass the carrying capacity of the land within a few generations of his life - not much different than more recent predictions of the same doom and gloom by people like professor Paul Ehrlich at stanford in his book Population Bomb.

      This is not to say that I don't think the potential for this to happen isn't there, just that the theoretical linear/exponential relationship between resources and population growth is flawed. Looking only at agricultural and population growth, the "first world" nations have extremely low population growth relative to their total agricultural potential. Population growth is only rampant in areas of low development, for a myriad of reasons, such as high infant mortality rates, the need for more family help to farm and insurance against losing one or two children, lack of birth control, etc etc. But it all boils down to cost benefit analysis. When you have to pay to educate your kids, and their usefulness does not outweigh their cost, you stop having them in large amounts. Ok, at this point I'm rambling, but my point is made. Production is not automatically linear, and population growth is not automatically exponential, for human beings. And this was just as wrong in 1798 as it is now.

    23. Re:No. by nihilogos · · Score: 2

      As an aside, this article brings one more thing to mind: every environmentalist needs to understand that he is not "saving the Earth." He is only saving himself and his descendants. The Earth will recover from every incosiderate act man has done to it in the blink of an eye (relative to its lifetime), and graciously replace us with other species if we destroy our way of life.

      This is a fact of nature. It happens with mice, antelope, fish, bacteria, and apes. Why would people think it wouldn't happen to humans? Sorry, creation scientists, we're animals too, and though we use different resources, we're not immune to laws of nature because of divine providence.

      Humans beings are unique on this planet in that they are able to completely drain a natural resource, to the point where there is nothing left to recover if the species dies off. The real fear of environmentalists is well illustrated in Australia where the arrival of Europeans has had an irreperable effect. Much of the country sustained a diverse, balanced ecosystem which is now destroyed. Not destroyed as in let it lie fallow for a few years and it will recover, but destroyed as in gone. These areas which previously hosted numerous species of flora and fauna are now deserts and will remain so.

      People still seem to think of the earth as an infinite sink which can cope with as much garbage as we throw at it and recover if left alone for a little while. Life on earth isn't inevitable or invulnerable and it's usually only religious types who think it's here solely for the purpose of us that think so.

      --
      :wq
    24. Re:No. by God!+Awful · · Score: 2


      Because humans have a nearly unique ability to modify the environment's carrying capacity through the use of technology. (I say "nearly unique" because there is limited use of tools documented in a handful of other species, e.g. chimps.)

      That's great and all, but how about we make sure we have a solution to the environmental problem before we merrily let it get out of hand. I have no doubt that mankind will someday discover the cure for cancer, but if they don't find the cure before I'm dead then it's not doing me any good, is it? (okay I admit it, that was cheap. I don't actually have cancer, but you get the point.)

      -a

    25. Re:No. by mikec · · Score: 2

      Why would people think it wouldn't happen to humans? Because we're very different from other animals. We are not immune to the laws of nature, but we are certainly immune to simplistic supply-and-demand curves. We produce our own supply, and we find substitutes for things we can't replace. As the number of chicken hawks increases the number of chickens falls (which eventually leads to a crash in the chicken hawk population). But as the number of chicken-eating humans increases, the number of chickens increases to meet the demand. When bronze-age cultures had mined out all the bronze around the Mediterranean, did civilization collapse? No, they found substitutes, some of which worked better than bronze.

    26. Re:No. by smithmc · · Score: 1

      Populations, however, do not reach the line by steadily growing in number and tapering off, treating the carrying capacity as an asymptote. Think of the line as a horizontal line on a graph, the horizontal axis representing time, the virtical representing population. Population grows with an exponential function until it overshoots the carrying capacity, then it starts to die off until it is below the capacity. The population level oscillates around this level with a logarithmic function, looking somewhat similar to a sine wave, and as time goes to infinity, the oscillations become smaller and closer to the carrying capacity.

      This is a fact of nature. It happens with mice, antelope, fish, bacteria, and apes. Why would people think it wouldn't happen to humans?


      Perhaps because it has already been shown not to be the case? Look at the historical population of the US, or Europe. Did either of these places experience massive die-offs before leveling to near ZPG? If so, it's been covered up awfully well...

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    27. Re:No. by WhaDaYaKnow · · Score: 2

      The population level oscillates around this level with a logarithmic function, looking somewhat similar to a sine wave, and as time goes to infinity, the oscillations become smaller and closer to the carrying capacity.

      This is a fact of nature. It happens with mice, antelope, fish, bacteria, and apes. Why would people think it wouldn't happen to humans?


      As opposed to everyone replying to you that think that humans are so bloody unique, I want to point out that you failed to mention one important thing:

      This 'sine wave' oscilates between two imaginary high and low limits (consider them horizontal lines parallel to the carrying capacity, where the carrying capacity is the center line). In a normal developing population, it never overshoots, nor undershoots either of those high and low 'thresholds'. From what I understand, a lot of occurances that were studied where a population did either over or undershoot, they became extinct very soon thereafter.

      Now I don't know what the data looks like for us, but I have a suspicion that it's not too dandy. Just hope we really are that unique...

    28. Re:No. by shepd · · Score: 1

      >These areas which previously hosted numerous species of flora and fauna are now deserts and will remain so.

      If this were true we wouldn't exist.

      Deserts eventually flourish once again.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    29. Re:No. by mabs · · Score: 1

      It will grow back, but without a large scale effort, it will take more than a few generations. The Mayan's turned the areas around their cities into deserts, but they have grown back now, hundreds of years later.

      --
      VK3TST
      -- "People aren't stupid. Usually." -- jd
    30. Re:No. by forged · · Score: 2
      A 4 x 4 suv fitted with proper tires would probably not have had any problems in heavy snow. But the ones you describe don't seem to be this kind...

      I'd love to drive a hum-vee but never actually have. I know there are some places out there which can rent them to you for a day or an afternoon, however that's well over my budget for fun.

    31. Re:No. by forged · · Score: 2
      I towed a 300kg boat on its trailor for over 1000km a couple months ago with my Renault Espace (yup, french car) and it did 6.5 l/100km, that's about 36.5 miles per gallon, driving 100km/h on the highway.

      We hardly felt that we were towing... Not too bad a mileage. I haven't got anything heavier to tow so I don't know how it would perform otherwise. But for lightweight trailors it's a damn fine car.

    32. Re:No. by Wraithlyn · · Score: 2

      It happens with mice, antelope, fish, bacteria, and apes. Why would people think it wouldn't happen to humans? Sorry, creation scientists, we're animals too, and though we use different resources, we're not immune to laws of nature

      Mice and antelope can't nuke each other for resources and completely render the environment uninhabitable for hundreds or thousands of years.

      What I'm saying is that no other species has the capacity to disrupt the natural order and destroy all the life-support systems of Earth in entirety. And we're a violent, warlike bunch of motherf**kers. What a pity.

      Things are going to get very, very, VERY bad on this planet, and it's going to happen within our lifetimes.

      Moderation Totals: Depressing=1, Total=1.

      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    33. Re:No. by Treylis · · Score: 1

      Or maybe it's because the world death rate is holding steady at 100% and people have less kids. Either way, really.

    34. Re:No. by Treylis · · Score: 1

      Neither can humans... really, it would be virtually impossible, even with nuclear/biological/chemical weapons, to render this place unhabitable. Some shit out there is pretty damned tough, and the Earth's tough itself.

      'Natural order' as we know it, sure. All life-support systems... no, no, and no.

    35. Re:No. by withak · · Score: 1

      The population level oscillates around this level with a logarithmic function, looking somewhat similar to a sine wave, and as time goes to infinity, the oscillations become smaller and closer to the carrying capacity.

      Just out of curiosity, what type of logarithmic function looks similiar to a sine function?

    36. Re:No. by markmoss · · Score: 2

      Getting through snow is 80% the driver, 20% the vehicle. I learned to drive in northern Michigan, with 200 inches of snow a year. Then I joined the Air Force, and spent six years in New Mexico. Every now and then it would snow just a little, and it was really funny seeing those cowboys skidding their big 4x4's off the road, even somehow getting them stuck in just one inch of snow. I was driving a Pinto station wagon (cheap, tiny, underpowered, rear-wheel drive), and that wisp of snow was no problem at all to me.

      However, when the snow gets a foot deep, cars and minivans are likely to get stuck no matter who's driving. There's too much drag on the bottom compared to the traction, and where snowplows throw up piles at intersections (or the end of the driveway), you're likely to get stuck with the wheels up in the air. So now that I can afford a 4x4, I've got one (Dodge Dakota pickup) and I drive it when the snow is getting deep - but the extra ground clearance makes a lot more difference than the 4wd.

    37. Re:No. by orkysoft · · Score: 2
      While the AC's post may not be scientifically accurate, it is true that humans are some of the few species on earth that have evolved into flight. We are in a smaller group of vertebrates, and one of only two (bats and humans) that have true flight capabilities among mammals.

      You think the invention of the airline ticket is evolution? Then you would also think the invention of mass media (starting with the printing press and ending (so far) with the internet) is evolution.

      It is not impossible that we could evolve further to overcome this overpopulation obstacle, although I am not sure what it would take for humans to "devolve" back into sea dwellers.

      Well, we could become a lot smaller than we are now, although it looks like we're getting taller and bigger instead. To live on the water, we'd need sturdy boats, capable of surviving all kinds of storms and high waves. To live underwater, we'd need technology to extract oxygen from seawater, and strong domes or other structures to stay dry in. I don't think that is impossible.

      It would be interesting. With global warming, less food, less water, and less oxygen, humans might evolve to a darker skinned, narrow chested, extremely tall equator dwelling species.

      Why would we live on the equator? Won't it be warmest there?

      Or we just might force ourselves into the stars. We have the resources and the know how to do it. A less dense, taller, paler, broad chested (thin atmosphere) creature might be our ultimate nature.

      At the moment, it's prohibitively expensive, and the technology isn't yet totally ready for a long intra-solarsystem flight. To leave our solarsystem and go to e.g. Alpha Centauri, we'd need at least Sid Meier's team of writers to design the spaceship, and it'd have to be exceptionally (dare I say impossibly?) tough (you ARE going to bump into rocks of different sizes at high speeds) and durable (the trip will take thousands of years) to survive the trip, and we'd need one or more of these:

      • Faster Than Light travel (do you expect this to happen in the next 50 years?)
      • Reliable cryogenics + tough spaceship ("If I want to go back to the year 2000, I'll just freeze myself again")
      • Extremely efficient and reliable life support + people to live on the ship and not go insane (they'd need lots of books and DVDs (without CSS and region coding, of course ;-) ) and other entertainment, as well as education).
      These options all present as yet insurmountable technological barriers. We don't have FTL travel, reliable cryogenics, or the life support (although this seems to be the most realistic option right now). It is possible, but I wouldn't count on it just yet.
      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    38. Re:No. by ErikZ · · Score: 2


      Hey, wanna go to Hiroshima with me? I hear it's a great tourist trap. I'm sure it shouldn't be that hard to find a hotel there.

      Oh wait, that can't be true! The area must be uninhabitable for hundreds or thousands of years!

      That lush forrest is not fooling you!

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    39. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So true! The only time I ever see an SUV doing anything off-road is when they are stuck in a ditch in the winter. Every winter the SUV hotshots come flying by and think their vehicle is immune to the laws of physics. As soon as they hit a patch of ice or a snow rut in the road they go flying off the road, and finally they realize that they can't bring a their behemoth to a quick stop after it gains to much momentum, especially on ice and snow.

    40. Re:No. by Wraithlyn · · Score: 2

      Hiroshima was 15 kilotons.

      They have bombs that are hundreds of megatons now.

      Human history is perpetual warfare. Nuclear war will happen eventually. It's naive to think otherwise. A shroud of debris causing nuclear winter is a very real possibility.

      I'm not saying life won't exist anymore, but I am saying it probably won't be a nice little "shrinking sine wave" levelling off of our population. We're too powerful for our own good, we will wipe ourselves out.

      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    41. Re:No. by jafac · · Score: 2

      The listed towing capacity of the Acura Integra (1995) is 350 lbs. Read your owner's manual. You may be able to actually tow more - but it's not safe, and you might actually blow up that spiffy LEV engine of yours. After paying for a rebuild, you might change your mind.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    42. Re:No. by OutOfMind · · Score: 1

      Somehow, people in SUVs seem to develop this brain disease where they come to think that they are immune from the laws of physics.

      ~k
    43. Re:No. by Skwirl · · Score: 1

      >In countries where people are starving, the population growth is enormous.

      Exactly. Staving people have more children under the misguided philosophy that their children will help support them. The only way for this cycle to taper off is for the starvation to reach a point where people die faster than they can reproduce.

    44. Re:No. by derF024 · · Score: 1

      Ever towed before? Just because a vehicle CAN tow 3000lbs doesn't mean that you want to tow 3000lbs with it. A 3000lb boat/trailer behind an Integra would be a nightmare.

      that's possible. a 2000 lb boat/trailer is the only thing that i have experience with, and the car has towed that combo fairly regularly over the past 10 years. it handles well, stops well and the gas mileage is about 28 mpg at highway speeds. i've pulled that boat up a ramp, through high winds/bad weather, and over 600 miles in a weekend one time last year. (NYC -> Lake George and back)

      anyway, i made the comparison just because you don't need a 600 hp V12 monster truck to tow an avg. size boat. since i can tow one with my sports car, a sedan or wagon would do nicley.

    45. Re:No. by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

      Well, we could become a lot smaller than we are now, although it looks like we're getting taller and bigger instead. To live on the water, we'd need sturdy boats, capable of surviving all kinds of storms and high waves. To live underwater, we'd need technology to extract oxygen from seawater, and strong domes or other structures to stay dry in. I don't think that is impossible.

      Another interesting point is that humans are no longer selectively breeding to further the species. We breed without thought to the fact that we may breed substantially less sturdy humans than we have had in the past. Medicine has artifically extended the lifespan of the human (in recent years).

      Not to say that if we did away with medicine, we'd automatically live only 25 years, but our lives would be shorter. My point is that we're breeding to weed out social ineptness now.

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    46. Re:No. by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

      How can you talk about human life so clinically? Every time that population growth tapers off, it's because human beings are starving to death.

      It may sound callous, but in reality, these human beings are always being replaced. There are more people born than die everyday. Think what the world would be like if everyone lived to be 60 or 70? Think of the population explosion then. We'd really be up a creek.

      To quote family guy, people need to be able to die. It's the natural order of things. It's the cycle of life and all that. Animal dies, decays, fertalizes the ground, so that more plants grow, support more animals. Didn't you see the Lion King?

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    47. Re:No. by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

      That's not to say technology will enable us to grow the population and our consumption indefinitely... just that defining carrying capacity in the context of humans, which have repeatedly shown their ability to essentially change the rules of the game, is not easy.


      I couldn't have said it better myself. We keep changing the rules, but ultimately we can't quit the game.

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    48. Re:No. by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

      We are not immune to the laws of nature, but we are certainly immune to simplistic supply-and-demand curves.

      Exactly. We keep changing the rules, but ultimately we can't get out of the game.

      Which I guess is a repost, but if people only read replys, then there you have it.

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    49. Re:No. by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

      I don't have any idea.
      That was based on:
      Population overshoots a line, then dies off and dips under the line.
      Population grows at a rate relative to e.
      Population presumably falls at a rate relative to e.

      That's about all I know. I'm a history student, not a math man. Math is not my forte. Any insight would be appreciated.

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    50. Re:No. by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

      To add to the above comment, the girlfriend said it oscillates around the line, and the only things i know that oscillate are sine and cosine functions, not being very math oriented.
      So I said "looks kind of like a sine function?" and she said "yeah, sort of".

      That's what I'm going on, the Infallable word of Tess.

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    51. Re:No. by ErikZ · · Score: 2

      Why do you think that if someone has a 15 megaton warhead, they'll go "Lets use it!"

      Hiroshima was 15 Kt, but it was the most "Unclean" nuke we've ever made.

      Nuclear war will not happen eventually, the use of nuclear weapons will probably happen again. But the doomsday cold war scenario is pretty much dead.

      Look at India and Pakistan. Both armed with nukes, at war, religious extremists on at least one side. Still, no nukes being fired.

      What kind of conditions is it going to take to get these people to fire a nuclear missile at each other?

      And just because you have access to more powerful bombs, doesn't mean they're going to be used. Your grasp of how the military works is weak.

      And you have no idea if we're too powerful for our own good. What are you supposed to compare us against?

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    52. Re:No. by sabinm · · Score: 2

      You think the invention of the airline ticket is evolution? Then you would also think the invention of mass media (starting with the printing press and ending (so far) with the internet) is evolution.

      Actually, no one says that evolution *has* to be genetic. We used our *brains* to fly while birds and insects and bats use wings. We produced flight as readily and easily as other species.
      Unless you think you need wings to fly. :0
      But all flight truly is is manupulating gravity and utilizing lift. IN space, you don't even need lift.

      Why would we live on the equator? Won't it be warmest there?

      We would move toward the equator because of the melting of the Polar Ice Caps. Hence the extreme latitudes of the earth would force all life (land-dwelling) to migrate to the equator.

      At the moment, it's prohibitively expensive

      Expensive is a clearly relative term. If this were forced evolution, the cost would be siginificantly less than *not* going to space. (the extinction of all things human)

      We only need to colonize the moon for the first hundred years and make expeditions to earth to mine for nessecary minerals and components. (That always gives me a kick. No one ever thinks of going back to earth after ecological disaster). But living on the moon for 500 years should give us sufficient experience and know how to create a durable space vehicle. (Who is to say that this object is not a small planet? Or the moon itself?)

      You'd be amazed at how much humans are capable of given the proper impetus (pyramids, moon shots etc.)

      --
      http://cincyboys.blogspot.com/ Everything Cincinnati. Including the word 'Finnih'
    53. Re:No. by Wraithlyn · · Score: 2
      I am well aware of the concepts of deterrance. I just think WW3 will happen eventually, maybe for reasons that are completely unfathomable to us now. Please explain why you think it can't.

      "Look at India and Pakistan. Both armed with nukes, at war, religious extremists on at least one side. Still, no nukes being fired."

      Great argument. It hasn't happened yet, therefore it never will.

      "you have no idea if we're too powerful for our own good. What are you supposed to compare us against?"

      All prior humanity. What if Hitler had nukes? Or Hussein? Or Al Qaida?

      Things will escalate. What will happen when a hundred countries can easily produce weapons of mass destruction?

      Maybe it won't be nukes, maybe it will be a genetically engineered plague, or environmental depletion. Maybe it will be something completely unpredictable.

      Two points I don't think can be refuted:
      1. History is filled with humans wiping each other out in record numbers. You think we've really changed?
      2. We possess, and are developing weapons more devastating than in any other point in history.
      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    54. Re:No. by ErikZ · · Score: 2
      I just think WW3 will happen eventually, maybe for reasons that are completely unfathomable to us now. Please explain why you think it can't.

      Because for it to happen, the alternative would have to be just as bad. So you have nothing to loose. And before you go on about how a madman can get their hands on a nuclear arsenal, it's not that simple. A nuke can't just lay there waiting to be used. They need periodic maintenance by intelligent workers, otherwise they stop working. So, for an end of the world scenario to happen, someone would have to gain access to and be able to use ALL of the world's nukes. Which happen to be in working order.

      I am well aware of the concepts of deterrence. I just think WW3 will happen eventually, maybe for reasons that are completely unfathomable to us now. Please explain why you think it can't.

      No, no NO. You deliberately cut out the point I was making. Which was "It's possible, but considering that those two countries have had all the reasons in the would to go to nuclear war with each other, and haven't then the chances of nuclear war are far slimmer than you originally thought."

      prior humanity. What if Hitler had nukes? Or Hussein? Or Al Qaida?

      Woulda, coulda, shoulda. How about a comparison against something that actually exists instead of these bogeymen you've conjured. This connects to my "Maintenance men" point I made above.

      1. People kill each other in large groups, yes. But to assume that they would do something in an uncontrolled, runaway reaction is ridiculous. The people in charge of wars do their damnest to not put themselves in danger. Have faith in humanities cowardice and self-interest. So no, I don't think people have changed. :)

      2. Hmm, Devastating. "To lay waste; destroy." Well that's just incorrect. The most devastating weapon mankind has in its possession is the Megaton nukes. We're not creating/developing more powerful nukes. We are designing more ACCURATE weapons. Nukes are old school; the military now wants weapons that take out a target, and just the target, in one shot.

      Heck, they don't even want to use nukes if they don't have to because of the political fallout. Fuel-air bombs are the new darling of the military. The power of a small nuke and none of the radiation.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    55. Re:No. by orkysoft · · Score: 2
      My point is that we're breeding to weed out social ineptness now.

      Hey, this is Slashdot. We know this already ;-)

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    56. Re:No. by orkysoft · · Score: 2

      Why would we live on the equator? Won't it be warmest there?

      We would move toward the equator because of the melting of the Polar Ice Caps. Hence the extreme latitudes of the earth would force all life (land-dwelling) to migrate to the equator.

      If the ice caps were to melt, the sea level would rise globally. Thus, keeping your feet dry doesn't necessarily involve being near the equator, it involves being on sufficiently high ground. Thus, living just a few minutes from the North Sea coast isn't such a good idea from that perspective... <ulp>

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    57. Re:No. by Wraithlyn · · Score: 2

      Look, bottom line is neither of us can predict what will happen long-term in such a complex and mutable environment (the geopolitical landscape) with any degree of accuracy... elementary chaos theory. I may be taking a passimistic viewpoint here, but I am being open minded. You keep declaring what CANNOT happen. You cannot know this for certain.

      I just think WW3 will happen eventually [...] Please explain why you think it can't.
      --
      Because for it to happen, the alternative would have to be just as bad. So you have nothing to loose.


      I fail to grasp the logic of this statement. World Wars only start when the alternative is just as bad as World War? How do the origins of WW1 and WW2 fit this?

      No, no NO. You deliberately cut out the point I was making. Which was "It's possible, but considering that those two countries have had all the reasons in the would to go to nuclear war with each other, and haven't then the chances of nuclear war are far slimmer than you originally thought."

      Um no, I addressed it directly. Just because India and Pakistan haven't nuked each other (yet), doesn't mean nobody ever will. They do not have "all the reasons in the world.", that's hyperbole. They just have reasons.

      "Or Hussein? Or Al Qaida?
      --
      Woulda, coulda, shoulda. How about a comparison against something that actually exists instead of these bogeymen you've conjured."


      Pardon me? I thought you just said Saddam Hussein and Al Qaida don't exist.

      We are designing more ACCURATE weapons. Nukes are old school; the military now wants weapons that take out a target, and just the target, in one shot.

      Heck, they don't even want to use nukes if they don't have to because of the political fallout. Fuel-air bombs are the new darling of the military.


      I'm sorry, but this is an extremely American/Western centric viewpoint. Do you think terrorists, for example, design their attacks along these guidelines? What do you think would happen if a nuke was detonated in New York city? What would the US do to retaliate? Or what if smallpox was released in 50 cities simultaneously?

      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    58. Re:No. by joshyc · · Score: 1

      Oh please, America is the real morally corrupt government here. In America, morals are secondary to preservation of the status quo, a feat which is often accomplished in immoral manners. Don't be mad at the Saudis for charging a lot for oil. In fact, they should be charging more. Oil the only thing they got, and its a limited resource. What are they gonna sell after the oil is gone? Sand? America is lucky to have such an abundance of natural resources and needs to watch that it doesn't get too greedy or prosperous times may soon be over.

  46. Re:It's The End Of The World As We Know It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hopefully Michael Stipe and REM will have expired by 2050. The earlier the better. If I have to listen to "This one goes out to the one I left behiiiiind" again, I'll probably have to throw the radio out the window.

  47. interesting point by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

    As usage of resources like fossil fuels is largely about economics, things won't change much until there is an economic reason to change. For example, nearly running out of fuels and skyrocketing prices.

    Which means that we may be better off with some of those economic reasons appering in a very real way sooner rather than later, pollution-wise.

    --
    "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
    1. Re:interesting point by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2
      Indeed. I've always been a big fan of the economic logic behind the claim, "Earth will never run out of oil". As oil gets harder to acquire, the price goes up, eventually passing even the most expensive alternatives for any possible use of crude.

      Considering the long-term advantages of being independent of oil (IC cars are half the problem by themselves), it's enough to make one wish we started running out tomorrow.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
  48. Hey, This is Strange!!! by Verizon+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    • 2002-07-07 01:37:34 UK Says The Earth Will Die by 2050 (articles,science) (rejected)

    I guess this wasn't as important 18 hours ago? Ahh well, that's Slashdot journalism for you... it must have been a slow news day today. Or maybe they're just gay. I suppose it's who's at the controls at that particular time --- oh wait, it WAS timothy!
    --

    Aw, fuck it. Let's go bowling. - The Big Lebowski

    1. Re:Hey, This is Strange!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They space out their postings so it is quite posibile it was already queued. Besides complaints of this nature are old and broing.

      Oh and your off topic

    2. Re:Hey, This is Strange!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congratulations, you just shouted to the world: "I am a petty lamer with a small penis!!"

  49. That's not why you failed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You failed because you're a failure.

  50. some salt, some truth by NaturePhotog · · Score: 5, Insightful
    America's consumption 'footprint' is 12.2 hectares per head of population compared to the UK's 6.29ha while Western Europe as a whole stands at 6.28ha. In Ethiopia the figure is 2ha, falling to just half a hectare for Burundi, the country that consumes least resources.

    Whether it's 50 years or 500, we are currently using resources faster than they are replenished. And the U.S. does consume a disproportionate amount of the resources in the world.

    100% accurate or not, reports like this aren't going to change the way the U.S. lives -- we're too comfortable in our lifestyles to make big changes. It's going to take some catastrophic change that impacts the U.S. directly to get us to wake up. Unfortunately it's developing countries which are going to feel those changes first.

    1. Re:some salt, some truth by Jerf · · Score: 4, Interesting
      This kind of post exemplifies the whole problem with the debate, which is the painful oversimplification of the entire problem, until no opinion is left without overwhelming evidence in its favor.

      Some sample problems:
      • Resources are not constant. Some replenish themselves. The amount of wheat that I consume is a virtually irrelevent point, because that amount of wheat can be grown again. Much the same goes for many other products, such as wood and any chemical that can be produced by a lifeform.
      • Resources are not a constant. Resources can be recycled, re-used, and re-allocated. We may not be doing the best job of this... or are we doing such a horrid job? The true answer is difficult to ascertain and cannot be done with such a limited analysis.
      • Resources are not constant. Improved extraction and refining techniques effectively increase the amount of any given resource that can be extracted from the Earth. Linear analysis can not correctly predict this. Remember how we were supposed to run out of oil by 19x0? Well, we did, we just found more. It may not be reasonable to suppose an infinite supply exists, but again, it's not reasonable to project linearly, either. There may be enough to last us two hundred years, assuming the population growth is slowing as it seems to be in some ways. Or there may not be enough, in which case the economy will throw significant non-linearities into the equation as it raises the price of oil. Linear analysis can not correctly predict this.
      • Resources are not constant. Any space activity in the next few decades completely throws everything off. More realistically, any new refining technique increases resources, any new genetic engineering technique increases resources, any new drilling technique or location technique or recycling technique increases resources. As technology improves, so does efficiency, the moreso if anybody cared. Linear analysis can not correctly predict this.
      • As a consequence of much of the above, resources are created, not found. Oil no longer wells up out of the ground, and all the easy resources are long gone. The US may use a 'disproportionate' share, but by being the technology leader, it also produces a vastly disproportionate share of the world's resources, both directly and indirectly. Better oil-finding technique benefit many people, not just the US, and the agricultural research done in the US benefits Third World countries astoundingly. Arithmetic analysis does not lead to understanding this issue. Linear analysis can not correctly predict the effects of this.
      It's going to take some catastrophic change that impacts the U.S. directly to get us to wake up.

      We have woken up. Personally, I worry more about everybody's use of linear or God help us all, constant projection techniques in understanding these phenomena. We'll stupid ourselves into the cosmic grave yet...
    2. Re:some salt, some truth by Badanov · · Score: 0, Troll

      Who decides what is proportional? You? Me? Some commie at the U.N? All the resources we are 'consuming' we are paying for, every drop we use. Nothing is being stolen: we even have receipts for what we are using. Why don;'t you stop wringing your hands like some nanny, and let the markets take care of economics? Malthusian was wrong then, and you are wrong now.

      --
      Dawn of the Dead
    3. Re:some salt, some truth by psin+psycle · · Score: 2
      • Resources are not infinite. The amount of wheat you consume cannot be consumed by anyone else. There is a finite amount of wheat that can be grown each year, and if we over consume this people will starve. Much the same goes for many other products, such as wood and any chemical that can be consumed by a lifeform.
      • Resources are not infinite. Resources should be re-used, and re-allocated whenever possible. Recycling uses resources. Resources are not infinite. Recyling should be our last option.
      • Resources are not infinite. Improved extraction and refining techniques effectively reduce the amount of any given resource that remains in the earth. It is not reasonable to suppose an infinite supply exists - to plan for the future we must make the best use of what we have.
      • Resources are not infinite. Even in space, there is a limited number of resources. In space the human population could grow exponetially - it may seem like a large area now... but it is limited.
      • Resources are not infinite. As a consequence of much of the above, resources are created by the Earth and are in limited supply. Oil no longer wells up out of the ground, and all the easy resources are long gone. The US may use a 'disproportionate' share, and by being the technology leader, it also depletes a vastly disproportionate share of the world's resources, both directly and indirectly. Better oil-finding technique displaces many people, not just in Sudan, and the Genetic Modification of agricultural research done in the US threatens Third World farmers astoundingly. Arithmetic analysis does not lead to understanding this issue.
      --
      Need a website host? Try out http://WebQualityHost.net
    4. Re:some salt, some truth by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

      "America's consumption 'footprint' is 12.2 hectares per head of population compared to the UK's 6.29ha while Western Europe as a whole stands at 6.28ha."

      Now here's something that has me wondering. If we're using all this land, how much of it is our own?

      According to the World Factbook, the US (third largest country in the world) has 9,158,960 km^2 and a population (also third) of 278,058,881, giving us an area-per-person of 3.29 ha. So we are capable of supplying about 27% of our own land needs.

      Moving on to the UK, it turns out they only have about 0.405 ha per person, supplying only 6% of their needs. As for some other Western European countries, France gets about 15% and Germany about 7%.

      The two African countries mentioned, Ethiopia and Burundi, are in the 80% range, but still need outside land-energy suppliers.

      "Whether it's 50 years or 500, we are currently using resources faster than they are replenished. And the U.S. does consume a disproportionate amount of the resources in the world."

      I realize that looking at total available land per person per country is simplifying things a great deal, but it would seem at least with this cursory glance that it's the Europeans that are consuming a disproportionate amount of other countries' resources. The United States may use a lot of resources, but we also happen to own a lot of resources (ie. within our own borders). As a brief example, between Alaska and the Gulf of Mexico the US is less dependant on foriegn oil suppliers than Western European countries by far.

      Interestingly enough, it seems to be the European powers that are the most vocal about conserving available global resources, much more so than the United States. Coinsidence?

    5. Re:some salt, some truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This "consumption footprint" garbage is just a made-up, bogus number. It's completely meaningless.

    6. Re:some salt, some truth by spoco2 · · Score: 1

      Yes indeed there are many replenishable resources... except perhaps wheat isn't the best example, as the amount of over farming that's being done is creating more and more barren soil that cannot support the production of crops. Earth can only produce so much food per year per hectare before you're using more nutrients than the soil can be replenished with. To stop that, farmers use fertilisers, which have all sorts of horrible side effects like algea blooms etc.

      Having said that I'm sure that there can be methods to produce enough food developed... in fact there's already far too much made, there's so much waste in 1st world countries it's just ridiculous, when others are languishing without... but it's not just the US there, lot's of us do it.

      But continuing on in this blind thought that there's an ample supply of oil, there's plenty more where what we've found came from, why worry etc. is such a narrow minded view. The point is: It's a non-renuable resource! Once it's used up (And hip-hip horray, it may not happen in our lifetime, so why the hell should we worry about it), where are you left?

      Why aren't more governments using wind, water and solar power generation. The Australian Government is one of the worst in this respect. We've got a ridiculously large country, with an amazing abundance of wind, water and sun... and what do they do? They insist that we must keep up our coal burning power stations... Both poluting more than we ever have (Damn that Kyoto(sp?) treaty, we're going to make MORE pollution), and speeding our way through a limited resource...

      Why not put up more wind generators? Why not put in more hydro generators using wave energy? Why not massive solar farms? All of these technologies are effectively 'free', effectively 'umlimited', and non-polluting. And all of them are within our current technological abilities...

      Are they being used much?

      Nup.

      The whole 'linear' vs 'non-linear' argument is pretty much mute. Sure, by using these linear projections they come up with dates that continue to fall by the wayside, but that doesn't mean that the concerns aren't real and pressing.

      The problem is there are some damn large companies and damn large countries depending on the support of said damn large companies all dependant on these old fossil fuels.

      Humph... I continue to watch the horizon become more and more muddied with polution... I continue to be able to spend less and less time in the sun because the Ozone layer above grand old Australia is stripped bare... I continue to watch plenty of amazing creatures being wiped out by ignorant countries that presume that their 'long held' 'customs' are more important than the survival of an entire species of creature.

      It's quite sickening.

    7. Re:some salt, some truth by junkgrep · · Score: 2

      ---The amount of wheat that I consume is a virtually irrelevent point, because that amount of wheat can be grown again.---

      Not only that, but if you didn't consume wheat, it wouldn't be grown in the first place. It's replenishment RELIES upon your consumption of it, not the other way around.

    8. Re:some salt, some truth by junkgrep · · Score: 2

      --The amount of wheat you consume cannot be consumed by anyone else. There is a finite amount of wheat that can be grown each year, and if we over consume this people will starve.--

      But there is no reason to think that we are anywhere near this limit, or could even get there, thanks to the Law of Diminishing returns (i.e., the more wheat we tried to grow, the harder it would be, and the pricier, and hence the less we would demand in relation to other things... etc.). Further if no one consumed any wheat, no wheat would be grown! The existence of a resource like wheat DEPENDS upon consumption, not vice-versa.

      ---As a consequence of much of the above, resources are created by the Earth and are in limited supply.---

      I think you missed entirely the gist of his comments. Things are not JUST resources by their nature: they are only resources _in relation_ to a particular human purpose.

      ---Genetic Modification of agricultural research done in the US threatens Third World farmers astoundingly.---

      How can you possibly worry about Third World farmers without also worrying about of Third World consumers? The consumers (which may or may not include a subset of farmers) are the ones for whom cheaper food would benefit much more in the aggregate than cheaper food would hurt the farmers int he aggregate.

    9. Re:some salt, some truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >

      the only thing you forget is taht we PAY for these resources. Now oil and some others are finite resources, but many FOOD for example would simply not be produced at all if we did not buy them. Also if the US consumed less we would not have to wait 50 years for mass starvation, it would start right away when half the world economies(and all the 3rd world economies) flushed right down the shitter!
      Look I love the planet as much as any WWF elf wrestler. However if you really want to save the planet, capitalism is the only way we are gonna be able to afford to save it. Overpopulation will not kill us off. It may kill some of our grandkids, but most will live.

    10. Re:some salt, some truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      umn I thought spae was infinite. Isn;t that what we have been told all these years? The universe is infinite and getting bigger.

    11. Re:some salt, some truth by ImaLamer · · Score: 2

      100% accurate or not, reports like this aren't going to change the way the U.S. lives -- we're too comfortable in our lifestyles to make big changes.

      Of course not, because America still feels as if she is the only thing that matters. But we've started to slip, years ago; and there isn't anyone to blame. But we are the ones who open and connect the world, we don't control it but we play host a lot. But we aren't doing what we should.

      One example is that Germany is the leader in "recyclable" cars. If this is a global problem, and the chance is, we need to be working on the same new technologies. If not we will lose our grip. We are living a life on high compared to others...

      It's going to take some catastrophic change that impacts the U.S. directly to get us to wake up. Unfortunately it's developing countries which are going to feel those changes first.

      I disagree. The motion of civilization will likely push developing nations to alternatives. We will be the ones in the rut.

      The event that changes us is our resistance to move forward. It will be a developing nation that knocks us off. Staying ahead is the only solution.

    12. Re:some salt, some truth by Hassan79 · · Score: 1
      "The United States may use a lot of resources, but we also happen to own a lot of resources (ie. within our own borders)"

      This is no argument. Imagine how much the Russians would be able to consume if they were allowed to consume resources proportional to the area of their country. The simple fact is that if all countries exploit their resources like the U.S., this planet will die very quickly.
      George W. Bush's environment policy is a danger for mankind as a whole.

      --

      Don't drink and su! antidisestablishmentariazationally
    13. Re:some salt, some truth by JPMH · · Score: 2
      America's consumption 'footprint' is 12.2 hectares per head of population compared to the UK's 6.29ha while Western Europe as a whole stands at 6.28ha. In Ethiopia the figure is 2ha, falling to just half a hectare for Burundi, the country that consumes least resources

      The Economist magazine this week has a long, multi-article survey on the economics the environment and sustainable development, together with an editorial, an uncompromising cover ('CO2AL - Environmental enemy No. 1'), and an interesting science article on how to burn coal without releasing the CO2 into the atmosphere.

      One point it makes about the WWF's environmental footprint figures is that 'the biggest factor by far is the land required to absorb CO2 emissions of fossil fuels. If that problem could be managed some other way, then mankind's economic footprint would look much more sustainable'. ('Working miracles').

      Although it notes that 'any reduction in emissions has to start slowly, because the capital stock involved in the global energy system is vast and long-lived', the survey goes on by saying that 'that pragmatism must be flanked by policies that encourage a switch to low-carbon technologies when replacing existing plants... Governments everywhere (but especially in America) need to send a powerful signal that carbon is going out of fashion. The best way to do this is to levy a carbon tax. However, whether it is done through taxes, mandated restrictions on greenhouse gas emissions, or through market mechanisms, is less important than that the signal is sent clearly, forcefully and unambiguously. This is where President Bush's mixed signals have done a lot of harm: America's industry, unlike Europe's, has little incentive to invest in low-carbon technology. The irony is that even some coal-fired utilities in America are now clamouring for CO2 regulation so that they can invest in new plants with confidence' (Blowing hot and cold).

      ('A clause in America's Clean Air Act exempts old coal plants from compying with current emission rules, so much of America's electricity is now produced by coal plants that are over 30 years old. Rather than closing the loophole, the Bush administration has announced measures that will give these dirty old clunkers a new lease on life' (Editorial)).

      The survey as a whole is usefully level-headed. One thing that's well worth a look is the second table on this page: an interesting perspective on different ways the world changed over the 20th century. ('A century that changed the world', in the section Flying blind)

    14. Re:some salt, some truth by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

      we're too comfortable in our lifestyles to make big changes

      If your leadership had any interest outside of serving your corporate masters (the ones who profit from American consumption) than maybe just MAYBE you Yankees could realize "Hey, we are driving the plant to shit -- lets put on the breaks, think use some sense, and chart a different course. The alternatives are massive war, famine,...., etc"

      I mean really, what is it with Americans failing to accept responsibilty and make responsible decisions? Is your country run by children?

    15. Re:some salt, some truth by thales · · Score: 5, Insightful
      150 years ago the best source of artifical light was Oil Lamps that used Whale oil. At that time the argument could have been made that there is a limited number of Whales (true), that the number of Whales was declining (true), therefore at some date in the not too distant future everyone would be sitting in the dark because of a Whale shortage.

      We aren't sitting in the dark. Alternative sources of light were developed. The distillation of Kerosene from Petroleum turned worthless black goo into a valued resource. The development of Coal gas created a new source of lighting, gas lights that were better than the oil lamps and used a resource that was far more plentiful than Whales. Natural Gas replaced Coal gas, turning a hazzardous substance that was found while looking for oil into a resource. The electric light turned waterfalls into a resource that could be used for lighting.

      Before these developments Petroleum, Natural Gas, and Waterfalls were NOT resources. The first two were natural hazzards that decreased the value of land that they were found on, and the last decreased the value of rivers as transportation sources.

      This is nothing new. In the Stone age Flint was the prefered material to make tools out of. Copper Ore was a worthless rock that didn't have the properity of flaking evenly that was needed to make tools. The discovery of smelting turned those worthless greenish rocks into a resource and averted a tool shortage caused by flint being a finate resource.

      Today having a full landfill on your properity is NOT viewed as a resource. It's a nucance that decreases the value of the land. That landfill may be like having oil on your land in 1850. New technology may transform that worthless land full of garbage into a new resource.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    16. Re:some salt, some truth by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • The amount of wheat that I consume is a virtually irrelevent point, because that amount of wheat can be grown again

      Sure, virtually irrelevant. If you discount the space needed to grow that wheat, the pesticides (and byproducts of pesticide manufacture) entering the water system because of it, the biomass of fertilizer used, and the energy requirements (mostly from fossil fuels) of getting water to the wheat, and the wheat to your mouth. Unless you grow your own organic wheat locally? Do you?

      • Resources can be recycled, re-used, and re-allocated. We may not be doing the best job of this... or are we doing such a horrid job? The true answer is difficult to ascertain and cannot be done with such a limited analysis.

      Gee, let's just make vague statements, because there isn't anything like a global information repository for us to draw on. No, wait... OK, let's see what the EPA has to say about recycling (which is "is an essential part of EPA's overall plan for reducing the amount of waste we generate", despite not being one of their Key Topics). Key quote "Today, this country recycles 28 percent of its waste, a rate that has almost doubled during the past 15 years." Draw your own inference from that. Will it keep on increasing, or have we already got all the easy stuff? Bear in mind that "recycling" in a US context can just mean "shift the problem offshore", which is hardly a global solution.

      • Improved extraction and refining techniques effectively increase the amount of any given resource that can be extracted from the Earth. [...] It may not be reasonable to suppose an infinite supply exists

      Strangely, this is the only point on which I agree with you. It's just a shame that you slipped that whacko supposition in at the end. Or do you really believe that maybe if we just keep sucking harder and harder then the oil will just keep flowing?

      • As a consequence of much of the above, resources are created, not found.

      You haven't shown that at all. You've demonstrated that access to available limited resources can be extended, and that the efficiency of use can be increased. None of that "creates" new resources, it just shifts the inflection point.

      Your supposition about space exploitation is just that, and actually agrees with the WWF conclusion, that we're running out of things to dig out of the ground.

      And your obsession with linear analysis is just that: a petty obsession, which ignores the qualitative substance of the issue. OK, let's talk non-linear. Human biomass growth is non-linear, as are the minimum resource requirements of that biomass. You've asserted (sight unseen) that the WWF report must be wrong on the assumption that it must be using linear prediction. Fine, then use your superior skills to predict the inflection point. What's your guess? Any idea? Any idea at all?

      But worst of all, you are actually supporting everything that the WWF is saying. You just choose to dismiss it by proposing that the future will take care of itself, because "we have woken up". And yet you provide no evidence - none - that this has happened.

      To me, 28% recycling - and a withdrawal from Kyoto - doesn't show that we've woken up. It just shows that we've realised that we're in a nightmare, but we don't know what to do about it. And every time that we (the people) shrug and say "Ah, whatcha gonna do?" it just gives our elected representatives a mandate do likewise on the basis that the solution will come from another source, like maybe some super-stable multinationals with long term (50+ year) strategies, or maybe something more believable, like the Tooth Fairy.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    17. Re:some salt, some truth by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

      "Imagine how much the Russians would be able to consume if they were allowed to consume resources proportional to the area of their country."

      If it's within their own country, what right do we have to say anything about it? Why shouldn't they be able to use Russian oil however damn well they please?

      Besides, I think the numbers showed that we are not consuming domestic resources in proportion to the size of our country. In order to match Western Europe's numbers, we'd have to double (or quadruple in some cases) our per capita demand.

      What it sounds like you're trying to say is "The US should stop using its own resources so it can give them to other people instead." Why should I as an American be punished for Europe's lack of domestic energy sources?

      Hate to tell you this but communism went out with the 80's.

    18. Re:some salt, some truth by praedor · · Score: 2

      There comes a point when the cost/benefit of extracting more oil is so unbalanced as to make continued extraction stupid (we are approaching that point - one solid projection based on USGS data indicates the inevitable decline in world oil production REGARDLESS of technology starts in 2011).

      Your resource argument is rather bland and ugly. What about fish? They replenish themselves but at a rate slower than we are consuming them. There is NOTHING you can do about that other than reduce fish catches. The same starts to hold true for your wheat. An acre of land can only support a certain fixed amount of productivity increase until it is tapped out and overuse of fertilizer and pesticide is NOT an answer, these are problems to be corrected, not continued.

      Technology requires resources and it gets more expensive with each innovation. Think of technology as a pyramid with a wide base and a narrowing peak. Once the support base taps out, the top comes crumbling down so that further tech advancement becomes impractical due to there not being the resources to support it because we overconsumed already. It would be NICE to be able to have that next techie toy that will "fix" everything, problem is, to get it means you have to kill people by denying them resources required just to live. Sorry, not OK.

      The answer is to change the way things are done before it is forced by a hard, immovable wall of reality.

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
    19. Re:some salt, some truth by Hassan79 · · Score: 1
      What it sounds like you're trying to say is "The US should stop using its own resources so it can give them to other people instead."

      No. You can do whatever you want with your resources, as long as it won't have effects on other countries. You don't need to give away anything to other countries. But many environmental damages won't stop at borders, e.g. climate changes and water pollution.
      For example, I don't care about the effects of oil drilling to Alaska's environment. It's your business. I only care about the greenhouse gases emitted by fossile fuel consumption.
      Unfortunately, the effects won't hit the U.S. first, but the countries who did the smallest contribution (3rd world).

      Hate to tell you this but communism went out with the 80's.

      *LOL* Especially the Soviet Union polluted its environment with arguments similar to yours ("we're big, we're powerful, nobody will dictate us what to do").

      --

      Don't drink and su! antidisestablishmentariazationally
    20. Re:some salt, some truth by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1


      We're too comfortable in our lifestyles to make big changes. It's going to take some catastrophic change that impacts the U.S. directly...

      We might have to beef up security, and tell the rest of the world they're either with us, or against us.

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
    21. Re:some salt, some truth by mattm76 · · Score: 0
      Our country may be run by children, but it is the groundwork laid by our founding fathers (businessmen) that continues to make this the freest, and therefore greatest, nation in the world. Regardless of who my leaders tend to favor, I can choose to not buy their products if they are bent on destorying the environment. It is in the best interest of our corporate masters to maintain their integrity and public image becuase if Joe Consumer is pissed off, they ultimately have to answer to Joe Stockholder or go out of business.

      Besides, we are not driving the "plant to shit" any faster the the rest of the world. (see this post) We are continuing to meet demand both domesticaly and overseas, and until there's a fair treaty, one where the US isn't punished for its ability to create wealth, we will have to rely on consumer education to "save" the planet.

    22. Re:some salt, some truth by Jerf · · Score: 2

      Your resource argument is rather bland and ugly.

      You, and several other repliers, projected. I made no 'resource argument'. I made a 'modeling argument'. Better understanding of the issues will lead to better solutions.

      Technology requires resources and it gets more expensive with each innovation.

      Nope, gets cheaper in every way that matters. How do you think we sustain exponential growth? If it were constantly getting more expensive, growth would be logarithmic.

      The answer is to change the way things are done before it is forced by a hard, immovable wall of reality.

      Perfect example; by saying this, you demonstrate that you missed my point. There is no 'hard, immovable wall of reality'... it's a 'soft, ever-moving wall of reality'. It exists, yes, but it's not something you can point to, and making plans as if it is will be less successful then plans that take into account the soft nature of it. Panic about the right things.

      In the meantime, I make no particular claims about the environment. Everybody jumping to criticize my post on that point merely reinforce my point that people are thinking in very, very inappropriate ways about these issues. (Dogmatic claims are roughtly equivalent to a 'constant' modelling approach, which is even worse then a linear model... and of course there's the issue of reading claims into my post and getting all righteous about correcting these perceived claims, since they don't match dogma.) I have opinions, but surprise surprise! they're too complicated to explain in a simple Slashdot post. They're probably wrong too, but they have the distinction of being adaptable.

    23. Re:some salt, some truth by Jerf · · Score: 2

      But continuing on in this blind thought that there's an ample supply of oil

      You projected. I said the issue is more complex, I didn't actually say anything about how much oil we have. I don't have the data to make that claim. You don't have the data to make that claim. Quite possibly, nobody does. All I see are various dogmatic claims made on poor models and bad thinking.

      The whole 'linear' vs 'non-linear' argument is pretty much mute.

      "Moot." (Pet peeve.)

      Sure, by using these linear projections they come up with dates that continue to fall by the wayside, but that doesn't mean that the concerns aren't real and pressing.

      You do realize that you just said that the truth doesn't matter, don't you?

      False projections do result in concerns that are not real. They may get lucky and stumble on the truth, but how can you tell? It is not just possible, but likely that the current understanding is so flawed as to be damaging if acted on.

      Poor thinking is poor thinking. Just doing "something" is a fallacy, not a wise course of action, no matter how many people parrot the party line.

    24. Re:some salt, some truth by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

      founding fathers (businessmen) that continues to make this the freest, and therefore greatest, nation in the world.

      This is simply not true. Your not the "freest" nor the "greatest". Really - do you not see your jingoism????

      We are continuing to meet demand both domesticaly and overseas,

      YOU ARE THE DEMAND - READ THE ARTICLE!

      until there's a fair treaty

      I suppose that would be one where you were allowed to run willy-nilly without any concern for the planet..

      one where the US isn't punished for its ability to create wealth,

      That would be for the definition of wealth of living in a shallow, consumer driven, toxic wasteland.

      we will have to rely on consumer education to "save" the planet.

      "CONSUMERS" do not exist. Citizens are the ones with issue - Citizens are the people who are your neighbours who would have issue with polluting the river, seas, air so you Yankees can whoop-it-up in your SUVs on the way to the mall..

      Christ, what planet do you live on? Read a book. Read some news from outside your country. Thi k critically. For fuck's sake - you all cant be that stupid.

    25. Re:some salt, some truth by mattm76 · · Score: 0
      Open your eyes. Yes, we are the freest and the greatest on the planet I live on, Earth. What planet do you live on? I've been all over Europe and North America (the 1st world), and no one has it like we do. There's plenty of empirical data to back me up.

      If you look at it from a green point of view, we aren't the worst. There are plenty of countries that pollute and consume disproportionately to what they produce. Why would the American people want treaty that automatically puts them at a disadvantage to the rest of the world? Our congress voted Kyoto down 99-0 because many American businesses would suffer. We respect individual prosperity and we're not going to sell out a few businesses out for the sake of world opinion. That WWF report is a joke. It completely disregards the very thing that sets us apart from other species which is technology. We will find ways to extend our resources and EVENTUALLY the growth of the population will be forced to stabilize. The free market will facilitate both.

      BTW, the only harm SUVs are doing is depleting world's oil reserves ever-so-slightly faster than a normal car would. You should be happy we drive them because as soon as we run low and the price of oil goes up, we wont have to pick on all those reputable counries in the Middle East.

    26. Re:some salt, some truth by spoco2 · · Score: 1

      You projected. I said the issue is more complex, I didn't actually say anything about how much oil we have. I don't have the data to make that claim. You don't have the data to make that claim. Quite possibly, nobody does. All I see are various dogmatic claims made on poor models and bad thinking.

      * But we're both taking opposite views on having this limited knowledge. You seem to be following down the path of "We can probably keep going for ages with what we've got, we seem to keep finding more of it, and can refine it better". Whereas I go down the track of "Regardless of how much there actually is, it's a non-renuable resource and it seems foolish to be spending as little time/money as the world is investing in other energy sources".

      The whole 'linear' vs 'non-linear' argument is pretty much mute.

      "Moot." (Pet peeve.)


      *Yes indeed, I completely agree with the peeve on that, more a typo than anything... I apologise. :)

      Sure, by using these linear projections they come up with dates that continue to fall by the wayside, but that doesn't mean that the concerns aren't real and pressing.

      You do realize that you just said that the truth doesn't matter, don't you?


      * No, what I said was that while they may have their dates wrong, it doesn't mean that the concerns in regards to someday running out of oil/coal/whatever is not valid. Just because they have their date set at 2050, and this is most likely going to be proven incorrect, it doesn't mean that the points they raise in regards to consumtion aren't valid.

      False projections do result in concerns that are not real. They may get lucky and stumble on the truth, but how can you tell? It is not just possible, but likely that the current understanding is so flawed as to be damaging if acted on.

      * Not really... how do we know they aren't even half making up their projections to try and stir the pot a bit (I agree these endless predictions of when we're going to run out of fuels are probably more damaging than good, but they may not agree). The issue is that those of us in the Western world are generally too comfortable and too removed from the possibility that these are not endless resources. Most of the populace don't particularly care either as the supplies seem so huge that 'there's no way it's going to affect me'. By proposing these dates which are within a large number of people's lifespan, maybe they hope that it will mean that people think about the consequences of their consumption a bit more.

      Poor thinking is poor thinking. Just doing "something" is a fallacy, not a wise course of action, no matter how many people parrot the party line.

      * Who's saying that we should just do 'something'? You're acting as if there aren't good, solid ideas on how to set up renuable energy sources; good, solid ideas on how to more effeciently recycle waste; good, solid ideas on how to better distribute/grow food. There are. It's not as if there's just a bunch of brainless fools running around with solar panels stuck to their heads pleading for action. There's a lot of research that has already been done, and plenty more that could be done with more money, that is pushing us well in the right direction to have non/low polluting vehicles, non/low polluting power sources, excellent recyling etc.

      This is not a case of crying about the end of the world and wondering what to do about it, it's merely getting further support to continue along the better path of human development rather than the destructive one.

    27. Re:some salt, some truth by ruzel · · Score: 1

      I just wanted to applaud your tagline: Nuke Gay Whales. But don't you think you should add *for Jesus*. It expands on the original a little bit:

      Nuke Gay Whales for Jesus!

    28. Re:some salt, some truth by fluido · · Score: 1

      Yes, but, thanks to huuuuge gains made by oil companies, research in the direction of finding a clean, cheap substitute for oil is (I believe) actively hampered.

      You must have a lot of courage (and your research must be damn cheap) to aim your research to a direction that risks damaging the gains of the oil dons.

      Yet, I believe the availability of cheap, clean energy is the only possible safe way out from the messy situation we are in.

      Not loving the epic of the soldier, I am not at all seeing with joy the perspective that resources (water, rather than oil...) be captured by force.

    29. Re:some salt, some truth by thales · · Score: 2
      The Oil Companies have the infrastructure to deliver a fuel to automobles and homes. They are allready in postion to deliver an alternative fuel. They lost control over their supplies to OPEC a long time ago. They would LOVE to distrubite an alternative fuel if it ment they could deal with a suplier that was more stable than OPEC, both politically and the price they are charged.

      Find a the cheap new energy source and the oil companies will become your happy customers.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
  51. Re:Wrestlers? [OT] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pledge of Allegiance: One nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all...

    "Under God" is a state endorsement of religion, like it or not. According to the principles the USA was founded on, this is wrong. Think about it: "one nation under God" is no more religiously neutral than "one nation under Allah" would be.

  52. Excuse me, but you overlook the obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In case some of you didn't know (apparently the 800 of you who made the same stupid joke), there is no World Wrestling Federation anymore. They lost the rights to the the acronym to the real WWF, the World Wildlife Fund. The former World Wrestling Federation is now World Wrestling Entertainment, the WWE. You must have missed their slighty-more-clever-than-your-joke ad campaign centered around "Getting the F out".

    1. Re:Excuse me, but you overlook the obvious by microsoft.CLIT · · Score: 0

      In case some of you didn't know (apparently the 800 of you who told us the obvious) we dont give a fuck and we already know WWE vs WWF. Anyway why dont the both of you just STFU. Thank you and HAND.

      --

      moderators: everything I say is supposed to be funny. don't be upset if it's over your head.
  53. denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by Fuzzums · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How are you so sure? Smoking companies denied the negative effects of sigarettes for years and years and now they have to pay bigtime for claims. Just think about it. Maybe the 'tree-hugging morons' are wrong, but if they are right, are you willing to take that chanse?

    Taking public transport (or a bike) doesn't hurt me. Neither does using 40W lamps in stead of 60W. Or turning off televisions and monitors in stead of using the stand-by feature.

    I know America (and Russia for that matter) isn't that happy with anti-pollution measures, but together the two nations are good for 50% of the CO2 (and other exhaust) production in the world.

    Please don't say that because I'm from Europe I'm a tree-hugging freak. Europe also produces pollution. I know. But why are companies like Shell, Q8, Esso and Texaco looking for other alternatives and what is wrong with that?

    But think of this before you mod me down: The effect of acid rain isn't local. Forests all over the world have to suffer the effects. Importing oil, wood and other products from the 3rd world leaves THEM with the effects while we have the products.

    And even if, in 50 years the statistics turned out to be wrong, at leas it is good to be aware of the (possible) consequences of our lifestyle.

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
    1. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by elmegil · · Score: 2

      Gee, I usually only see this approach to convincing people in religion. I think that gives you some idea of how reasonable I think it is....

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    2. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by mselmeci · · Score: 1

      See, the thing is that religion usually isn't accompanied by proof. Here, you have proof, and also it's very logical (as opposed to religion.) Maybe the date is wrong, especially if we change our evil ways, but still, you have two facts:

      - Population increases
      - Supplies don't

      Any fool can add these up to spell eventual disaster. This isn't meant to be a spelling of doom no matter what, it says what's projected to happen if things keep following their course. Change the course, and these things won't happen as predicted.

    3. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you have two facts:

      - Population increases
      - Supplies don't


      Neither of these are "facts".

    4. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by Latent+IT · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Supplies don't? Well, you're right to some extent, but in other ways, totally wrong. Food, for instance. The food supply increases as technology allows growing more food per acre, and as it allows fewer people to grow more of it, even in less than ideal soil. Technology also brings electricity from the atom. There is also solar, wind, wave, and nearly uncountable other ways of generating electricity, with which you can do anything - especially loose hydrogen and oxygen from water to fill your fuel cell, and make breathable air.

      Honestly, with only 1/3 of the earth land, and even less than that actually habitable, I think the first thing we'd run out of given enough technological innovation is a place to stand.

      What will happen will be this - eventually we will run out of oil... rather - the cost of getting more oil out of the earth will outweigh the value of the barrel of oil you could extract. I hope fervently for this day, since while everyone equates this with disaster, this will solve the vast majority of our problems. This will stop the pollution that makes me wheeze. Nuclear waste is amazingly insignificant when compared with burning coal and oil. Just build a big lead thing, deposit the (amazingly, amazingly small) 30,000 tons/year, and keep it around for a thousand years, by which I'm sure some bright boy will have developed a way to use electricity to power am effecient railgun, and fire it off into space a bit at a time. Then just keep on keeping on until we either run out of room to stand, or run out of material to power a nuclear power plant. By that time (upsettingly far in the future) well, someone else can come up with another damn idea. ;p

    5. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine, ignore it. Be a fucken idiot.

    6. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by ToLu+the+Happy+Furby · · Score: 2

      What will happen will be this - eventually we will run out of oil... rather - the cost of getting more oil out of the earth will outweigh the value of the barrel of oil you could extract. I hope fervently for this day, since while everyone equates this with disaster, this will solve the vast majority of our problems.

      Don't hold your breath. Just like with food and mineral resources, advances in oil "harvesting" technology continue to outpace advances in oil consumption. Indeed, the size of the world's known oil reserves--that is, the amount of oil that we know about and can extract at below-market cost--has never dropped; they continue to increase every single day, and don't show signs of stopping.

      This will stop the pollution that makes me wheeze.

      Oil doesn't really cause that. In particular, with modern technology, oil can be burned with quite low levels of air pollution (besides CO2). In the US, city air quality has rapidly increased in the past 40 years, and continues to do so, due to the availability of cleaner technology and the Clean Air Act pushing its use. (Similar developments in the rest of the Western world.)

      Of course this doesn't mean it's ok for Bush and his cronies to try to open more loopholes in the Clean Air Act, or that air quality shouldn't be improved further. Or that America's tremendous oil usage isn't a problem: beyond the issue of CO2 production and global warming, there's the tiny issue of those hundreds of millions of Arabs whose anger and despair at being trapped under backward, corrupt, sexist, autocratic regimes has been diverted--by those same regimes--into fundamentalist hatred of America, Israel, the West, democracy, liberalism, etc., all while the US props up those same regimes because we're scared that if we don't they'll cut off our oil. And beyond the fact that they pollute and contribute to global warming out of proportion with their numbers, and increase our dependence on oil (see last sentence), SUVs are extraordinarily dangerous to the other cars on the road (as well as pedestrians, bicyclists, etc.).

      However, while all these negatives to continued usage of oil will help a bit, they aren't going to rise to any sort of crisis level that will do much to lower demand for oil. At best, what they'll do is spur on a little extra effort towards developing replacement methods of generating energy, which will in turn catch on once their cost drops below that of oil. Again, this isn't going to happen because the price of oil will suddenly shoot up--if anything, it will continue to drift down as it always has (inflation adjusted)--but because they will get much cheaper as the technology gets worked out.

      And this will probably happen pretty soon. Indeed, wind power is apparently the cheapest way to generate electricity for increasing swaths of the world. Solar power is getting there. And fuel cells will do so eventually, too, and without any geographical restrictions.

    7. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by elmegil · · Score: 2
      Here, you have proof, and also it's very logical

      1. I don't seem to recall seeing any proof provided, nor any logic.
      2. If it was provided and I just missed it, what was the need to make the argument by "what do you have to lose"?
      Let me restate my original premise more clearly: the only time I see argument by "what do you have to lose" is when the actual arguments for the proposition are empty and baseless.

      As far as the "population increases, supplies don't" you need to go read some of the other threads under this article. Malthus made exactly the same argument over 100 years ago, and we all know how correct he turned out to be. See, what all this ignores is increasing efficiencies of use. Is there a limit to efficiencies? Of course. Have we reached it? Do we know what the limit is? A resounding no to both. The fact is, sounding an absolute alarm as in "we will be all dead in 50 years" is great for crying wolf. Unfortunately, we've heard it all before.

      If you want to make a serious case for conservation and reduction of resource use, you'll do so with reasoned, logical, cogent arguments, not great massive alarums about how the sky is falling.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    8. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by lobsterGun · · Score: 1

      Don't worry, once we run out of Petrol, we'll just swithc to Methanol/Ethanol. You'll still have plenty of reason to wheeze.

    9. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by WhiteKnight07 · · Score: 1

      ...are you willing to take that chanse?

      Yes.

      --


      We're going to make information free Mr. Anderson, whether you like it, or not.
    10. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      Thanks. You're risking my world (and my childrens world) too.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    11. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by WhiteKnight07 · · Score: 1

      I don't think a single person could possbily do irrepable damage to the enviroment on the scale we are discussing here. I'm actually just risking my individual piece of this world (which will become my children's piece if I have any) not yours. If you don't want to risk your part then don't, that's your choice. But I will do with my part as I see fit.

      --


      We're going to make information free Mr. Anderson, whether you like it, or not.
    12. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      I don't think a single person could possbily do irrepable damage to the enviroment

      Very true, but a single person can do their littke bit to prevent or cause things. Teamwork it's called in management terms. The point is that the effects we're talking about arn't local, but global. If I pollute it has effect on you aswell.

      I wonder. Exactely how do you see fit? I guess you wouldn't want to dump chemical wast in your backyard if your children are goint to play there.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    13. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Smoking companies denied the negative effects of sigarettes for years and years and now they have to pay bigtime for claims.

      Actually, the tobacco companies are (for the most part) NOT paying for claims. They merely upped the price of cigarettes by 25 cents a pack. *Current smokers* are essentially paying a tax to get the lawyers/states off the tobacco companies' backs.

    14. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by tres · · Score: 1

      The only problem with this is that the technology used to grow more food in less space relies on fossil fuels as well. I'm not talking about tractors and combines, but the fertilizers and pesticides.

      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    15. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by jpmorgan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, as things stand right now, when we run out of oil, expect modern life as we know it to end. And I don't care how much power you can generate using wind, solar, nuclear, etc... the simple fact of the matter is that petroleum based products are pervasive in our society. Without oil, you can kiss goodbye to plastics, and most of the chemical production industry. We don't have the ability to synthesise these long-chain organic compounds efficiently yet.

    16. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by WhiteKnight07 · · Score: 1

      I suppose I should explain my postion more throughly. When I say "yes" I say it because I think that the entire artical is nothing but a big smelly pile of FUD, nothing more. The chances that they are right are so small that I don't think its worth considering. I'm not about to change my ways because someone else thinks I need to. I'll do it when I think such a course of action is mandated. And this mandates nothing IMHO.

      "As I see fit" is whatever I personally think is a responsible course of action. Dumping chemical waste out in the open is obviously not responsible. Such waste should be properly disposed of and converted into fertilizer, which can then go on my lawn.

      --


      We're going to make information free Mr. Anderson, whether you like it, or not.
    17. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by AkkarAnadyr · · Score: 1

      Some bright boy already did - basically to put all the waste in front of a cyclotron beam; the recoverable energy, even if not at break-even for every type of waste, still makes the process humongously cheaper than all the bulk-storage or escape-velocity based solutions.

      --

      I bought this house and you know I'm boss
      Ain't no h'aint gonna run me off

    18. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      m'kayisee. But don't let a bit pile of FUD withhold you from thinking about it. For ecample there are more arguments for using less energy. One could be the environment. Another could be money and an other again could be recucing the load on the powergrid (in California???)

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    19. Re:denying the statistics, preaching to the choir by WhiteKnight07 · · Score: 1

      Yes yes, exactly, now if only everyone else would use this same sort of sane logic.

      --


      We're going to make information free Mr. Anderson, whether you like it, or not.
  54. Taken over by the force... by flyonthewall · · Score: 1

    Yep, I knew it! MS has now overdone it with their expiring betas.

    Besides, version 1.0 never does work out. ......

    Trust me, you are unique... Just like everybody else!

    --
    "The avalanche has already started. It's too late for the pebbles to vote." - Kosh
  55. Hmmm... perhaps a bit overblown. by RobertFisher · · Score: 3, Interesting
    While we have to be very cautious with regards to our environment and consumption, I do believe there is a tendency for reports from environmental agencies to be overblown. (And this is coming from a long-standing member of both the Sierra Club and CALPRIG.) I am skeptical with regards to this recent report, because of two facts.

    1) The highest per-capita consumption occurs in the first world. (see below)

    2) The population of the first world is rapidly shrinking, and will amount to a small fraction of the total world population by 2050. (According to the UN. See this link for details.)

    3) By 2050, even the 3rd world population is expected to reach equilibrium, so that the entire world population will actually begin to decline.

    Taken together, it seems unlikely to me that the conditions stated by the WWF may actually come about, unless the 3rd world population increases its consumption dramatically, or the UN study is substantially incorrect. This is because, even though the world population is expected to increase from 6 billion to 9 billion by 2050, that additional growth will occur almost exclusively outside of Western nations. Significantly, the population of the first world will actually diminish. Now, the report itself states

    "America's consumption 'footprint' is 12.2 hectares per head of population compared to the UK's 6.29ha while Western Europe as a whole stands at 6.28ha. In Ethiopia the figure is 2ha, falling to just half a hectare for Burundi, the country that consumes least resources."

    So if indeed the third world consumes a large factor (an order of magnitude!) less "footprint" than the Western nations, it would seem to me that the world might actually be better off by 2050 : they are, quite simply, more efficient at using existing resources.

    Bob

    --
    Science, like Nature, must also be tamed, with a view turned towards its preservation.
    1. Re:Hmmm... perhaps a bit overblown. by ragtimesf · · Score: 1

      Yes, population growth will become level by 2050. But that has nothing to do with resource consumption. If you have a large number of people consuming resources at a rate faster than which they are able to be replenished, then the fact that the number of people remains stable is irrelevant. At some point, all of the resources will be consumed. I think that's the point of this article. The article is, of course, overblown in a typically political way. But can anyone really prove that we're not using resources faster than they can be replenished? It's a valid concern.

    2. Re:Hmmm... perhaps a bit overblown. by GileadGreene · · Score: 1
      So if indeed the third world consumes a large factor (an order of magnitude!) less "footprint" than the Western nations, it would seem to me that the world might actually be better off by 2050 : they are, quite simply, more efficient at using existing resources.

      Take a look at this comment. It's not so much that the third world is more efficient, as that they have higher mortality rates, shorter lifespans, more disease, less literacy, and a generally worse set of living conditions. It has nothing to do with efficiency. If anything a technological nation is a more efficient user of resources - that's what technology is, efficient use of resources.

    3. Re:Hmmm... perhaps a bit overblown. by djshiawase · · Score: 1
      Significantly, the population of the first world will actually diminish.

      [...]

      So if indeed the third world consumes a large factor (an order of magnitude!) less "footprint" than the Western nations, it would seem to me that the world might actually be better off by 2050 : they are, quite simply, more efficient at using existing resources.

      [snip]


      I notice that with all the hullaballoo about an impending collapse in resources, proposed solutions are far and few between. And those that are proposed are incredibly intricate and involved, so complicated that results cannot clearly be put forward. The underlying problem with these 'solutions' is that it focuses on adversity, and the minimum for the parties involved.

      I propose a solution that is awful yet at the same time incredibly efficient: the utter obliteration of all borders, whether they be trade, work, or residence. A Rwandan could move to New Jersey and take up a job in the local Burger King, provided basic security clearance (health, background, etc.) and transport and setting-up costs are met. Whether the manager would hire him would depend on this fellow's ability to compete in a labour market. And an American company could set up a sweatshop in Burkina Faso manufacturing Happy Meal Toy #40321. Whether the enterpriser could keep his workers around long enough in a market with free movement depends on providing decent conditions to their workers.

      This is only an idea, as I have neither the education nor the contacts to follow up on what essentially amounts to a gut feeling. Questions would come about the responsibility of welfare (which has no relation whatsoever with market economics, as far as I know) and so on, but I feel the general idea is that if a person is willing to end up somewhere and start anew, in a fair, free market, that should happen, shouldn't it? Whether the market is food or employment, competition should be encouraged and supported, and market-stuffing like subsidies should be removed. Those taking part will be better off in the long run with a better application of their skills.

      People write off ideas automatically without truly considering the implications. Isn't this what we really want, really, if we're interested in maintaining democracy and capitalism for the present time?

      --
      they made me do it
  56. AIDS epidemic? by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

    I don't know about the complete implosion of the human population, but we can already see how disease is going to be wiping out a big chunk of the population. Exactly what percentage of African citizens are infected with HIV again?

    If nothing else, plagues of one kind or another will cull the population a bit.

    --
    "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
  57. Been there, done that by jdhouse4 · · Score: 1

    I'm old enough to remember this non-sense "we'll over-consume ourselves into oblivion" theory that was so in vogue back in that depressingly nightmarish decade called the 1970's. Doomsdayers were wrong then just as their progeny of today are incorrect.

    Back then these people predicted that we would not be able to feed ourselves due to over-population (wrong), that materials such as metals (Ti, Cu, Fe, etc.) would become prohibitively expensive (wrong again), and so on, and so on.

    People in particular are, and the human race in general is, adaptable. Whenever these doomdayers say the sky is falling, by-and-large they are basing their predictions on models that are not dynamic in their ability to react to the compensative ability of society. As long as these predictions are based on 0th order analysis, we shouldn't take them too seriously.

    --
    Let us go to the stars, dream new dreams, and renew the embers of hope that have long since grown cold.
  58. no wrestling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    any comments other than lame jokes about wrestling?

  59. sounds about right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Now learn this lesson from the fig tree: As soon as its twigs get tender and its leaves come out, you know that summer is near. Even so, when you see all these things, you know that it is near, right at the door. I tell you the truth, this generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened."(Matthew 24:29-34 NIV)

    Israel was (re)formed in 1949 (and is always represented by the fig tree), so the generation that saw that event will not pass away before the end of the world. so theoretically one of that generation could live to be 101, which would put them at the year 2050.

  60. The Internet ... by Hassman · · Score: 1

    Makes you stupid.

    --
    -Mark
    Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
  61. First, Do Some Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Instead of constantly measuring how much damage humans do, and then arguing about whether it's too much, why don't we instead focus on making positive contributions to nature rather than just taking from it? If we started designing our own systems like many of the better ones found in nature, our outputs would be highly beneficial to other ecosystems rather than simply toxic. "We're not causing all that much damage" does not mean that "we're improving things that much" either.

  62. I agree: Balderdash by lrohrer · · Score: 1


    This article has no scientific statement only political statements. It should not have been featured in slashdot. It is pur flamebait -- propaganda

    1) The US forest's are actually growing. Consider 100 years ago Pennsylvania's forests were used to build the east coast houses and then provide fuel. Today they have grown back.

    2) An acre of corn traps 5 times the amount of CO2 as an old growth forest. MORE importantly CO2 is not polution it is natural by product of life. If you don't want CO2 then kill everyone and everything.

    4) Methane is 22 times the "greenhouse gas" as CO2 and the article does not mention it at all. Methane is produced from bateria inside most animals -- (except kangaroos!!!!! http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacifi c/newsid_2023000/2023371.stm ) Perhaps they did not mention cow flautuance because this article is shit.

    5) Water vaper is also a greenhouse gas but it is not mentioned.

    6) Sure the US uses a lot of energy per capita. So what? Every other country is trying to do exavtly the same.

    1. Re:I agree: Balderdash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm only going to reply to your comments briefly, cos I can't be assed with this crap.

      God, you freaks are depressing me.

      OK,
      1) The US forest's are actually growing. Consider 100 years ago Pennsylvania's forests were used to build the east coast houses and then provide fuel. Today they have grown back.

      Yeah, good example, they were allowed to grow back. Its what nature does. And all resources, except for the fossil fuels which we have natural alternatives for, will replete if we just chill the f(*& out on them.

      4) Methane is 22 times the "greenhouse gas"....Perhaps they did not mention cow flautuance because this article is shit.

      Well Mutha8*&ka, where do these cows come from? THey're the burger fodder that McD/BK/HUMANITY breed to the max for the equivalent price of hundreds of sacks of human consumable food per animal. You're also just ignoring completely the fact that damage occuring naturally to our biosphere isn't really a valid reason for adding to it
      You freak

      and finally,

      6) Sure the US uses a lot of energy per capita. So what? Every other country is trying to do exavtly the same

      Ahh. I was wondering. What, do they teach you that in school or something?

      4% of the planet and America consumes 25% of the worlds resources. Sheit.

      Not that I want to really get into a tit-for-tat, but alot of these posts I've read are a joke, Is this really how alot of America sees this issue?
      I mean shit, you seem proud of the fact that you use a shitload more energy than you need. How does 4% of the planets population use 25% of the energy? By chucking supersize coke bottles into the bin and not recycling

      And why do you think that every country is trying to do exactly the same? What as like a social goal? To consume more energy for the glory and satisfaction of consuming more energy?

      I've seen no comments agreeing with the article, just pisstaking, righteous indignation has been posted so far, and all of this stinks to me of guilty conscience.

      America's guilty citizens stand up and sheepishly diss proposals to improve planed

      Look at the way you obvioulsy consider the environment, in Europe and Japan we don't treat it like this. We all recycle glass/plastic/paper. Almost everyone does this. Try it, you might find you're looked at in a better light

      Anyway,
      I also doubt also that we will be down and out in 50 years. Restrictions get placed naturally, we slow ourselves down without even being conscious perhaps. If it doesn't turn nasty.

      But there could well be trouble on the horizon. So, there's no harm in warning of the dangers and there's certainly no real need to keep pushing it so far. Anyway. This was supposed to be short.

    2. Re:I agree: Balderdash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Our forests are growing? Ha Ha Ha. A group of fast growing decidious trees in a PA park is hardly a forest. Take a look at a satellite photo of a larger one-forest covered state like Washington and try to make that claim. The size of the clearcuts in Washinton are the size of PA itself.

      Also, Corn produces more methane, by far, than any other plant on earth. (thus cows shit it, because that's what they eat.)

      "Every country is doing the exact same thing" -- Too funny, the old deny there's a problem at all and then claim that everyone else is doing it too.

      100 years ago people could cross large rivers walking on the backs of a northwestern salmon run, try that now and you'll drown.

    3. Re:I agree: Balderdash by shepd · · Score: 1

      >100 years ago people could cross large rivers walking on the backs of a northwestern salmon run, try that now and you'll drown.

      Today people can cross entire oceans without a food supply. Try that 100 years ago and you'd die.

      I fail to see your point.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    4. Re:I agree: Balderdash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You freak

      That was totally uncalled for! He isn't a freak, he's just a common-or-garden variety idiot!

  63. fuck the WWF by Evil+Adrian · · Score: 0

    they sued the WWE over some fucking letters (that, I might add, they had been using for over 20 years)... I hope their panda drops dead

    --
    evil adrian
  64. for South Africa by Trepidity · · Score: 2

    I believe the number usually quoted is "1 in 9". I mention South Africa because it's one of the few African countries with a government sufficiently competent to collect reasonably accurate statistics. But even if it was say twice this high, that's not going to be anything we haven't seen before -- in many parts of Europe, for example, the bubonic plague killed 10-20% of the population. Humanity can and has survived population-decimating diseases before. And AIDS is less dangerous to society functioning normally because it's less panic-inducing, since you can't get it from breathing the air near a sick person or corpse.

    1. Re:for South Africa by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

      Thanks for the number.

      I really don't think aids will kill off humanity or anything like that. I think that it will just decrease the population somewhat, more or less like the bubonic plage.

      As for panic-inducing, I am afraid people believe whatever the heck they want to believe (safe things that are dangerous, and dangerous things that are safe). We could do with some more logical humans. :P

      --
      "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
    2. Re:for South Africa by Bitsy+Boffin · · Score: 2

      Decreasing the population is a good thing. Why ? Because it's not that we are going to pollute the earth, or burn it's natural resources, or anything so cataclysmic. We are simply going to run out of room.

      The worlds population, on average, DOUBLES every 47 years or so. That means, long before I am dead, there will be (at current rates) TWICE the number of people on the planet - that's 12 BILLION, how would you feel about twice the number of people in your neighbourhood ?

      Long before my children (if I have any) are dead, the population will quadruple (24 Billion), and before thier children are dead the population is 8x what it is now, and that's in only 150 years or so !

      That's 48 BILLION people in 150 years, which most would agree is a number completely unsupportable, not without some extreme reductions in the standard of living for western cultures, to the level of 3rd world countries.

      The long and short of it is, in just 50 years things will begin to get tight and unless there is a population "cull" or planetery migration, there will soon be nothing but starving, dehydrated, dead and dying humans on the planet.

      We have to leave earth or start reducing the population, and we have to start NOW.

      --
      NZ Electronics Enthusiasts: Check out my Trade Me Listings
    3. Re:for South Africa by spencerogden · · Score: 2

      Here is one summary of the population figures. I believe more recent studies lower these figures even further. Meaning that fertility is expect to decline even fast than was thought, and we might see maximum population sometime between 2050-2080, with a max somewhere around 10 million. Population will not grow exponentially, infact it never has. If you look at the last 2000 years and the population estimates we have, a linear function is a much better fit. I beleive Julian Simon has written about these long term population trends.

      Remember, bredding humans is more complicated than breeding bacteria.

    4. Re:for South Africa by Yottabyte84 · · Score: 1

      If more places followed China's lead and STRONGLY encouraged (nasty tax penalties for children beyond the first) the situation would improve. I really think this is a neccacery evil. It WILL piss people off A LOT, but in NEEDS to be done.

    5. Re:for South Africa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but the truth is, the birth rate declines dramatically, and naturally, in all developed countries. Government controls are not needed.

    6. Re:for South Africa by rkent · · Score: 2

      And AIDS is less dangerous to society functioning normally because it's less panic-inducing, since you can't get it from breathing the air near a sick person or corpse.

      Um... I might take issue with that. I mean, obviously AIDS isn't communicated by air, but it is going to be extremely disruptive to several African nations over the next couple of decades. Here's why.

      First of all, AIDS is communicated sexually, which means it is spread most rapidly among people aged 15-30 or so, which is the most sexually active time in your life, and also the prime working age for people in those cultures. So, yes, it might "only" be 10-20% of people there who die, but it will probably be the tenth-to-a-fifth of the most productive people in the culture.

      Furthermore, there is SO much disinformation about AIDS in many African nations that it would be funny if it wasn't so tragic. It's often viewed as a curse that can be absolved by praying and as such, not contagious by any kind of human transmission. Some cultures even believe that you can "un-AIDS" yourself by - get this - having sex with a virgin.

      So, no, you can't get AIDS by breathing the same air as someone who has it. But that doesn't make it un-disruptive to a society. At all.

    7. Re:for South Africa by Yottabyte84 · · Score: 1

      It's not enough. Most families in the US have at least 2 children, and frequently 3 or more. Last I heard this avaraged out to 2.3 children per family, which does cause population growth. There are already too many people in many parts of the united states and other developed contries.

    8. Re:for South Africa by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      I really wish people would comprehend that as the number of people increases in any area or even on the planet as a whole, we will simply build more and higher structures to hold and accomodate them. New York City has millions of people today. 200 years ago it didn't. If you tried to put millions of people in the NYC of 200 years ago it would be a disaster. What makes the difference between the two time periods? BIGGER AND MORE BUILDINGS!

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    9. Re:for South Africa by iamblades · · Score: 1

      But it doesn't need to be done..

      Once all countries are industrialized, there will be very little population growth, judging from the countries that are already industrialized.

      Several western countries actually have DECLINING populations, as the US will likely have once the babyboomers start dying off..

      China is in a unique category though, maybe together with india. They are the only two countries that really really need laws like that, because they really are about to run out of space.

      Industrialized countries are not growing though, and soon African countries will be the only countries with appreciable growth rates...

      --
      Shit adds up at the bottom...
    10. Re:for South Africa by shepd · · Score: 2

      >how would you feel about twice the number of people in your neighbourhood ?

      I don't know about you, but like most people owning a computer and surfing slashdot I live in a first world country.

      Where I live statistics suggest I can expect to see fewer next door neighbours in the future.

      >We have to leave earth or start reducing the population, and we have to start NOW.

      We are reducing the population. The fact that people in the third world will be forced to reduce their population by disease or economics won't make any difference.

      Third world countries can either start acting on their own problems or the consequences will be epedemic in proportion (for themselves). We got here the hard way and it isn't like we refuse to give the information necessary for third world countries to help themselves up.

      Unfortunately, their leaders are (usually) mentally derranged in some way and it all amounts to a sad story.

      Over time, though, I think we can expect an implosion of the world population as third world countries realise the best way to increase their quality of life would be to have fewer people eating their slice of the pie.

      Our way of life will continue at its current pace, and theirs will either stay the same (should they take action) or will get worse (should they choose to continue on their path). I don't see how millions and millions of Africans starving to death will affect us, other than making fodder for a heart-tearing documentary of how horrible life is in the third world.

      In first world countries we (mostly) have the ability to generate a sufficient food supply for ourselves, supply ourselves with electricity, and supply ourselves with whatever knowledge we need to survive. The fact is, in many ways (aside from fossil fuels and crazed nuclear bombing madmen) what happens in third world countries has absolutely ZERO effect on us in any economic or life-changing way. Yes, I am including the WTC bombing in this, since that was done by people living in a third world country. Ask yourself: Today, not even a year later than that event, has there been any appreciable impact on your life that wasn't artifically created?

      Maybe I'm just a cold hearted person, but for years whenever a "feed african children" commercial came on TV I'd just say "if you had 1/4 the population you'd have enough food to be as fat as Sally Struthers -- fix the problem yourself -- stop having babies to the point that they'll die before they even have the chance to farm your land". Its a problem that no amount of first world resources can possibly fix. In fact, the more resources we throw at them without them changing their ways the more the problem escalates due to the fact that they'll just generate (unnecessarialy) more mouths to feed with them, rather than devote them to sustaining their current population. They have to fix their social problems on their own.

      Their destiny, ultimately, is up to them.

      Sorry for the rant.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    11. Re:for South Africa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WRONG!!! some countries in africa have HIV rates of 20%-37% of the adult population. This was just released by the UN last week(the AP carried the report). That means a HUGE reduction in just a couple of generations in parts of africa. Oh, and these countries are already starting to have shortages of ..PEOPLE.

    12. Re:for South Africa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the average number of children in the US is 1.5 per two people. The higher number likely does not take into acount the un married and childless people. Many gay couples, and single people never have kids and are not counted as married. This is not many people but a large enough % to make the numbers screwy.

    13. Re:for South Africa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Their destiny, ultimately, is up to them.

      Or up to the people with resources who can enable them.

      Aid agencies such as Oxfam don't divide their income by the price of a Happy Meal and feed that many bloated kids for a day: they provide the opportunity for people to develop.

    14. Re:for South Africa by JoeRobe · · Score: 1

      I have heard of several studies (but not actually read the papers coming from them) that find that homosexuality rates have historically risen during times and in areas of overpopulation. The conclusion, if I recall, was that this rise was a natural way to reduce the population without resorting to disease or war.

      Does anyone know more about this (i.e.: where are the papers, what are the official conclusions, etc.)?

      --
      The best way to predict the future is to invent it.
    15. Re:for South Africa by shepd · · Score: 1

      >Aid agencies such as Oxfam don't divide their income by the price of a Happy Meal and feed that many bloated kids for a day: they provide the opportunity for people to develop.

      Not that I disagree or agree, but over where I am (North America) Oxfax either doesn't exist or they're not letting on.

      All the ads I've seen (and I'm not one to seek out these agencies, so what I know of them is through advertising) say that the money goes to feed children, which fans the flames, rather than assuaging them.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    16. Re:for South Africa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So is it "[Like China] STRONGLY ENCOURAGED" One Child, or is it "nasty tax penalties" after the first one?

      China's Strong Encouragement includes sterilization, forced abortions, and infanticide. Primarily female infanticide, of course, since every family wanted a male child to carry on the name.

      Among the negative side effects are a significant lack of available females for marriage and the Little Emperors: single children who are self-centered after years of being doted on by parents and grandparents. Amusingly, they will probably reject centuries of conformance for the Greater Good and therefore initiate the downfall of the communist system that brought them into being.

      And with the wonders of hindsight, it has been suggested that, oops, a Two Child program would probably have worked just slightly slower and without as many of these negative side affects.

      But I'm sure that expanding the One Child program to the wider world would work much better than it did there...

    17. Re:for South Africa by Yottabyte84 · · Score: 1

      China's "Strong Encouragement" consists of fines for those that choose to have multiple children. It is true that female babies may be killed for cutrual reasons by families who cannot afford the fines, which is sad. You're right about a Two Child program being a better option, for preventing overcrowing before it happens, but in china the overcrowding was already too bad.

  65. not so funny subjects by PhiberOptix · · Score: 1

    a couple funny posts here and there is cool, some jokes even make me laugh (yeah, laughing @ slashdot jokes, im a loser, i know)..but cmon, there were like two hundred people posting the same joke one after another.

  66. BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More BS from WWF.

    Same issue was tried years ago in the famous bet between Paul Erlich and Julian Simon.

    Simon won.

    And he would win again if the same bet were made now.

  67. Tragedy of the commons by MavEtJu · · Score: 3, Informative

    Take with as large a grain of salt as you think appropriate.

    Aaaah, a beautiful example of the 'tragedy of the commons'.

    Don't get me wrong, I don't think that globalisation et al are wrong, as long as you take *all* aspects of it, not only the short-term ones like make-money-fast and the-next-generation-will-solve-this. If you go for a certain approach, take everything including the messy parts, not only the easy gains.

    --
    bash$ :(){ :|:&};:
    1. Re:Tragedy of the commons by js7a · · Score: 1
      The atmospheric commons is only tragic when air quality regulations are not in effect.

      There has been a historical trend of fewer carbon atoms per calorie (and storage cost) of fuel, and there is reason to believe that the trend will continue.

      The question is, will it be too little, too late?

    2. Re:Tragedy of the commons by Treylis · · Score: 1

      Tragedy of the Commons is crap. I'm amazed that it received all the attention that it did. It automatically assumes that people will work in their best interests, but, somehow, they stop working for them when it comes to collaborating with others to keep things going. I know that it's like the former a great deal in real life, but, it's also like the latter in a hell of a lot of important situations.

    3. Re:Tragedy of the commons by MavEtJu · · Score: 2

      It automatically assumes that people will work in their best interests, but, somehow, they stop working for them when it comes to collaborating with others to keep things going.

      This is a true story from when I attended a phsychology class. We were told this "tragedy of the commons" story and three people were brought up to the front of the class. The professor had a bowl with three chocolate eggs in it and said "at the beginning of each minute I pass the bowl and at the end of the minute I double the amount of eggs.". Remember, this was a minute after he stopped his lecture about the "tragedy of the commons".

      First person, gets the bowl with three eggs, grabs one. Second person too, third person too. Result after ten seconds: one empty bowl.

      The professor explains it once again: "I'll double the amount of eggs each minute.". First person gets the bowl, doesn't take any. Second person get the bowl, takes an egg. Third person, takes one egg, puts down the bowl, gets the third egg. That was two minutes after the lecture, after a 'practise round' and two times things explained. Third person gives one of the eggs to the first person, who finally can't hold himself anymore and starts swearing to the second and third person.

      Humans are too stupid to understand when it comes to long term consequences. Enjoy our SUV while you can, the end is near.

      --
      bash$ :(){ :|:&};:
  68. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    sorry but i dispute the fact that all 6 or 7 billion people in the world are eating well, it's more like half at best. Yes currently there is ample food (for the 1/3 of the world in first world countries), who knows about the rest...
    it just may be that there isn't enough food for everyone.

    This economist accurately predicted the current population of the earth, 200 years ago - thats pretty impressive i wouldnt discount his theories so fast.

  69. I hope not by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

    Nuclear power seemed like a good idea not too long ago, but in the US we are having political problems about where to dump the waste. If someone could magically deal with the waste, then I imagine nuclear power would skyrocket. Until then, it is too darn expensive ($,politically,environmentally)

    --
    "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
    1. Re:I hope not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The obstacles are political, not environmental.

      Nuclear waste is a non-issue.

    2. Re:I hope not by TWR · · Score: 2
      Nuclear power is fine, but idjits like the WWF are preventing it from being used. Burning coal (the chief supply of electrical power in the US) dumps TONS of uranium into the atmosphere in easy-to-breathe particle format. Does anyone complain about this radioactive waste, try to figure out how to store it? Of course not; it's being stored in the lungs of every American.

      The real problem is that these are anti-science Luddites whose inability to do simple math or think clearly forces them to make a living by trying to scare everyone else.

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

    3. Re:I hope not by nomadic · · Score: 2

      Good lord, this again. Let me explain it to you simply; the radiation is more dangerous from reactor waste because it is CONCENTRATED. What's so hard to understand? Would you rather sleep in a room with say a bucket of transuranic waste or with the equivalent mass of coal particles? Hmm?

    4. Re:I hope not by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1
      ould you rather sleep in a room with say a bucket of transuranic waste or with the equivalent mass of coal particles? Hmm?

      Bear in mind that I would literally have to sleep with the coal dust. The concentrated waste gets nowhere near me. It can get glassed and dumped into the deepest darkest hole we can dig.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    5. Re:I hope not by thetbone · · Score: 1

      Why would you sleep in a room with either??

    6. Re:I hope not by spike+hay · · Score: 2

      Would you rather sleep in a room with say a bucket of transuranic waste or with the equivalent mass of coal particles? Hmm?

      Transuranic waste, please. The coal dust is very carcinogenic and I would be inhaling it into my lungs. It could cause lung cancer , emphysema, or black lung disease. While the radiation from the waste would not be too bad, and it certainly wouldn't get into my lungs.

      It's not like you die from being around plutonium. I wouldn't want to have a chunk of plutonium on my person all the time. But just casual exposure to radioactive materials will only increase cancer risk a very small amount. The big danger is when you are around fissioning materials.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    7. Re:I hope not by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Coal dust can be carcinogenic in sufficient doses; a few hours with it probably won't damage you. Transuranic waste is highly radioactive, however, and you're sure to suffer from it.

    8. Re:I hope not by Jeremi · · Score: 2
      Does anyone complain about [air pollution from burning coal], try to figure out how to store it? Of course not...

      Of course they do. Environmentalists have been complaining about pollution from coal burning since the beginning. The fact is it's not an either/or choice between nuclear and coal. Both technologies are unacceptable, but that's okay because there are other options to choose from. Solar, wind, geothermal, hydroelectric, etc. (no, don't bother to point out that all of those also have their shortcomings.... that may be so, but they are still better alternatives than coal and nuclear)

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    9. Re:I hope not by stardyne · · Score: 1

      Good lord, this again. Let me explain it to you simply; the radiation is more dangerous from reactor waste because it is CONCENTRATED. What's so hard to understand? Would you rather sleep in a room with say a bucket of transuranic waste or with the equivalent mass of coal particles? Hmm?

      The concentrated reactor waste is only harmful if not stored properly, and only then to a localized population. The radiation from coal plants is a threat to the entire world.

      I was onboard a Nuke sub for a while, and we had many radiation alarms onboard caused by coal plants in the area. We never had one alarm caused by the nuclear reactor.

      This ignorant garbage that you are spouting has no basis in reality. Please go to a library and educate yourself.

    10. Re:I hope not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The real problem is that these are anti-science Luddites whose inability to do simple math or think clearly forces them to make a living by trying to scare everyone else.

      The real problem is the bloody lies the nuclear industry has told everyone again and again and fucking again, about the safety of their product, the prices of their electricty, the cost of decommissioning and so endlessly on.

      I am agnostic on whether nuclear pwer is a good thing. One thing that would convince me it was, wasa proper, decent, honest costing.

    11. Re:I hope not by jweatherley · · Score: 1

      but that's okay because there are other options to choose from. Solar, wind, geothermal, hydroelectric, etc. (no, don't bother to point out that all of those also have their shortcomings....

      Typical enivronmentalist stance: we should be using all this wonderful technology - please don't point out why it is ineffective as that makes baby Gaia cry.

      o Solar: This could work but to make it work efficiently you want your (expensive) panels close to the Equator. Problem is most equatorial countries are basket cases.

      o Wind: Nice for a small rural community but the windmills are v. unpopular with those that live near them - ooops rules out small rural communities then - and tend to be put on top of pretty hills spoiling the view. Putting them out at sea is expensive. They are also troubled by both lack of wind and too much wind so end up not producing electricity for substantial yet unpredictable periods of time.

      o Geothermal: great if you live in Iceland.

      o Hydroelectric: You forgot greenies don't like this as you have to build a dam and dams are baaaaad.

      One you didn't mention is tidal - in some ways this is better than wind as there is a more predictable and consistent energy source to be tapped but again cost is a problem. Renewable supplies may well be the future but they are not ready to replace Coal/Gas/Nuclear anytime soon.

      --

      --
      Reverse outsourcing: it's the future
    12. Re:I hope not by TWR · · Score: 2
      See, you just proved my point about doing math and thinking clearly. A "bucked of transuranic waste" is easy to contain. If I can put that bucket in a lead casket, then sure, I'll share a room with it, use it as a coffee table, whatever. Radioactive particles in the air are not easy to contain. I could wrap myself in a HEPA filter, I guess.

      The moral of the story is: ONE LARGE MASS OF RADIOATIVE STUFF IS EASIER TO HANDLE THAN LOTS OF SMALL MASSES. But nitwits like you prefer the small masses because you can't see them. That's good thinking.

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

    13. Re:I hope not by TWR · · Score: 2
      Horseshit. None of the sources you mentioned are even moderately capable of supplying the power needs for the US.

      If you think they are capable, cite for me chapter and verse from a peer-reviewed science journal that shows that they can.

      You are just spewing more ignorance and wishful thinking from the tree huggers.

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

    14. Re:I hope not by Jeremi · · Score: 2
      Typical enivronmentalist stance: we should be using all this wonderful technology - please don't point out why it is ineffective as that makes baby Gaia cry.

      Heh, I guess that came across the wrong way. I didn't mean to imply that 'green' technology is perfect, or that its problems shouldn't be discussed. What I meant was that it is a developing technology, and the problems that it does have can be and are being resolved.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    15. Re:I hope not by spike+hay · · Score: 2

      Transuranic waste is highly radioactive, however, and you're sure to suffer from it.

      However, a chunk of plutonium sitting ten feet away from you wouldn't do much, assuming you are only exposed to it for a relatively short amount of time.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    16. Re:I hope not by nomadic · · Score: 2

      I guess you don't understand. Of course anything's safe if it's stored "safely", but that's a pretty damn vague term.

      ONE LARGE MASS OF RADIOATIVE STUFF IS EASIER TO HANDLE THAN LOTS OF SMALL MASSES. But nitwits like you prefer the small masses because you can't see them. That's good thinking.

      IDIOT. It's a LOT of large masses. That's what I don't understand about you; are you really so inanely stupid that you can't realize that this stuff accumulates, and have LONG halflives? Hell, this is elementary logic. The more waste you store, the less room you have, and the more likely there is to be an accident. Maybe you should enroll in an accredited college this time, you simpleton.

    17. Re:I hope not by TWR · · Score: 2
      I will use small words, because you are obviously too stupid to read large ones.

      WE ARE LETTING LOTS OF RADIOACTIVE (sorry, long word, couldn't avoid it) WASTE OUT NOW BY BURNING COAL. IT IS STORED IN THE LUNGS OF EVERYONE. THIS CAUSES CANCER.

      You seem to think it's a "radioactive/not radioactive" choice. It isn't. It's a choice between impossible-to-handle uranium particles in smoke from burning coal vs. relatively-easy-to-handle spent fuel rods.

      I don't want to increase my risk of dying of lung cancer because stupid people like you failed basic science and logic. I want nuclear power.

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

    18. Re:I hope not by neocon · · Score: 1

      Put differently, to quote the standard spiel given on the visitor tour of the CANDU (Canadian National) nuclear plants, `a properly run coal mine produces a hell of a lot more background radiation than a properly runk nuclear plant'.

    19. Re:I hope not by spike+hay · · Score: 2

      Also, plutonium is only an alpha emmiter. This form of radiation canot penetrate a sheet of paper or your dead epidermis. So a chunk of plutonium sitting right next to you would have no effect at all. It is only dangerous if you inhale it, or, to a lesser extent, ingest it.

      Here is an excellent Lawrence Livermore Nat'l Lab paper on plutonium toxicity. Pay special attention to the section on plutonium in drinking water. It shows how plutonium would simply settle out of the water, producing almost no health risk, even in large quantities.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
  70. Eat everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All those fat americans will be killed before 2050 ... so no problem at all.

    Eaten my millions of _really_ hungry mouths.
    No diet will rescue you.
    No plastic surgery can hide your decadence.

    250 millions consuming 25% of all resources.
    Do you still wonder why the rest of the world hates you?
    Oh ... i forgot. Those who love the american way are the good ones, every other opinion is evil.
    Black and White. Good and evil.
    A Simple mind leads to simple thoughts.

    God bless you!

    1. Re:Eat everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what?

      We don't give a shit anymore about whether you "love" or "hate" us. We've given up on expecting gratitude from the rest of the world.

      Now it is time to be feared. That's a lot easier to arrange than being loved, and it's the only thing that the savage nations (e.g., Europe) understand.

    2. Re:Eat everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      amen

    3. Re:Eat everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ahhh yes,well we've heard from the cannibal contingent...

      "Do you still wonder why the rest of the world hates you?"
      jealous cannibals???...I try not to care what they think...cause,well..they don't...

      "A Simple mind leads to simple thoughts."

      and the irony is deafening...dumbass

  71. Re:Typical Honda driving coders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, piss off, Marx Boy.

    Industrialization is the best (nay, the ONLY) way for a Third World country to develop itself.

    It's been shown again and again. Japan used to be a Third World country. Now it isn't. South Korea used to be a Third World Country. Now it isn't. Hell, the United States used to be a Third World country full of backward farmers. Now it isn't.

    Every country that has instituted a true capitalist economy (which includes the rule of law) has improved itself. Every country that has implemented your Marxist utopia has gone in the shitter.

    Greenies like you are willing to doom any chance that the Third World has for a better life.

  72. Thomas Malthus vs. The Rock by oliverk · · Score: 1
    I like this new slant of the WWF -- first they get a governor, now they've got economists (and environmental ones at that!)

    I think even Malthus (see http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~stephan/malthus/malthus.0.h tml) would be turning over in his grave from this bullshit. His initial predictions from the late 1700s always gave "generations" until the human race would die from overpopulation and overplundering of natural resources. Of course, that hasn't happened yet thanks to technological advances and such. However, in this latest DOOMSDAY ALERT we seem to have around 48 years.

    Is this just viral marketing for Lost in Space 2? Or maybe Odyssey 5?

    --
    ---- Please be nice in case my Slashdot karma ~= my real life karma.
  73. Mod the parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if you have mod points and love sanity over emotional blather and alarmism, mod the parent up!

    1. Re:Mod the parent up by rbook · · Score: 1

      Thanks!

  74. Don't give me this crap! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... while forests - which absorb carbon dioxide emissions - are completely destroyed and freshwater supplies become scarce and polluted.

    Don't be fooled by this propaganda! Remember general chemistry: CO2 + H2O + light energy ---> (CH2O)n + O2 ... Plants 'EAT' CO2 and make oxygen! Also see this site for some good information.

    Besides that CO2 emissions from volcano eruptions and output from the Ocean far surpass those from humans for the same time period. Just think, the oceans output such a large amount CO2 because ALL LIVING THINGS release CO2.

  75. It's deja vu all over again! by cosmicpossum · · Score: 1
    I read the article at the Observer and couldn't help thinking that it all sounded erily like the dire predictions of the Club of Rome back in 1972.

    They predicted that the world would run out of gold by 1981, of mercury by 1985, tin by 1987, zinc by 1990, petroleum by 1992, and copper, lead and gas by 1993.

    I did a Google to refresh my memory about the previous putative disaster-in-the-making and came up with a very relevant column written by Mark Steyn, get it from the Google cache.

    --
    (This sig intentionally left blank)
  76. Same old BS by CNERD · · Score: 1

    I agree that we should be concious of the envirouments health, but i hear too many scare tactics being used. The world was suppose to end ages ago according to yesteryear's biologists.

  77. HIV & AIDS by doog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Unfortunately and perhaps ironically, it may be that the rapid spread of HIV will devastate the population enough to save us.

  78. Attention! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The grain of salt required for this article consumed approx 3/4 of the nations supply. At this rate salt will be depleated by 2005. With the rise of crappy science and the salt needed to digest it, will we even live to see 2050?

  79. Re:WW.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Paying closer attention reveals they recently got the 'F' out.....although this says more about my viewing habits than anything else. I hate wrestling...

  80. The Couter Arguement From the Economist by agutier · · Score: 1

    A great article from Aug 2001, if you have a subscription to the Economist you can read it here:

    http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?Story_ ID =718860

    Over population has a natural check. As people get richer, they have smaller families. (Italy, for example, is starting to shrink.)

    Global warming, loss of biodiversity, and pollution are are all real problems, but they are exagaerated by some envrionmentalists.

    But that's okay. Its what envrionmentalists do. Raise awareness.

  81. And in other news: by jerdenn · · Score: 2

    Just off of the A.P. wire:

    Chicken Little reports that the sky is falling.



    -jerdenn

  82. Muslim Genocide Now! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kill the raghead babies before they grow up to be terrorists!

  83. Well it might... by bazmonkey · · Score: 1

    but I might get a girlfriend within the next 50 years too, and I'm not holding my breath.

    The "assumptions" everyone talks about that the WWF doesn't consider are exactly what has kept humanity alive through the Industrial Revolution. The WWF doesn't take into account that animals outside of man also use resources. When push comes to shove, humans aren't going to fly off to Mars, we're going to shove the animals out of the way. That's what we've done for years and years.

    Yes, technology has enables us to do what we used to without as much energy, but that's not the biggest factor here. Raising cattle and nearly eliminating American bisons in the process, that was a big one.

    When it comes to sustaining life, Earth has a lot of give. As sad as it may be, humans will simply choke away less "efficient" animals on this earth. A perfect example, in Africa herders are beginning to raise domesticated versions of antelopes instead of cattle. They just make more and eat less.

    Yes, we are running out of room, but c'mon, we're human beings. If there's one thing we do well, it's taking what we think is ours. We aren't going to leave, animals will.

    And 50 years will go, and I'll still be single.

  84. two words by jeffehobbs · · Score: 2

    Take with as large a grain of salt as you think appropriate.

    Salt lick.

    ~jeff

  85. To the idiot moderators... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The parent post is a reference to the Jehovah's witnesses, who, give a date for the end of the world. When the date passes without incident, they move the doomsday date back.

    It is actually a perfect analogy.

  86. Ho Hum by BionicElf · · Score: 1

    Econuts have been announcing the Earth's imminent demise forever. In the sixites there were TONS of these "scientific" reports proving the earth was gonna be dead before 2000.

    We're still here.

  87. bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you REALLY think that a 2002 Lincoln Navigator (16 MPG highway) pollutes less than, to use an example of a car more than 5 years old, a 1996 Honda Civic HX (45 MPG highway)?

    1. Re:bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you REALLY think that a 2002 Lincoln Navigator (16 MPG highway) pollutes less than, to use an example of a car more than 5 years old, a 1996 Honda Civic HX (45 MPG highway)?

      As a guy who works in an AirCare testing facility in Vancouver, BC, Canada, and who has seen the scientific measurements of the emmissions from each of them...

      YES

    2. Re:bullshit. by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 1

      As a guy ... who has seen the scientific measurements
      YES


      Bullshit and bullshit. Care to back that up with some proof, coward boy? If you were who you say, you wouldn't be an A/C. And you haven't seen shit unless Canada is THAT fucked up. One of the points of having a car's emissions checked and maintained is to prevent the very thing that emission tests are supposed to detect. If the cars fail the tests in their district they aren't supposed to be on the road.

      Should we instead be blaming Canada? I refuse to believe the whole country has their shit as fucked up as you do.

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    3. Re:bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Argued like a real expert.

      I assume you know the exact levels of pollutants that each model of car will emit under differing conditions, to the point of knowing that a new engine with tight tolerances will burn dirtier and pollute more than an older but smaller engine that's worn quite a bit, burns some oil, blows past its valves, leaks gas into the crankcase, yet still pollutes less?

      Fucking moron with an agenda totally unconnected with reality. You wouldn't know "nature" if it hit you in the face. And if it did you probably wouldn't like it.

    4. Re:bullshit. by silverhalide · · Score: 1

      Whoa there cowboy! It's a BAD assumption to assume that gas mileage is equal to emissions.

      It's not.

      In ideal combustion, there would be only CO2 and water coming out of the tailpipe. This in itself is harmless. Plants take care of the CO2 and convert it back to oxygen, and water is, well, water. (It's also disturbing to note how the article makes it sound like trees account for most of the C02->O2 conversion on the planet, this also isn't true, algae in the ocean account for something like over 60%).

      However, in imperfect combustion, like that in your car, other nasties come out the tailpipe, such as Nitrous Oxide compounds (Known as NOx, x for the various subscripts accompaning the compounds). There are others I can't think of at the moment. These other pollutants are the main contributor to factors such as smog and acid rain. New vehicles that come out this year, including most new SUVs, have much much cleaner emissions than that of older cars because they utilize state of the art catalysts, fuel injection, and other aftertreatments. Now, they might have MORE emissions, but the majority of that is of the less harmful gasses like CO2 and water vapor.

    5. Re:bullshit. by Mournblade · · Score: 1

      Maybe not, then again, maybe it does. Certainly a 2002 Lincoln Navigator will pollute less than a 1997 Navigator (though I don't know if Lincoln made the Navigator back in 1997). It's interesting that the stats you chose to cite (MPG) have nothing to do with pollution. They are measures of resource consumption.

    6. Re:bullshit. by audacity242 · · Score: 1

      The actual emissions put out per second might be lower. But that doesn't change the fact that the vehicle uses a LOT more gas to go the same distance, which means that it is indirectly causing more pollution, as it requires more crude to be refined into gasoline.

  88. Scarcity by pompomtom · · Score: 1
    When certain resources become scarce, they will become expensive, and people will be forced to stop using them and seek alternatives.
    No, they will become expensive, so only rich people will use them up.
    --

    Buckets,

    pompomtom

    "There's an exception to every rule. Except for some rules"
    1. Re:Scarcity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No, they will become expensive, so only rich people will use them up.

      And everyone else will use, umm, alternatives?

    2. Re:Scarcity by famillionaire · · Score: 1

      This is correct - the population problem is a problem of distribution of resources specific to capitalism, not a problem of overpopulation per se.

    3. Re:Scarcity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Specific to capitalism?

      Yup, that certainly explains why no communist regime has ever managed to feed itself.

  89. it's NOT true. by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    why is the number of 'who cares' and 'they're talking crap' reactions so high?

    people in africa don't die from aids.
    rainforests never existed.
    hunger is a state of mind.
    and the forestfires in arizona is made up by cnn.

    as much as I want people in arizona to keep their houses, I want prople in africa to have food and medicine.

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
    1. Re:it's NOT true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I want prople in africa to have food and medicine

      You know what? I do, too.

      Drastic reductions in energy consumption and the crippling of Western Civilization is NOT the way to make that happen.

    2. Re:it's NOT true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then grow up and realize that to feed people and produce medicines IT TAKES ENERGY AND RESOURCES

  90. Slashdot to Compete with National Enquirer by skywire · · Score: 1

    Highly placed sources within Slashdot have revealed on condition of anonymity that the news service has today put into place its new plan, developed after a reassessment of its target audience by their marketing research firm, to move into the supermarket tabloid space and compete toe-to-toe with the National Enquirer.

    Stories soon to appear include:

    Did Rapture Occur in 1979?
    Study Reveals Green Beans Cure All Cancers
    One Third of New York Population are Space Aliens

    --
    Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
  91. save the earth? by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

    Um, I guess you want to volunteer your backyard for a nuclear storage dump? No? I guess nuclear power is ok if someone else gets stuck with the waste. It is strange that you are calling someone an environmental hypocrite. By the same logic you used in your first line, everyone who can read/post here probably is approximately the same as far as pollution goes. I guess that might include you as well as me. :P

    --
    "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
    1. Re:save the earth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the nuclear waste produced since day one would fit into a single football stadium.

      It's a non-issue.

      I live a First World lifestyle, and I don't feel a bit guilty about it. I don't get holier than thou when I see my neighbor driving an SUV. You do. That's what makes you a hypocrite.

    2. Re:save the earth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Damn right.

      You cannot eliminate the impact that billions of humans have on the earth. What's the impact of nuclear power? A few sites that it's best to stay away from? The earth already has a lot of those. What's three more compared to the pollution of fossil fuels, the impact of damming rivers, or the ruination of millions and millions of acres of land for solar or wind power

      Aside: Why solar and/or wind power is such a "great thing" for ecofreaks is beyond me. Anyone want to visualize what the solar panel necessary to power a good sized city would do to the environment nearby and underneath?

    3. Re:save the earth? by Treylis · · Score: 1

      Seriously, nuclear waste is not a problem. It never has been. As one who has a lot of knowledge and background in this field, I can tell you that what you've heard to the effect of "oh my god, the waste is just piling up" is total bullshit. There are a number of ways of dealing with it pretty much perfectly that aren't used because the environmentalists scream that something /might/ happen, and newer tech like SLOWPOKE handles it, as well. It's really a trivial matter.

    4. Re:save the earth? by wheany · · Score: 1

      I guess you want to volunteer your backyard for a nuclear storage dump?

      I have no problem with that. Can I bury it, so that it won't spoil the view?

  92. Take it with a grain of salt by UnrefinedLayman · · Score: 5, Interesting
    ...but consider the possibilities before you do. I won't get into the validity of the claim, but if we assume that it's true, then take this into account: http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=104918 1 It is possible to fit 6 billion people into the Isle of Wright with room to spare. In fact, you could fit 27 billion people into a cube one mile by one mile by one mile.

    Only catch is, each person would have 12 cubic feet, or six feet by two feet by one foot. Now imagine that you're at the bottom of the cube.

    What is overlooked time and time again in the "you can fit x people into ____" argument is that just because you can fit a population into an area doesn't mean that area can support it. The most common example is Texas, at least in America. But what about arable land?
    "If you divided the world's 6 billion humans into Texas's 261,914 square miles, each person could claim .028 acres of land. It is obvious, however, that the land in Texas, (or even the land in North America for that matter), would not be able to sustain these people. Resource experts say a minimum of 0.17 acres of arable land is needed to sustain a person on a largely vegetarian diet without the intense use of fertilizers and pest controls.

    An estimated 253 million people currently live in countries with scarce arable land--which have on average no more than 0.17 acres available per person -- and this population is expected to at least triple by 2025 if current trends continue. Only 11 percent of the Earth consists of arable land, and that area is rapidly diminishing due to erosion, salinization and a decline in the practice of fallowing land."

    http://www.zpg.org/Reports_Publications/Reports/re port83.html
    As for space, let's say people will be transplanted to Mars by 2030. The world population will be 8.1 billion by then (http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/worldpop.html). In order to maintain current population levels, we would have to devise methods to transplant 2 billion people within thirty years. At a round trip of two years to get to Mars at the optimal revolution of the planets around the sun, with 50,000 people making the trip each time, you would need to make 40,000 trips before you could transplant 2 billion people, over the course of 80,000 years, at which point you might see H.G. Wells and his time machine where London once was.

    What's my point? Look for answers close to home. Keeping your head in the clouds can be fun, but not always productive. Rather than trying to find solutions to the effects of overpopulation, one should try to find solutions to the causes of overpopulation.

    For those interested, let's say we started sending people now and wanted to make sure we were at 6 billion people in 2030; the number of trips that could be made is 15, at 133 million people per trip. The maximum number of people to send at today's capability per ship is about ten. That's 13 million ships being sent every two years, plus enough food and water to feed people for the ten to twenty years it would take to allow for food to be grown on Mars. Put the cost of sending each ship at 20 billion dollars (http://www.miami.com/mld/miami/news/world/3607347 .htm), not counting the cost of constructing habitats on Mars, and not counting the cost of constantly sending supplies (and even then 20 billion dollars is very modest). That's 260,000,000,000,000,000 dollars (two-hundred sixty quadrillion dollars) every two years, at a total cost of 3,900,000,000,000,000,000 (three-quintillion nine-hundred quadrillion dollars) over the course of thirty years. If every person in the United States (287 million as of this year) were to pay an equal amount towards this, the cost over thirty years would be 13 and a half billion dollars, each. --- You tell me, is it worth ignoring what is obviously well-researched information? Organizations, especially those with a high and well-respected world-wide image like the WWF, don't typically lie outright in papers like this, and anyone who outright disregards what's printed, especially without reading it, is asking for the outcome presented to happen.
    1. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by Have+Blue · · Score: 2

      Maybe so, but how many people can stand on Zanzibar? :)

    2. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Funny

      (* In fact, you could fit 27 billion people into a cube one mile by one mile by one mile. *)

      Borg!

      That's The Answer!

      Just give Bill Gates time. He is getting closer and closer.

      BTW, do Borg have B.O.?

    3. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "As for space, let's say people will be transplanted to Mars by 2030. The world population will be 8.1 billion by then"

      Every Age of Empires player knows, you don't take the people to mars, you take just enough to build a town centre!

    4. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by deblau · · Score: 2
      What's my point? Look for answers close to home. Keeping your head in the clouds can be fun, but not always productive. Rather than trying to find solutions to the effects of overpopulation, one should try to find solutions to the causes of overpopulation.
      That's right, all you nerds! Stop breeding!!
      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    5. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by luisdlc · · Score: 1

      40,000 x 5,000 = 2,000,000,000. This are Two thousand millions. Not 2 billions. And 260,000,000,000,000,000 dollars are 260 thowsand billions dollars. Learn some math!

    6. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 2
      It isn't strictly a population problem. The population of the earth could go much, much higher before the planet would be exausted. Some people on the planet use much more resources than others. For instance, I heard someone note that for an American family to have 2 children instead of 3 is like an Indian woman stopping at merely 64 children. I can tell you -- there are a lot more Indian women having less than 64 children than American's stopping at 2.

      Not that population isn't an important part of the problem, but our resource usage is a bigger part. Though, honestly, I think the population problem should be much, much easier to fix -- lots condoms and easy availability of the pill would go a long, long ways. Bush, however, is fighting this as we speak. Okay, he's probably asleep now -- but when he wakes up he'll be back fighting it.

    7. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where I come from:
      1,000 = thousand
      1,000,000 = million
      1,000,000,000 = billion
      1,000,000,000,000 = trillion

    8. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by sean23007 · · Score: 1

      Well, it's 9:20 in DC, he should be awake pretty soon to start fighting it...

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    9. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by UnrefinedLayman · · Score: 1

      Take a moment to notice my explicit use of American terminology, such as American numbers, American dollars, and American citizens on this American website predominantly visited by American geeks.

      Sorry if I didn't present the numbers in a format you could readily interpret.

    10. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by cgleba · · Score: 2

      > But what about arable land?

      Desalinization, baby, desalinization!

      That is the wave (quite literally) of the future.
      Think about it -- the Middle East, for example. There is PLENTY of sun and in most parts plenty of wind. Combine solar and wind power with power generated from waves and use the energy for a reverse-osmosis desalinization plant. Take the resulting brine 'waste', bake it in the sun extracting a little more water and sell the salt as well as the minerals left over (zinc, gold, etc).

      The problem is the MASSIVE initial investment cost. But as land as resources become scare, the cost will become negligible in comparison. After a large initial investment and installation base, economies of scale will kick in making it dirt cheap. Non-arable land will become arable -- that is the solution -- and the world will be able to support even more people an we will do the enviornment good (make plans grow where they would have never grown).

      They are doing this a LOT in the Middle East already as well as some parts of Texas. Invest in desalinization companies for the long-term -- it will pay off!

    11. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by luisdlc · · Score: 1

      I am an American too. But I am not a unitedstatian. I think the main difference is that I know how to count, and that I know that my country is PART of the continent. what I mean is that, mine is AMERICAN terminology too.

    12. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by luisdlc · · Score: 1

      ten = ten = 10.

      ten tens = hundred = 100.

      ten hundreds = thousand = 1,000.

      ten thousands = ten thousands = 10,000.

      ten ten-thousands = hundred thousand = 100,000.

      ten hundred-thousands = million = 1,000,000.

      ten miillion = ten million = 10,000,000.

      ten ten-millions = hundred million = 100,000,000.

      ten hundred-millions = thousand million = 1,000,000,000.

      ten thousand-millions = ten thousand million = 10,000,000,000.

      ten ten-thousand-million = hundred thousand millon = 100,000,000,000.

      ten hundred-thousand-million = billion = 1,000,000,000,000.

      see the pattern?
      the truth is out there.. so do some google and learn some maths.

    13. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He went to one of those substandard European schools. Cut him some slack.

    14. Re:Take it with a grain of salt by neocon · · Score: 1

      Put differently, if the entire population of earth were to be relocated to North America, they could live at a population density no higher than that in Manhattan. Also, completely independently of government birth control programs (whether brutal, as in China, or merely pushy, as in India) , families in better-off countries tend to have fewer kids. This suggests that as countries modernize and free up their economies to produce general improvements in standards of living, population growth will solve itself...

  93. ignorant? by Conrad_Bombora · · Score: 1

    How is this guy extremely ignorant?
    It's impossible to know everything. I think it's a valid request. After all there are far to many acronyms in this world.

    BTW at least "pro-wrestling" tells you there full of shit. Unlike the World Wildlife Fund.

    Yeah I know I used an acronym. hehe

  94. Freak by yzquxnet · · Score: 2

    Freak

    1. Re:Freak by Glanz · · Score: 1

      I can, for you and me. But as far as Jon is concerned, there's no hope.

      --
      Rien n'est plus beau que le creux du 0.
    2. Re:Freak by yzquxnet · · Score: 2

      One word still comes to mind. FREAK!

  95. please explain by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

    How is nuclear waste a non-issue? Politics decide our environment; at least to the people living in towns near the roads they are going to be transporting the stuff. One truck accident and their environment will be very unpleasant indeed.

    --
    "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
    1. Re:please explain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One truck accident and their environment will be very unpleasant indeed.

      No, it won't. The people who told you that were lying.

    2. Re:please explain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the waste is stored in a solid form, that's nonsense. One truck accident, and they go out, clean up the solid non-soluble waste, and send it off to be stored.

      Actually the trucks transporting unprocessed material are more dangerous than waste material. Then again it's not like this shit isn't already all over the planet anyway,

    3. Re:please explain by shepd · · Score: 1

      >How is nuclear waste a non-issue? Politics decide our environment; at least to the people living in towns near the roads they are going to be transporting the stuff. One truck accident and their environment will be very unpleasant indeed.

      Nuclear waste is a non-issue because we have built slowpoke reactors.

      Complaints from crazed enviornmentalists aside, the government would be able to build more of them and would get rid of that waste in a useful manner (even if it isn't the economical choice).

      Instead, we have crazy corporate environmentalists (I consider Greenpeace a corporation, you might not) who decide that all nukes are bad and we need to ban them all rather than supporting the obvious solution to the problem -- using the waste fuel safely to our advantage.

      Perhaps there are problems with slowpoke power plants (some seem to think they emit radioactive particles into the air). They might be right. Why can't these people be constructive, though, fixing the problems rather than trying to drag us kicking and screaming back into the 18th century?

      I'm sorry if I came off a bit forceful on that. I really have no clue where you are on the environmentalist fence. I'm just angry because a bunch of loony hippies are stopping us from having a convenient road in my hometown...

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    4. Re:please explain by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      From an environmental and a containment standpoint, nuclear waste isn't that much different from other hazardous materials. The area is evacuated, cleanup crews are called in, and the material is contained and removed. Is a drum of cobalt-60 really that much scarier than a drum of methylethylketone? Only to people who think one whiff of the stuff and you grow a three-headed kid.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    5. Re:please explain by wheany · · Score: 1

      That reminds me of a conversation on usenet where someone was against nuclear power (actually atompower) because the waste has atoms.

  96. Fixed resources? by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    In that case, though it leaves serious flaws, such as the ability to produce more, but considering that there are not going to be any more resources. give all the resources to me, and perhaps anyone that could help me fend off the others.
    On the other hand, give everyone guns...or perhaps simply shoot them. Without the ability to produce more, they are going to die a swift death and everyone's lives will be meaningless and insignificant.
    Are you sure you failed because it wasn't nice, or just because it had no basis in any means of survival?

    There is still a sun in the sky, right? And last I checked the law that energy can not be destroyed still held true (entropy aside) so what's the big deal?

  97. Re: First musical post! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trolls have taste... I have Autechre in right now...

  98. Don't be so eager to believe the WWF by haydon4 · · Score: 1

    This is a decidedly one-sided article. Their two main points of argument are flawed.

    1. The human population is choking the planet. If you take the total population of the planet, divide them up into families of six, give them a house and roughly a half to a full acre of land, the total area of occupied land is a little larger then the state of Texas. I hardly consider that a population emergency.

    2. Natural resources are nearing their depletion point. New petroleum fields are being discovered in places where is was previously thought not to exist. The conventional idea that oil is produced by the fossils of long dead creatures is getting another look because oil is being found is deeper areas of the ocean, where fossils don't exist. Also, other evidence points that the planet may be actually be still producing oil.

    Environmental groups have been raving that the planets forests are disappearing at alarming rates, when in fact there is more forests now then there were 200 years ago. I mean, just look at my backyard, I've been watching the woods claim more of it every year and I see more trees now then there were 20 years ago.

    Carbon-dioxide, sulfer, ash, and other air pollutants produced by the largest factories over the course of a year are insignificant next to the amount of the same pollutants thown into the air of a single volcanic eruption.

    I'm not against the environment, and I believe in standard conservation techniques, but the so-called science that the World Wildlife Federation reports is absolute nonsence.

    In closing let me ask you one question: If the World Wildlife Federation issued a report that headlined: "Animal populations thriving, natural resources abundant, future looks bright for years to come." Would you be so ready to believe it?

  99. Ummm.... by kawaichan · · Score: 1

    Can't we just renew earth like how you renew a book from a library?

    Nothing to worry about, really.

    --

    kawai
  100. I see no problem here by blinov2000 · · Score: 0

    The mankind will survive what being happened. There's some mission of mankind that we, human beings, cannot understand. So we need no thinking about it. We are to solve our understandable problems as making money, educating children, promoting websites, learning PHP etc. Let it be -- My site

  101. In other words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    50 years until the NEXT release of DOOM?

  102. This kind of fascist tripe gets modded up??! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Almost as bad as any troll!

    1. Re:This kind of fascist tripe gets modded up??! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fascist tripe?
      This was better reading than the article itself! :)

    2. Re:This kind of fascist tripe gets modded up??! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Kill the weak" is not fascist tripe?

  103. Under-Reaction by dan5981 · · Score: 1

    I realize that this is a sensational report, to say the least. However, it really scares me to see the ease with which most people will shrug-off environmental issues completely. Are natural resource and environmental concerns really secondary to military and economic considerations? I don't think so. What's a good economy going to do for us when we can't breath natural air? The public is very quick to accept reports which say, "Keep living the way you are. You don't need to change your lifestyle. Anyone who tells you otherwise is a radical tree-hugger!" (See this John Stossel report.)

    I cannot understand how so many educated citizens can ingnore environmental issues, mock them, mock the people presenting them, or even actively fight against them with hopes of preserving The Economy. Yes, this specific report is over the top, but it raises a number of very valid issues (deforestation, extinction, etc.) which simply cannot be ignored. I know it's easy to change the subject (WWF jokes, anyone?), but one day these people may very well regret their overwhelming indifference.

  104. Politics by beavmetal · · Score: 0

    Politics and politicians are the real trouble here. When you think of resources, think of the diamond market. Diamonds are common, but the politics in control keep the percentage of available diamonds small. Also do not forget, that the politicians also have alot to gain by holding back technology. Since most of of the major Politicians of the world use thier stock in or seat on the board of a petroleum company to keep them sitting high, they have alot less to gain financially by producing electric cars. Wether we are talking about the WWF or the WWE both make me feel like I have lost brain cells for having been intertwined with their overzealous approach to entertainment.

    --
    Looks like it is time to replace your Personality Module. You are a bit to clingy, guess I better replace your fuser to
  105. that's a lot of salt by M@T · · Score: 2

    ...Take with as large a grain of salt as you think appropriate.

    Isn't this the problem ?

    --
    'sapientia potestas est'
  106. Economics by mc6809e · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Many here are pointing out that economic pressures will help limit consumption. The problem is that people often reject the market process as being unfair, immoral, etc and do all they can to substitute something else ala socialism.

    You can bet that once prices start to rise to check consumption, the government will step in "in the name of the people" and fix prices.

    Hell, it happened in the 1970's with Nixon's price controls on gas and gave us long lines at the pump and gas shortages.

    The truth is that, when the market gives people economic information they don't like, they try to use the political process to make it go away instead of making changes in their habits.

    When prices go up, instead of conserving, they'll bitch about those "evil greedy corporations." Hey, just like on Slashdot. The fact is, people don't change unless it hits them in the wallet, and they'll do everything they can to stop that from happening.

    If the market suggests they be paid less for their out-dated skills because of less demand, they'll blame someone else. It happens over and over. People want it all for nothing.

    I think what will happen ultimately is that the democratic process will force us all to drown together.

    1. Re:Economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



      I'd just like to point out that long lines at the gas pumps are a form of market correction.
      Or 'economic pressure'

    2. Re:Economics by hoffmang · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that market forces apply to governments also.

      The USSR learned all about bankruptcy.

    3. Re:Economics by mc6809e · · Score: 1

      I'd just like to point out that long lines at the gas pumps are a form of market correction.
      Or 'economic pressure'


      Such things are not usually considered a "market correction."

      What long gas lines show are a mis-match between supply and demand -- exactly what happens when prices are fixed.

    4. Re:Economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have a good grasp of economics and a refreshingly succinct way of making your point that reminds me a bit of Walter Williams. Have you written up any longer papers on the subject? Do you post regularly in any other forums?

    5. Re:Economics by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1
      I think what will happen ultimately is that the democratic process will force us all to drown together.

      Exactly, because democracy is evil. Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for dinner. As soon as 51% of the people figure out a way to get the other 49% to pay all the taxes, we're sunk. And we're well on the way there already. Wealth redistribution doesn't work. Look at the Jamestown settlement. Free enterprise is the way to prosperity.

      Our culture need to rediscover personal responsibility and the work ethic. No amount of political machination will solve the problem. The problem is the hearts of people and the greed found there. The Bible calls it sin, but if you want to use another name that applies, go ahead. Change people's hearts, and they will change their lifestyles and their politics.

      When the way for people to get ahead is to work hard and people are allowed to enjoy the fruits of their labor, everyone benefits. When the way for people to get ahead is to take someone else's money, it reduces incentive to work, increases greed and finger-pointing, and everyone loses. Basic human nature at work. The concept of private property is essential for a free society to function.

  107. Nope, won't happen- by schmaltz · · Score: 2

    Earth's due to expire June 6, 2003--

    [God@universe ~]$ whois earth.com

    Registrant:
    earth.com (EARTH-DOM)
    10900 Research Blvd #160C-12
    Austin, TX 78759

    Domain Name: EARTH.COM

    Administrative Contact, Technical Contact:
    Registrations, Earth W (TS121) hostmaster@EARTH.COM
    EARTH.COM
    10900 Research Blvd
    Suite 160C-12
    Austin, TX 78759
    (512) 838-5652 (FAX) (512) 838-6098

    Record expires on 06-Jun-2003.
    Record created on 05-Jun-1994.
    Database last updated on 7-Jul-2002 21:43:14 EDT.

    Domain servers in listed order:

    NS1.EARTH.COM 199.239.20.70
    NS2.EARTH.COM 199.239.20.71

    --
    Big Daddy, Johnny, Burp, Aunt Zelda, Scott, Slurp, Big Momma ... where's Siggy?
  108. The problem is... by jaaron · · Score: 2

    that these reports do not adequately take into account that populations adjust and evolve in response to changes in the enviroment.

    "Using the image of the need for mankind to colonise space as a stark illustration of the problems facing Earth, the report warns that either consumption rates are dramatically and rapidly lowered or the planet will no longer be able to sustain its growing population." [from article, emphasis mine]

    While I understand that the article is trying to shock people into paying attention to a serious problem (and it is a problem), at the same time alarmists need to recognize that growing populations when facing a change in the enviroment change with that environment. No society is going to continue at break-neck speeds to oblivion, eat the last edible object, and then suddenly start think, "hey we need to change something here." While the issue we face now is on a more global scale, many times in history local communities have faced similar problems and they adapt. Birthrates drop, consumption drops, etc. Now that doesn't mean it's always pretty either -- such situations can lead to massive decimation of a population, but I doubt we're facing the end of human existance here.

    My point is, while the issue raised is certainly an important and serious issue, it's not the end of the world. We need to worry and we need to do something, but we don't need doomsayers. (not that I wouldn't mind some terriformed land on Mars...) :)

    --
    Who said Freedom was Fair?
  109. Re:Typical Honda driving coders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boy! You are full of hate arn't you. Stop talking about stereotypes and get some real world facts you crazy religious-darawnist marx-loving market guy.

  110. you are odd by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

    Strange, you called some other guy a hypocrite before and are calling me one now. I never said anything hypocritical here; I pointed out that both of us would be hypocritical for saying such a thing. It seems that you just say "I dont have a holier than though attitude like you do, you hypocrite!" whenever someone says something you don't like.

    Your lack of feeling guilty had nothing to do with what I previously said. However, if you didn't feel guilty why are you posting anonymously?

    "All the nuclear waste produced since day one would fit into a single football stadium."

    Now this was more along the lines of what I was hoping for in a response. It contains an actual answer to a question, rather than name calling. I haven't heard of that before, and I think that is an interesting point.

    Be happy. :>

    --
    "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
    1. Re:you are odd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I confused you with the first guy.

      He lives a First World lifestyle and absolves himself of guilt by shoveling it off on the SUV drivers. I live the same lifestyle and don't feel guilty at all.

      As for your previous question, I'd have no qualms whatsoever about living next to a properly designed nuclear waste dump.

  111. Salty's not my strong point by Roosey · · Score: 1

    I'd need to take this article with a big grain of salt. A really, really big grain of salt.

    So much so that I'd deplete the earth of its salt reserves just trying to accumulate what would be equivalent to that one big grain of salt. ;)

  112. We R Fuct! by Billy_D_Goat · · Score: 1

    After reading this, I may as well just end it all and do my part to save the world.

  113. Figured out why .... by ProfMoriarty · · Score: 4, Insightful
    the "news" is presented this way ... and this statement sums it up pretty good:
    Matthew Spencer, a spokesman for Greenpeace, said: 'There will have to be concessions from the richer nations to the poorer ones or there will be fireworks.'
    AHHHHH ... I see now. It's Greenpeace's way of redistributing the wealth of the United States.

    Instead of helping the "third world" countries with infrastructure, stable government, and ways NOT to pollute, they want to take the "first world" countries and take wealth away from them and give it to the poorer countries (of course, they'll help do the redistribution ... one for you, one for me)

    Go ahead and mod me down for this, because it is a different angle on this type of story.

    --
    Karma? Karma? I don't need no stinkin' karma.
    1. Re:Figured out why .... by davecl · · Score: 2

      Look at the strict words of what the Greenpeace guy says, and not place your own interpretation on it. What he's saying is that we have a major imbalence in power and resource use. In just the same way that the power imbalence between the British and the American colonies created a violent revolution when it got too large, and the same applied to the Tsars and people of Russia, there will be increasing conflict if the current situation persists. This is the lesson of history.

      Either concessions need to be made, or there will be conflict. How those concessions should be made is not stated, but the alternative to making concessions is likely to be worse for everyone.

    2. Re:Figured out why .... by ProfMoriarty · · Score: 2
      Look at the strict words of what the Greenpeace guy says, and not place your own interpretation on it.

      Ok ... let's take your interpretation of it ...

      What he's saying is that we have a major imbalence in power and resource use.

      I'll take the resource use imbalence first ... with any production there needs to be some resource used. If there is NO resource use, then there is NO production. Now, let's say the free market of the world supports 2 widget factories, and both are in the United States, what would happen if Burundi decided to get into the widget business? One of the factories will either merge with another, or go bankrupt.

      Now, this brings me to the power side ... who would decide what goes where? As a sovereign nation, who has the authority to tell it what to do? The United Nations? They would take weeks to determine who would change the light bulbs in the hallway.

      As far as land use is concerned ... we stole this land fair and square.

      In just the same way that the power imbalence between the British and the American colonies created a violent revolution when it got too large

      Hmmmm ... I thought that the Revolutionary War was fought over tea. Oh yeah ... and taxes. When the American colonies actually started to produce, the British king decided that it was his. And the people thought otherwise.

      If Burundi decides to start producing things, I doubt that there would be any revolution since is already classified as a sovereign nation. Unlike the American colonies many years ago.

      Either concessions need to be made, or there will be conflict. How those concessions should be made is not stated, but the alternative to making concessions is likely to be worse for everyone.

      Huh? Who needs to concede anything? Is the US going to start bombing aspirin factories if they try to compete with us?

      Ok ... IF we need concede something then fine ... so be it ... but we would need to know it.

      BTW, I'm all for moving Microsoft to Burundi.

      --
      Karma? Karma? I don't need no stinkin' karma.
    3. Re:Figured out why .... by thales · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Funny thing is the people in the third world aren't Whinning for concessions. It's the first world social planners that are doing that. The main complaint I heard when I was in Asia and Africia is that we just import raw materials instead of investing in factories so they can have jobs. They don't want to drag us down to their lifestyle, they want to advance to ours.

      80 years ago the Social planners were fond of claiming absurdities like "One factory could produce enough shoes for the worlds population if the greedy owners weren't so selfish" The Modern Eco movement started when it became apparent that Socalism was incapable of providing proserity for everyone. Rather than castigating the Rich for not producing enough shoes for everyone they blame them for wasting resources by producing any shoes at all, and proclaim the "moral superority" of those who go barefoot.

      80 years ago the "poor" was the excuse to destroy the wealthy. Now the enviroment is the excuse. The excuse has changed, the goal (destruction of the Rich) and the real reason (Envy) remain the same.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    4. Re:Figured out why .... by davecl · · Score: 1

      I'll take the resource use imbalence first ... with any production there needs to be some resource used. If there is NO resource use, then there is NO production.

      Actually, software and a lot of other intellectual property is much less resource intensive than many industries. And if I just download my software overt the net, the resource use gets even lower. This is a good thing!

      Now, let's say the free market of the world supports 2 widget factories, and both are in the United States, what would happen if Burundi decided to get into the widget business? One of the factories will either merge with another, or go bankrupt.

      Lets be a little more realistic here...

      First the US Widget Manufacturers Association will claim that the Burundi factories are violating its patents and trademarks. If Burundi can afford that litigation, they'll then claim the widgets are substandard and demand a ban on Burundian widgets on grounds of safety. If Burundi gets past that, they'll claim the Burundians are using slave labour to undercut them and demand tariffs or import restrictions. Only if the Burundian widget makers have the money to see off all these legal challenges will one of the US factories close... But wait, then there's an appeal to the appropriate Congressional district, and we're back to tariffs or some other way that rich countries prevent a level playing field because they have more power than the developing ones.

      Hmmmm ... I thought that the Revolutionary War was fought over tea. Oh yeah ... and taxes. When the American colonies actually started to produce, the British king decided that it was his. And the people thought otherwise.

      Yes, a power imbalence - the Revolutionaries were being oppressed by taxes the king had power to impose until they got rid of him. If he'd withdrawn the taxes (ie. made a concession) maybe no revolution and no USA...

      If Burundi decides to start producing things, I doubt that there would be any revolution since it is already classified as a sovereign nation. Unlike the American colonies many years ago.

      This is where the current world is different. Its no longer an issue of revolution against an occupying colonial power, now we have the potential for revolution against economic power. Call it globalised revolution if you want. It will be very bloody, so its not something I want to see, so some concessions should be made to reduce these pressures.

      Huh? Who needs to concede anything? Is the US going to start bombing aspirin factories if they try to compete with us?

      At the moment you don't need to, you send in the lawyers instead. Far more devastating!

      It works inside the US too, with RIAA and MPAA sending in lawyers so they can control distribution.

      BTW, I'm all for moving Microsoft to Burundi.

      On this we can agree!

    5. Re:Figured out why .... by smithmc · · Score: 1

      Either concessions need to be made, or there will be conflict. How those concessions should be made is not stated, but the alternative to making concessions is likely to be worse for everyone.

      Funny that you should have used the American Revolution as an alleged example of this, as it seems to me that in fact this is a case where the results were better for everyone - or, at the very least, better for the United States.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    6. Re:Figured out why .... by Treylis · · Score: 1

      Yes, because we all know that life is a zero-sum game and that the only possible way you can get anything at all is by stealing it from somebody else.

    7. Re:Figured out why .... by reflector · · Score: 1

      I see now. It's Greenpeace's way of redistributing the wealth of the United States.

      It's not about redistributing wealth. When many of today's more industrialized nations were going through their growing pains of entering the industrial age, they polluted heavily using some of the dirtiest coals available because it was the cheapest fuel there was.

      Now that other nations are entering that stage of their growth, it would be very hypocritical of post-industrialized nations to say to them that they can't do the same, that they should remain rural and agrarian and should never aspire to a modern society like we have.

      If these nations are told that they cannot do what we already did, they will simply laugh at the hypocrisy and not agree to any environmental restrictions. The Greenpeace spokesman is correct, poorer developing nations should be given concessions to bring them to the table.

    8. Re:Figured out why .... by davecl · · Score: 1

      That's the problem here. Too many people define 'better for the US' as being equivalent to 'better for everyone' when it might well not be true.

      Of course you get elected in the US for being good to the US, which is why something supranational is needed.

      And who knows, maybe the world would be better if the UK still included the whole of North America. The UK would be at least...

    9. Re:Figured out why .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The excuse has changed, the goal (destruction of the Rich) and the real reason (Envy) remain the same.


      Are you relly that ignorant and shallow?

      The "Rich" are a pariah. And this "envy" of which you speak is the echo of a guilty conscience... branding greens hypocritical is the argument of the weak... this isnt gradeschool. You'll have to do better than that... your about as transparent as a child with candy behind his back.

    10. Re:Figured out why .... by blitziod · · Score: 1

      I have a better idea. Why not make them use the available technology that we have. We used the best tech available when we grew, they can too. And the best thing is that WE can get rich selling them green technology that allows growth without hurting the ecosystem. That is of course unless the hippies pass a bunch of laws that screw this up.

      --
      The only way to bust a doper--is when you yourself become a smoker!
    11. Re:Figured out why .... by reflector · · Score: 1

      And the best thing is that WE can get rich selling them green technology that allows growth without hurting the ecosystem.

      You've just said it yourself, such a plan would be expensive for them, and would benefit mostly us. There's no incentive for anyone to go along with this "deal".

  114. Overpoulation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If are B52s arent bombing brother Osama anymore, I think it's time to load them with condoms and bomb asia & africa.

  115. The Population Bomb by Kafir · · Score: 3, Informative

    The battle to feed humanity is over. In the course of 1970s, the world will experience starvation of tragic proportions, hundreds of millions of people will starve to death.
    -Paul Ehrlich, The Population Bomb, 1968

    There's a long history of vastly misguided prophets of doom by now- starting with Malthus, I guess, but the most revealing example is probably Paul Ehrlich, who's been writing books since the sixties (The Population Bomb, The Population Explosion, etc.) about how the world will be swamped by an exploding population and run out of resources, all in the (ever-postponed) near future. In the sixties he thought that we'd be starving in the seventies, and that Great Britain would no longer exist by the nineties. I don't know what he thinks now, but he's still writing along the same lines.

    Ehrlich also famously made a bet with economist Julian Simon, in 1980, that five raw materials picked by Ehrlich would be more expensive (because they would be rarer, per capita) ten years later. In 1990 Ehrlich was wrong on every pick.

    An awful lot of science fiction has been written along those lines, as well: Disch's 334, Harrison's Make Room, Make Room (filmed as Soylent Green). But in the real world, I'm not too worried. We may kill off all the black rhinos, white rhinos, sumatran rhinos.... And that would be unfortunate, but it would not constitute a threat to human survival.

    Also, incidentally, shipping people to other planets is not likely to be an effective way of dealing with excess population. Can you imagine the amount of chemical fuel involved in lifting just the quarter-million people born every day away from the earth?

    1. Re:The Population Bomb by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

      The solution is to institute draconian laws, then use earth as a penal colony...

      That should get all the buerocrats off the planet for a while, leaving us to just do whatever we want

    2. Re:The Population Bomb by wronkiew · · Score: 1
      The battle to feed humanity is over. In the course of 1970s, the world will experience starvation of tragic proportions, hundreds of millions of people will starve to death.
      -Paul Ehrlich, The Population Bomb, 1968

      While unadulterated statistics in this area are hard to come by, 100 million people dead from starvation in the 1970s seems to be correct within at least an order of magnitude.

      Also, incidentally, shipping people to other planets is not likely to be an effective way of dealing with excess population. Can you imagine the amount of chemical fuel involved in lifting just the quarter-million people born every day away from the earth?

      I can imagine the amount of fuel involved. I can even imagine this being done with existing technology. The "chemical fuel" that concerns you is nothing more than oxygen and hydrogen. These are gases which can be easily separated from water with the application of electric current. After these chemical fuels are burned, they return to the environment exactly what was taken.

    3. Re:The Population Bomb by enkidu55 · · Score: 1

      "There's a long history of vastly misguided prophets of doom by now- starting with Malthus"

      Malthus? What about Jesus Christ? I think the doomsday machine started way before Malthus?

  116. this is why by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

    This kind of article is why it is ignored. Odd extreme reports that have no or little factual basis have caused the public to pretty much ignore such warnings. You could say that environmentalists have efficiently subverted their chances of having large public support. Of course, (mis)information from the 'other side' isn't helping either. Controlled media also helps; there are some VERY nasty ongoing environmental disasers in the US that most people simply dont know about because nobody tells them (for example, Oregon oil refineries used to dump wastes straight into a nearby river openly. The state made them pay large fees for each day that they did that. However, those fees were still much smaller than handling the waste properly, so they continued to dump openly and just pay the fines.)

    As long as there are reports like this that are obviously bogus, the general population will pretty much ignore these issues. This article really shouldn't exist.

    --
    "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
  117. Mod Parent Up (+1, Informative) by CableModemSniper · · Score: 0

    Mod Parent Up

    --
    Why not fork?
  118. So will we end up in space... by speedfreak_5 · · Score: 1

    living in giant doughnut shaped colonies fighting for domination of earth orbit amongst ourselves with giant robots? I didnt think we'd be doing that so soon. Seriously though, this is a pretty big problem.

    --
    Why yes I am paranoid! Thanks for asking!
  119. Yes and no by Goonie · · Score: 2
    Sure, AIDS isn't going to wipe us out, but it's going to set Africa back on its heels for decades to come.

    The thing that makes it bad, as I understand it, is that instead of killing mostly young kids and the elderly, it kills adults in the 20s and 30s - the people that do the work. It also kills much more slowly than the plague, smallpox and the like, and huge amounts of effort need to be devoted to caring for the sick and dying.

    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
  120. Insightful? What a load of crap. by ClarkEvans · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Earth will not expire in 2050. Simple economics will keep it from doing so

    You can't use economic arguments. Why? Beacuse our current economics don't take into account the cost of pollution (externalities) -- what makes you think that things will change in 50 years? Has current pollution made us change? Please.

    What we need is reasoned leadership, not to keep running towards what everyone knows is a cliff. By the time we get there we may not be able to stop... how can we bring extinct species back? how can we stop global warming... Assume for a moment that global warming is like any force, just beacuse the change is still relatively small doesn't mean that the accelleration isn't huge. Once you want to "change" it's like stopping a car... it will take a while. A long while. If it took us 200 years to start serious warming, it may very well take us 300 years to do the cooling. And by then it may be just too late.

    There are four types of people: those who are ignorant and know it; those who are knowlegable and don't; those that are knowlegable and know it; and those who are ignorant but think that they are knowlegable. You my fellow biped are in the latter category; and what a dangerous person you are beacuse of this. Why a moderator would mark you as insightful is beyond me. Spreading ignorance under the guise of wisdom is the worst of all sins.

  121. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by rbook · · Score: 1

    I didn't say *ALL* people are eating well. I said people are eating better than in the past. Average caloric intake in poor countries has skyrocketed in the last century. They are not eating as well as rich countries, but much better than the poor countries of 100 years ago.

    Plus, in the U.S. 100 years ago, poor people were all skinny. Nowadays, in the U.S. we actually have poor people who are fat. We even have homeless vagrants who are fat. This is completely unprecedented in world history.

    There is still starvation of course -- but a lot less of it than there was 100 years ago when the world population was about 1/6 of what it is now.

  122. Air, water, food... by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Earth will not expire in 2050. Simple economics will keep it from doing so. When certain resources become scarce, they will become expensive, and people will be forced to stop using them and seek alternatives.

    Yeah, I can't wait to see you seek alternatives to food and water. How do you take your soylent green?

    Interesting they compare the United States' use of resources to that of Burundi. This comparison is truly startling.

    Yes, its is truly startling that you stuck on that comparison, and not on the better document and much more relevant case of the UK.
    (The United States places the greatest pressure on the environment, it takes 12.2 hectares of land to support each American citizen and 6.29 for each Briton.)

    And Timothy, you might want to encourage your brother to go ahead and buy that new SUV. If his current car is more than five years old, that new SUV will be adding less pollution to the atmosphere.

    Wow! Totally unsuported wild claim...sweet!
    Lets see, small car pollutes more than car that burns twice as much fuel. Suuuuure.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:Air, water, food... by gid · · Score: 1

      it takes 12.2 hectares of land to support each American citizen and 6.29 for each Briton.)

      Wow! Totally unsuported wild claim...sweet!

      Heh, sorry, I just found that kinda ironic. I don't know about those numbers, but it's probably mostly true. Ya know why we "require" more land? Because we HAVE more land. If we all lived on a little island somewhere, our livestyle would be much more conservative I'm sure.

      There are alternatives to "food". There's more than one type of food, no more cows to eat, try looking for fish, etc. If things become a real problem, then I hope people are smart enough to not make so many damn babies. If the US can't support itself anymore, then things will be done. And if not? Things will take care of themselves. (read as, people die of starvation, and voila, not as many people anymore) That's how it works. I dunno about you, but I'm leaning towards the don't have so many damn babies solution.

      And yes, newer cars polute less. I don't know about an SUV poluting less than a 5 year old car, but I wager money that it polutes less than a 10 year car that burns a quart of oil every week, heck even if it didn't burn oil.

      I'm definitely one of those, the Earth ain't going anywhere, it's if we're gonna kill oureselves off that worries me people. Well I don't so much as worry, as I'd be dissappointed if it happened. :)

    2. Re:Air, water, food... by Treylis · · Score: 1

      Ever heard of the hydrologic cycle, dumbass? Water doesn't get 'used up'.

    3. Re:Air, water, food... by six809 · · Score: 1

      I dunno about you, but I'm leaning towards the don't have so many damn babies solution.

      I used to believe that. Then I realised that only intelligent, concerned people do think like that - the less so will keep on pumping babies out. I'd say that if intelligence starts implying non reproduction, that's a pretty strong evolutionary pressure to lower the average intelligence and/or concern about our surroundings.

      I also realised that without offspring of my own to care about, why should I be that bothered about the future of the planet? Plus I just reckon I'd like to raise a child (or two) as part of a loving relationship, blah blah blah.

    4. Re:Air, water, food... by Hittite+Creosote · · Score: 1
      There's more than one type of food, no more cows to eat, try looking for fish

      Yeah, try looking for them off the Grand Banks or in the North Sea...

    5. Re:Air, water, food... by Scrameustache · · Score: 2

      Water doesn't get 'used up'.

      Please put an ounce of gasoline and a pound of arsenic in every glass of water you drink, thanks.

      dumbass?

      I know you are, but what I am?

      Geez, all them talks 'bout pollution 's just lies of the devil. I can dump anything I want in the ground water supply!

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    6. Re:Air, water, food... by Exantrius · · Score: 2

      Yeah, I can't wait to see you seek alternatives to food and water. How do you take your soylent green?

      I don't have time to go digging right now, but food is probably the least of our worries. If worldwide meat consumption stopped, and we replaced the hay with something that humans can eat (oats? other type of grain?), we would be buried in food.

      Raising a single cow for approximately 200ish single person meals uses as much land to make it possible to feed at least 50 people for a year--If anyone's really interested I'll dig up the place I found that figure. (note-- I'm pretty sure my numbers are way off-- I think a single cow probably gives twice that number of meals, and the land will feed four times-- I should have left for work about 20 minutes ago)

      I'm not willing to give up much of my lifestyle for something that I don't believe in-- The scientific evidence that global warming is caused by humans is severely lacking. I will say I see ways that humans are causing it, but I also believe that the earth will bounce back from it just fine-- Things get hotter->More water evaporates->Causes clouds that thicken atmosphere->world gets cooler

      And, um, old cars tend to pollute more. If they've got a honda something or other then yes, a SUV will pollute more. If they've got an 87 Cadillac boat, it's going to pollute a *LOT* less.

    7. Re:Air, water, food... by Treylis · · Score: 1

      You obviously have no idea how trivial a matter it is to purify water. Yes, of course, some shit is hard to remove, but there's enough water to distribute concentrations so that even home-made filters will work just fine. Makes me think of the fact that despite all the crowing about acid rain in the Northwest, the average acid content in the water around there has gone /down/ from what it used to be.

    8. Re:Air, water, food... by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1

      Water isn't just for drinking silly. Without adequate fresh water we get dead rivers, acid rain, poisoned soil, desiccated ecosystems, and across-the-board rising prices in agro-products.

      Drinking water is only a small percentage of what is needed for a healthy water table.

      "All the crowing" is the reason the acid rain has been reduced from terrible to fair. One example: The Army Corp of Engineers has placed thousands of lye (alkaline) deposits in thousands of headwaters to reduce stream acidity, which affects the entire hydrological cycle, and thus food production and your last fishing trip.

      A little cursory research would prevent laughable sentiments such as "Don't worry about fresh water, we can all use filters."

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
    9. Re:Air, water, food... by djneko · · Score: 1
      And Timothy, you might want to encourage your brother to go ahead and buy that new SUV. If his current car is more than five years old, that new SUV will be adding less pollution to the atmosphere.

      Wow! Totally unsuported wild claim...sweet!
      Lets see, small car pollutes more than car that burns twice as much fuel. Suuuuure.
      Don't forget that SUVs are classified as light duty trucks and allowed to pollute more per gallon than more fuel effecient cars. So you only get 16 miles per gallon, but your 16 miles also pollutes more than the 30 miles my car gets out of a gallon.
      --
      `/\/\
      (^.^)
      (")(")
      not quite an analog pussy, just a cat that plays with vinyl
    10. Re:Air, water, food... by CoffeeDregs · · Score: 1
      (The United States places the greatest pressure on the environment, it takes 12.2 hectares of land to support each American citizen and 6.29 for each Briton.)

      Most of that difference is due to the cost of dental and orthodontic work, though.

    11. Re:Air, water, food... by Treylis · · Score: 1

      The acid content was higher /before/ industrialization of that region. Dead rivers and poisoned soil? Name one major river that's been totally devastated to that point by pollution. As to the soil, there's a lot of ways to muck around with arable earth and crop breeding to make things work, as we're doing now.

      And rising prices? Are you out of your mind? Food is cheaper right now than any other point in human history. Farmers are paid to /destroy/ their excess crops.

    12. Re:Air, water, food... by gid · · Score: 1

      I'd say that if intelligence starts implying non reproduction, that's a pretty strong evolutionary pressure to lower the average intelligence and/or concern about our surroundings.

      Never thought about it that way before, maybe the "replace yourselves" philosophy is the "right one". Bah, I gotta find myself a woman willing to commit first.... Hell I have to be willing to commit. :) But I guess with the replace yourselves philosohy we're breeding a "cultural elite" in a sense if your kids go on to be smart also, and inherit your estate, etc, which I'm also not sure is a good thing.... OH THE HUMANITY.

    13. Re:Air, water, food... by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1

      Cursory research:

      http://www.washtimes.com/metro/20020313-9699394.ht m

      http://www.boquetriver.org/adopthumanimpact.html

      http://www.opg.com/envComm/SEDsup2.pdf

      http://www.esa.org/carpenter.htm

      I live within half a day drive of about 11 (quick count) major rivers that were devastated to that point. 6/22/02 was the 33rd anniversary of the Cuyahoga River catching on fire. The river burned like it was gasoline. I'd call that a dead river. Luckily a 33 year combination of declining industry and major watershed restoration efforts has restored it at least to a habitable shadow of its former self. Unfortunately major increases in population, energy production, and heavy commercial livestock production are gradually hammering the Cuyahoga and many other fragile watersheds back to their industrial state, albeit with a different concoction of toxins.

      Food may be cheap now, but there has to be a balance in the world between farming and biodiversity. You can't turn the whole world into a farm, nor even half of it, with no fresh water for anyone but humans with filters. It's just not sustainable. (FYI 'sustainable' doesn't mean we can feed all the people, 'sustainable' means trees and bugs and beavers and bunny rabbits and little soil mites are necessary for our survival.)

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
  123. Re:Wrestlers? [OT] by CableModemSniper · · Score: 0

    especially since they are the EXACT same sentence. guess what "Allah" translates to?

    --
    Why not fork?
  124. Warrenty by skydude_20 · · Score: 1

    Will Earth Expire By 2050?
    Yes, because if you check the warrenty, the warrenty expires in 2049

    --
    Jesus saves souls and redeems them for valuable cash prizes
    1. Re:Warrenty by Billy_D_Goat · · Score: 1

      Damn, I knew I should have paid for that extended warranty package!

    2. Re:Warrenty by blitziod · · Score: 1

      that's what you get for buying your planet at best buy!

      --
      The only way to bust a doper--is when you yourself become a smoker!
  125. Re:Typical Honda driving coders by Disevidence · · Score: 2

    FYI:

    The WTO and World Bank have implemented in many 3 world countries strategies for opening up foreign capital and investment.

    This happened due to the third world countries taking out loans in the 70's, interest peaking at the 80's, leaving them with an unpayable debt. So, the WTO and World Bank said, ok, we'll pay of your debt, if you redirect money from infrastructure, capital works and health services into buying foreign products and opening up the market for global conglomerates. So instead of these countries increasing health services, they're forced to pay premium money to buying overseas goods, and therefore their own market collapses.

    Capitalism's great, isn't it?

    (Skip the socialism arguments, Socialism is just as fucking bad).

    Source?

    Curtis and Taket 1996, p.276, as referenced in -

    Promoting Health, The primary Health Care Approach pp 7 -16, Wass, A. (2000) 2nd ed.

    Eat that, fuckwit.

    --
    Think nothing is impossible? Try slamming a revolving door.
  126. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by rbook · · Score: 1

    Which economist predicted the current population of the earth 200 years ago? You can't be serious.

  127. Actually, we're STILL in an Ice Age. . . . by Salgak1 · · Score: 1
    . . .we're just between glaciations. The 1970's predictions were at least based in a historical climate pattern.

    In the long run, the glaciers will return. Whether the mechanism is temporary heat-up, and resultant partial melting of icecaps cooling the oceans, or a more gradual cooldown, the geologic evidence says the current Ice Age ain't over yet.

    When will the next glaciation start ? It may have already started, or may not start for another 50K years. But it will occur. . .

  128. They song birds are going away. by thogard · · Score: 2, Interesting

    But the reasons are much different than they imply.

    The bigest natural competitor to a typical songbir id a pigeon. I've been told (by someone who does research on penguins) that every pigeon tends to displace at least 20 native birds in Australia.

    Pigeons where brought here because the sailors used to drink their boold as a cure for scurvy but now they idiots feed them in the parks and their populations are growing.

    Its interesting that cats are getting a major blame for the decreasign numbers of songbirds when the pigeons are teh major cause.

  129. YES!!!!!!! by soccerisgod · · Score: 1

    Take that earthlings!

    That makes it so much easier to invade this fffffffffilthy pile of ... *gnarf* ... DIRT!

    Yes!

    --
    If a train station is a place where a train stops, what's a workstation?
  130. Sustainability link by tpengster · · Score: 1

    People interested in this subject might want to look at John McCarthy's Sustainability pages: http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/progress/

  131. Extrapolation is a dangerous business by SysKoll · · Score: 3, Informative

    Extrapolating a trend to 50 years is plain dumb when you are targeting an industrialized society. Frist, we aren't insect. If we start drowning in our own refuse, we'll adapt.

    Second, God only knows what technologies will appear in the next half-century. Some of them could even be (gasp, argh!) beneficial to the environment.

    As a reminder of past extrapolations gone all wrong, here is an excerpt from "The history of Taxicabs" -- note the reference to the next fifty years.

    In 1900 there were 11,000 registered cabs in London and well over double that now (that's not counting minicabs) Motorised taxis appeared in London in 1904 and got the name 'taxi' from the taxometer that standardised the fares from counting revolutions of their wheels. A statistician about ten years before that had seriously predicted that, at the 'current' rate of expansion and increase of population, horse manure would cover every street in London from wall to wall, even covering windows, within fifty years. Thank you Henry Ford.

    -- SysKoll
    --

    --
    Mad science! Robots! Underwear! Cute girls! Full comic online! http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/

  132. Earth Expiring Soon -- Please Renew! by fo0bar · · Score: 1


    Registrant:
    God
    Heaven

    Domain Name: EARTH.SOL
    Created on: 17-JUN-10000000BC
    Expires on: 18-JUN-2050AD
    Last Updated on: 24-JUL-2001AD

    Domain servers in listed order:
    NS1.EARTH.SOL
    NS2.EARTH.SOL

  133. The worst thing about these reports by f00zbll · · Score: 1
    I know a lot of republicans who use these types of examples to discredit all environmental activism. Making these extreme reports often does more harm than good. The real problem is our culture is majorly F**ked up. Rather than taking an effective approach via lobbiest and building a strong credible political front, writing doom & glooom reports makes it hard for sympathetic politicians to stand with the environmental activists.

    Claiming unproveable effects like "global warming" or depletion of earths resources in 50 years only serves to make the environmentalist community look like a bunch of fanatical tree huggers. Taking the middle road and working within the system is what is needed to make a real gradual change. Trying to force a dramatic change is never going to succeed. Too many people's lives depend on current economy. It takes time to train and change people's mind, because that is the only way to reach a balanced plan of resource consumption.

  134. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fat part is genetics and laziness more than eating a lot. I know a lot of fat white trash that eats less than I do, and I'm easily 1/2 their weight and a few inches taller of them. I should point out that I eat about 3500 calories a day and weigh 130lbs.

  135. The risk of environmental misinformation by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
    Maybe the 'tree-hugging morons' are wrong, but if they are right, are you willing to take that chanse?

    I'd rather take the chance. They've been proved wrong so many times in the past that they've lost all credibility to the point of what they say almost being a guarantee of what WON'T happen.

    Taking public transport (or a bike) doesn't hurt me.

    Depends where or when you want to go and how fast you need to get there compared to private transportation.

    Neither does using 40W lamps in stead of 60W

    Depends what you want to light up and where. I use 24W energy-saving bulbs to light up many rooms--because it saves me money, not out of any concern for the environment. And I use 60W bulbs where I need some good working light.

    I know America (and Russia for that matter) isn't that happy with anti-pollution measures, but together the two nations are good for 50% of the CO2 (and other exhaust) production in the world.

    And how much, percentage-wise, of the world GDP does the U.S. produce? Yes, we consume more and produce more pollution but that alone doesn't tell the whole story. You need to compare it to how much "gross world product" is created by the nation in question.

    When you look at pollution from an efficiency standpoint, there are about 47 countries that produce less CO2 per dollar produced and about 150+ countries that produce MORE CO2 per dollar produced.

    The United States is not the worst polluter in any important way.

    But why are companies like Shell, Q8, Esso and Texaco looking for other alternatives and what is wrong with that?

    Nothing, alternatives are great! Especially if some day my car can run on free energy stored from the sun on sunny days and I don't have to pay for gas anymore.

    But don't come up with BS reports about the end of the world if we don't stop driving tomorrow. That's nuts and is misinformation.

    Importing oil, wood and other products from the 3rd world leaves THEM with the effects while we have the products.

    That's economics. If they are unhappy with the effects, stop selling the product.

    And even if, in 50 years the statistics turned out to be wrong, at leas it is good to be aware of the (possible) consequences of our lifestyle.

    In other words, "Even if they are lying or making absurd claims, at least they're making us aware of a (non-existant) problem."

    Come on... It's misinformation and lies. At best, it's conjecture. The more educated can and will take this for what it is--the monthly quota of enviro-hype that must be published to keep the media from losing interest and maintaining their funding.

    But to provide the general public, who believes most of what they read, with grossly inaccurate information is dangerous. It raises the risk that politicians will respond to the public's (un-necessary) concern by enacting policies that aren't based on science but on popular culture. That's when you get knee-jerk reactions not based on science such as Kyoto; luckily that's essentially dead since the U.S. has rejected it out of hand.

    1. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " And how much, percentage-wise, of the world GDP does the U.S. produce? Yes, we consume more and produce more pollution but that alone doesn't tell the whole story. You need to compare it to how much "gross world product" is created by the nation in question. "

      Riiiight.. Put a dollar value on the world. That's a great way to keep things going the way they are. Because our planet doesn't matter, but MONEY DOES!

    2. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Riiiight.. Put a dollar value on the world. That's a great way to keep things going the way they are. Because our planet doesn't matter, but MONEY DOES!

      I'm not putting a dollar value on the world. I'm calculating the EFFICIENCY of each country to find problem countries which, contrary to popular belief, the United States is NOT. If you do not calculate efficiency you risk making important decisions based on the wrong information.

      Of course that's what the environmentalists are counting on because the real information would not suggest that we'll need two planets nor would it suggest that the U.S. is the main problem. God forbid that North Korea, China, and Cuba (communist) all appear higher on the list of pollutants than the United States (capitalist) in any list that compares pollution in a useful way (see my post elsewhere in this thread).

    3. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by Kwantus · · Score: 1

      And until the US sets a good example, lowering the apparent standard-of-living bar, redusing the cost of transfer of efficient technologies, using those thechnologies itself, *and* reducing its emissions, why in hell should bit players like Cuba and N Korea change? You're buying Shrubya's propaganda just as wholesale as you claim the treehuggers are selling theirs.

    4. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      And until the US sets a good example

      Why is it up to the United States to set a good example? Can the world not do anything without us? Or must the United States ALWAYS lead?

      why in hell should bit players like Cuba and N Korea change?

      Well, they contaminate more than the United States if you consider how much pollution they produce and how much wealth they produce.

      But, if it's the "right thing to do," why does Cuba, North Korea, or anyone else in the world need to wait for the United States to do it?

      And, more importantly, why should the United States do it if so many countries aren't going to do it (a la exemptions in Kyoto). Perhaps the United States would have considered it if there was a level playing field and the same rules applied to all countries.

      No thanks... We need to "lead by example" by standing up to popular environmentalism and world pressure to do the "right thing" and, instead, do the "scientific thing" which is to base our decisions on reality and scientific fact, not half-baked psuedo-science filtered through an international PR machine which propose solutions that, if fully implemented, would make the United States' pollution efficiency closer to that of North Korea's... a step in the wrong direction.

    5. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      I'd rather take the chance. They've been proved wrong so many times in the past that they've lost all credibility to the point of what they say almost being a guarantee of what WON'T happen.

      Simple mathematics tell me that if the average family has more than two children the worldpopulation will increact. China realised this and came up with their one-child politics to prevent overpopulation. Simple logics tell me that the land for agriculture will not increase exponentially and neither will the production of food. (hmm. Soylent green??)

      Depends where or when you want to go and how fast you need to get there compared to private transportation.

      True, but spending time in a traffic jam or in public transport is a choise. The solution is simple. Live close to job.

      I use 24W energy-saving bulbs to light up many rooms--because it saves me money, not out of any concern for the environment.

      Ah. I get it. Oil companies should make fuel more expensive. This A. ingreases their profit and B. will get people to buy cars that will use less fuel.

      And how much, percentage-wise, of the world GDP does the U.S. produce? Yes, we consume more and produce more pollution but that alone doesn't tell the whole story. You need to compare it to how much "gross world product" is created by the nation in question.

      I would say you need to calculate the pollution per head of the populaton...

      When you look at pollution from an efficiency standpoint, there are about 47 countries that produce less CO2 per dollar produced and about 150+ countries that produce MORE CO2 per dollar produced.

      Are you calculating how efficient countries are polluting the world? But that tells more about the eficiency of the production process, but not about the total procuced amount of pollution.

      The United States is not the worst polluter in any important way.

      Maybe, but I disagree. Anyway even IF they are not the worst polluters they, together with Europe and Japan, have FAR more means to decrease their pollution and help other countries to decrease their pollution.

      That's economics. If they are unhappy with the effects, stop selling the product.
      There is also something like ethics. Instead of exploiting people now we, yes, ALSO Europe, exploit countries. It's no different, just the scale is larger.

      In other words, "Even if they are lying or making absurd claims, at least they're making us aware of a (non-existant) problem."

      I think there ARE problems. Pollution is one of them. On a small scale we know the effect of polluted groundwater or the correlation between chemicals and cancer. The point is that the large scale correlation is very hard to proove. We have no reference-world to compare results, but to me it seems safe to asume that there are negative effects on the bigger scale, just as there are negative effect on the smaller scale.

      The more educated can and will take this for what it is--the monthly quota of enviro-hype that must be published to keep the media from losing interest and maintaining their funding.

      To that I have to agree. 100% Look at Israel and Palestina. After suicide attack 50 the worls has lost interest. And the first time Israel invaded Palestina the whole world was upset and it was all over the news. Now you hardly hear anything about the second invation.

      That's when you get knee-jerk reactions not based on science such as Kyoto; luckily that's essentially dead since the U.S. has rejected it out of hand.

      Sadly, that is. I think it is too bad that the U.S. is rejecting it while the rest agrees there is a problem and are willing to do something together. And playing together is just a part of the globalisation game.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    6. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by general_re · · Score: 2
      Sadly, you're arguing what used to be common sense, even here on /. Unfortunately, it's become all too uncommon these days, and I suspect that your karma will pay the price for daring to think for yourself, and (horrors) posting an opinion that runs contrary to the received wisdom.

      Nevertheless, yeoman's work on this thread, sir - I salute you. Too bad I have no mod points :^)

      --
      ABSURDITY, n.: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.
    7. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Simple mathematics tell me that if the average family has more than two children the worldpopulation will increact. China realised this and came up with their one-child politics to prevent overpopulation.

      Obviously, the Chinese plan will actually REDUCE population over time. It also reduces freedom, but that's often an afterthought to many envrionmnetal radicals.

      Simple logics tell me that the land for agriculture will not increase exponentially and neither will the production of food.

      Luckily, the world is not ruled by simple logic. Check the information for the last 200 years and you will see that U.S. agricultural production has increased by leaps and bounds due to new techniques and science. Agricultural production has increased faster than population in the U.S.--that's why we don't have famine here.

      True, but spending time in a traffic jam or in public transport is a choise. The solution is simple. Live close to job.

      I agree. And I work at home. I love it.

      Ah. I get it. Oil companies should make fuel more expensive. This A. ingreases their profit and B. will get people to buy cars that will use less fuel.

      (A) is not true since by increasing prices the oil companies would cause people to use less, so their total profit would not be significantly effected. (B), however, is true. Although I do not condone the use of price-fixing to strongarm society into taking certain actions.

      I would say you need to calculate the pollution per head of the populaton...

      No, that is precisely wrong.

      If I drive 1000 miles and consume 10 gallons of gas and generate $5000 of wealth (which I may use, in part, for things that benefit society) and someone else drives 1000 miles and consumes 10 gallons of gas and generates only $1500, are we the same? No, I've produced much more wealth which CAN be used for the good of society and generated the same amount of pollution as the person that only generated $1500.

      That's why a simple "pollution per person" analysis is flawed. It's not just about how much pollution someone creates, it's about how much good that person can due for society (via the economy) as a result of that pollution.

      Are you calculating how efficient countries are polluting the world? But that tells more about the eficiency of the production process, but not about the total procuced amount of pollution.

      By increasing efficiency, total pollution will be reduced.

      Anyway even IF they are not the worst polluters they, together with Europe and Japan, have FAR more means to decrease their pollution and help other countries to decrease their pollution.

      So, in other words, the "rich" countries should subsidize the "poor" countries because we are rich?

      Sadly, that is. I think it is too bad that the U.S. is rejecting it while the rest agrees there is a problem and are willing to do something together. And playing together is just a part of the globalisation game.

      The main reason the U.S. rejected is because not everyone was "playing together." It placed certain restrictions on the developed world, such as the U.S., Europe, and Japan, while exempting large parts of the developing world, such as India and China which, together, amount to nearly HALF of the world population.

      Give us a level playing field in which EVERYONE plays and perhaps we'll consider it. Give freebies to certain countries while we throw our own out of work, prepare yourselves to get a good look at our backs as we walk away...

    8. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 1
      Simple mathematics tell me that if the average family has more than two children the world population will increact. China realised this and came up with their one-child politics to prevent overpopulation.

      Quite right. And look at what that policy has achieved.

      Simple logics tell me that the land for agriculture will not increase exponentially and neither will the production of food.
      .

      You're right, the land for agriculture will not increase exponentially, but the water will.

    9. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      Hmm. it's getting more and more interesting :)

      Obviously, the Chinese plan will actually REDUCE population over time. It also reduces freedom, but that's often an afterthought to many envrionmnetal radicals.

      Nope, it's not. I heared Chinese people about this subject. Their position is indeed that it is a reduction of freedom, but to them it's a small price to pay since the other option is hunger and overpopulation. What kine freedom do you have when there is no food or no one will take care of you when you need it?

      If I drive 1000 miles [snip] as a result of that pollution.

      Interesting point of view, but there is something wrong. I agree that making 1500 instead of 5000 per unit of pollution is inefficient, but that's only one side of the story. The point is NOT how efficient we pollute. You state 'it's about how much good that person can due for society', but you can do good for society without polluting.
      By investing in pollution reducing products or processes you decrease the pollution per $. But yes, that would require investments.

      By increasing efficiency, total pollution will be reduced.

      Still, it's not about how efficient we pollute, it's about how much we pollute. It's like smoking light sigarettes in stead of regular sigarettes, but smoke a whole package a day in stead of 4 or 5 sigarettes. The total amount of pollution / tar, cyanide (jup, that's in sigarettes too) and nicotine is what counts in the end and if you smoke too much you get cancer. Even with light cigatettes. Same thing with pollution.

      So, in other words, the "rich" countries should subsidize the "poor" countries because we are rich? [JUMP] Give freebies to certain countries while we throw our own out of work, prepare yourselves to get a good look at our backs as we walk away...

      Yes indeed. It's an investment that will pay off in the future. Not in hard bucks, but in health and quality of life. To me that is more important than having a booming (and crashing) economy.

      The whole story comes down to making lots'o'$$ versus ethics it seems. In the U.S. making $$$ is the only thing that counts and put nothing im the way of making $$$ or else, while in Europe, through gouvernment regulation, subjects like environment, cheap healtcare, helping developing countries, sustainable energy etc etc is more important.
      But again, that is my impression and I really would like to know how you would compare the two.

      The next part is getting interesting. In a way it reflects the different philosophies...

      The main reason the U.S. rejected is because not everyone was "playing together." It placed certain restrictions on the developed world, such as the U.S., Europe, and Japan, while exempting large parts of the developing world, such as India and China which, together, amount to nearly HALF of the world population.

      This is true. Compared to the size of the population, China and India are good for population of 2.200.000.000, but compared to health, income, economy, education, infrastructure and so on they're totally nothing compared to the U.S. _OR_ Europe. It's a really cheap excuse. They're FAR from the point where we are. We ARE developed countries. They're not. And placing restrictions on the developing countries will dramatically slow their development.
      Time to sleep. There is work to do tomorrow.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    10. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      The first link wasn't new to me. it's a result indeed. call it bad, call it wrong, but the results of overpopulation and lack of food are worse i think.

      http://www.cei.org/utils/printer.cfm?AID=2783 is also an interesting link. the article is short, but gives more input for discussion.

      I'm goint to read the 2nd article later on. it looks interesting. (Waterworld??) Water will not increase exponentially by the way. there are also limits to that, but it gives more options.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    11. Re:The risk of environmental misinformation by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      I heared Chinese people about this subject. Their position is indeed that it is a reduction of freedom, but to them it's a small price to pay

      Perhaps to the Chinese a reduction in freedom is a small price to pay. They don't have a very large tradition of "freedom." Overpopulation also isn't a problem in most of the developed world, so imposing those kinds of reductions in freedoms would be unnecesssary.

      What kine freedom do you have when there is no food or no one will take care of you when you need it?

      I'm sorry, my freedoms are not negotiable. As the saying goes, "Those that give up freedom to ensure security deserve neither."

      If environmentalists ever present a convincing case based on science and logic rather than politics and fear, I think you will see that a vast majority of Americans will take action without someone forcing it on us.

      The point is NOT how efficient we pollute. You state 'it's about how much good that person can due for society', but you can do good for society without polluting.

      Of course it's about how efficient we pollute--or, more clearly put, it's about how efficiently we can generate wealth with the least amount of pollution.

      You can do some good for society without polluting, but for you to be able to do those things you--and the economy around you--have to be in sufficiently good shape to support those activities. If you don't have food, medicine, shelter, etc. you won't be spending much time helping society, I can assure you. And for you to have your food, medicine, and shelter certain activities much take place--and those activities create pollution.

      So what we can do is try to increase the efficiency of inefficient countries. We can try to increase our own efficiency as long as doing so provides a net gain in efficiency. If, by implementing a given policy, our GDP/pollution efficiency is reduced we've actually moved in the wrong direction.

      By investing in pollution reducing products or processes you decrease the pollution per $.

      "Investing" (spending) on these products needs to reduce the amount of pollution per dollar. The problem is, many times the policies actually would INCREASE the amount of pollution per dollar--although overall pollution may be reduced.

      What that means is that, yes, you may have less pollution but you've also created less wealth in the world. Those that look at ONLY the environmental side of the equation without looking at the economic side are as shortsighted and out-of-touch with reality as those businesses that dump their toxic waste into rivers.

      Still, it's not about how efficient we pollute, it's about how much we pollute.

      It's about both. But if we can improve our efficiency, the total amount of pollution will tend to decrease for a given amount of "social good" (wealth).

      People don't like seeing the word "wealth" or "money." But these people simply don't understand that in the real world there is a very real relation between "wealth/money" and "standard of living" and "societal good." Sure, we can clean up our environment 100%--and all live like Ethiopians. But despite the fact that we'll have a cleaner environment, few would argue we've served the good of society.

      Those few that WOULD suggest we live like Ethiopians if that's what it takes to clean the environment are just as extremists and without merit as those businesses that think that dumping toxic waste in rivers is ok. Neither extreme is acceptable.

      Yes indeed. It's an investment that will pay off in the future. Not in hard bucks, but in health and quality of life.

      What you and many forget is that our health AND our quality live are very tightly linked to "hard bucks." I know it's an unpopular view, but it's the truth.

      Without the hard bucks, we will not have the money to support medical research to produce new medicines that save millions of lives per year. Or reduce the pain and suffering of those that are sick. Or distribute food to those that are starving.

      These are ALL aspects of health and quality of life that cannot be addressed without a thriving economy ("hard bucks") to support it. If certain policies that "save our environment" but destroy our economy are implemented, any potential gains in quality of life and health due to a cleaner environment very easily will be overshadowed by the decreases in our ability to address other issues of quality of life.

      but compared to health, income, economy, education, infrastructure and so on they're totally nothing compared to the U.S. _OR_ Europe. It's a really cheap excuse. They're FAR from the point where we are. We ARE developed countries. They're not. And placing restrictions on the developing countries will dramatically slow their development.

      So it's ok to let developing countries pollute the world for money, but developed countries cannot? I don't see the consistency in that argument based on the rest of your post that seems to imply that the environment is more important than "hard bucks."

  136. Thus my idea of. . . . by Com2Kid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    First attempting to explain to people who want to have more then 2 children why that is a bad idea.

    and if that fails?

    Could somebody PLEEEEAAASSEEEE legalize strangling the motherfuckers to death? PLEASE

    Yes the adoption system in America needs to be revamped, but that is no excuse for having buttloads of kids! People who cannot love a child because of the color of the child's skin should NOT be parents at all.

    1. Re:Thus my idea of. . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And why do you have a right to impose your view of life on others?

      And aren't you quite arrogant to assume that your view is "correct" and should be imposed?

    2. Re:Thus my idea of. . . . by Com2Kid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And why do you have a right to impose your view of life on others?
      And aren't you quite arrogant to assume that your view is "correct" and should be imposed?


      People who have excess amounts of childern are forcing THEIR world view of "I am better then you are I don't give a shit if the world goes to hell I am going to have loads of little brats so HAH!" on everybody else. . .

    3. Re:Thus my idea of. . . . by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      That all depends on if their having more children actually ends up making the world go to hell as you claim. But thats just your assumption. You have no concrete evidence to support that claim. So you're hating these people based on a belief. Thats not very intelligent. You'd also have to assume that technology would not advance to keep up with human population growth, something its never failed to do. Agricultural science and production, medical science, social science, materials science......all of them have risen to match what humanity required of them.

      I think you're just looking for a reason to kill someone's children.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    4. Re:Thus my idea of. . . . by Com2Kid · · Score: 2

      Agricultural science and production, medical science, social science, materials science......all of them have risen to match what humanity required of them.

      Listen, dude, I am a fan of Science in all, trust me, VERY devoted fan of it, genetic engineering and the whole bunch style fan of it, fuck, I wouldn't mind a few extra limbs and I wouldn't see anything(much) wrong with it;

      but uh-uh. Science is a TOOL, it is up to PEOPLE to /decide/ if that tool is worth using or not.

      Quite frankly being cooped like rabbits in hatches in massive apartment complexes with children running around on pseudo-grass is NOT my idea of a good future for the species.

      Do not confuse tools with common sense, and do not confuse the tools necessary to build a proper solution with the solution itself.

      Besides, sometimes the old fashion ways are the best, and not f*cking everything in sight ain't exactly new tech.

    5. Re:Thus my idea of. . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you're the one who thinks there are too many people, I vote that we kill you instead.

    6. Re:Thus my idea of. . . . by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      So is that what you think of all current apartment complexes? I grew up in one and I don't consider it an unatrual way of life. I'm also not proposing it for the entire populace. I was speaking mainly of the massive complexes as way to house livestock and crops not people. I also left out that orbital platforms would make a nice option for more space for livestock/crops. This gives us the entire room of space itself for production.

      Common sense is not so common. I don't think you're going to get many people to agree that the world of today is significantly worse than the days of 100's or 1000's of years ago when cities and towns were smaller and there was less engineering and technology to serve the populace. If the world needs to accomdate tens of billions of humans in the future, cities will get larger, buildings will get taller and life will go on with nary a blip.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    7. Re:Thus my idea of. . . . by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      I'm also not proposing it for the entire populace. I was speaking mainly of the massive complexes as way to house livestock and crops not people. I also left out that orbital platforms would make a nice option for more space for livestock/crops. This gives us the entire room of space itself for production.

      Heh, yah right. FAAAAR more money to be made by making condos 'exclusive must have' things and selling'em off at 10x (or higher. . . . ) the price that would be possible if they where mere commodity items used for storage and such.

      Remember, capitolism and greed, easiest path and all that.

  137. The article makes some good points by sevensharpnine · · Score: 1

    Overconsumption is certainly a dangerous problem, but we cannot forget that:

    Mammals are almost extinct: http://www.abc.net.au/am/s560989.htm

    Global Warming will kill us all:
    http://www.greenpeace.org/campaigns/intro?ca mpaign _id=3937

    Asteroid impacts are almost certain:
    http://impact.arc.nasa.gov/reports/aiaa/

    Machines will rule us all:
    http://www.corp.aventis.com/future/downloads /PDF/f ut0003/will_machines_take_over.pdf

    Doom and gloom run rampant:
    http://www.insteadof.com/doom/

    The next Ice Age will kill us all:
    http://unfccc.int/resource/iuckit/fact08.htm l

    Oh, and the sky is falling.

    --
    "God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh." -Voltaire
  138. Something else to consider. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2050? Hell. If religious fanaticism takes a step up, I'm predicting the world will be over by 2005.

    I died a long time ago. I'm just serving a sentence now.

  139. good point by BlueboyX · · Score: 2

    Good point. I forgot that processed waste is solid. I feel stupid now; I actually toured SRS twice where they convert wastes into solid (their simplified explanation is that they are basically mixing jello into liquid waste; making it easier to clean up/contain but no less radioactive).

    Also, as you say the chrud is all over the place. At the plant in GA that I visited they don't mind telling you that they routinely release chrud into the air, but they never tell the public exactly when it is released. One of the nastier things our gov has done is nuclear bomb testing on our own continent. Yeah, they don't do that anymore but they used to. My grandmother used to see a mushroom cloud in the distance from where she lived. She lived upwind and far enough away to be safe (or she wouldn't have survived to tell me about it) but there was another town about as far away as hers that was downwind. Needless to say, they wound up with ALOT of cancer problems.

    --
    "Never, never suspect the dreams within the dreams of dreaming children." ~The Amazon Quartet
    1. Re:good point by ausduck · · Score: 1

      One of the nastier things our gov has done is nuclear bomb testing on our own continent.

      Yes, it was much better when they started testing bombs in the Pacific, meaningly only some primitives got cancer more often.

  140. No reason to reconsider Kyoto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....since there is no evidence of any connection between human activity and this climate change.

    1. Re:No reason to reconsider Kyoto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I cannot believe my eyes, reading shit like this and seeing that people don't have a dammned clue as to what is going on around them! They simply refuse to believe factual, scientific evidence because they heard somewhere that "oh, that's not true". You choose to believe the "it's not true" voice, simply because it eases your conscience. Heaven forbid you have to change your luxurious lifestyle even a little bit!

      It's like the people who laughed at others who thought the Earth was flat. They chose not to believe facts that were shoved in their face, simply because it was too much work for them to change their views of something they've believed for so long.

      People like you will eat your words one day. Maybe not in your lifetime, but likely in your children's (if, God forbid, you have any).

    2. Re:No reason to reconsider Kyoto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get your ego out of the clouds. You are not as powerful as you think. Do you know that 1 volcanic eruption emits more "greenhouse gases" than the entire earth's population has produced in the past 30 years? Using a can of hair spray is not going to push it over the edge.

      There is just as much "factual, scientific evidence" saying that humans are not responsible for climate changes.

    3. Re:No reason to reconsider Kyoto by Smedrick · · Score: 1

      Do you know that 1 volcanic eruption emits more "greenhouse gases" than the entire earth's population has produced in the past 30 years?

      That's interesting...honestly. I've never heard that before. Can anyone back this up or show me a repuatble source for this info?

      I for one, believe that the Earth can survive anything we do to it. But I think we should start taking responsibilty for what we have been doing to the environment...if not for the Earth, then for our own health and well-being.

      --
      "I strongly urge both the faint of heart and the faint of butt to leave the room at this time."
      - Strong Bad
    4. Re:No reason to reconsider Kyoto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, my "luxurious lifestyle." I do so love my gold plated walls and the diamond gravel in my fish tank. Nothing but caviar for me!

    5. Re:No reason to reconsider Kyoto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go read up about the Mt. Pinatubo eruption in the Philippines not that long ago. It changed the color of sunsets in many parts of the globe for like a year.

  141. Re:Typical Honda driving coders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    marxism and religion = incompatible. marxism and darwinism = incompatible. darwinism and religion = ...mostly awkward compatibility at best.

  142. As Sam Kinnison said so well .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When speaking of the famine in Ethiopia ...

    You live in a fucking desert. Move.

    1. Re:As Sam Kinnison said so well .... by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
      You live in a fucking desert. Move

      You're thinking of Los Angeles.

  143. Greed and laziness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's the greediness of the lazy. Instead of working to build something, they foul their own nests and whine piteously for handouts from the people who actually work to do something.

    1. Re:Greed and laziness by ProfMoriarty · · Score: 2
      It's the greediness of the lazy. Instead of working to build something, they foul their own nests and whine piteously for handouts from the people who actually work to do something.

      Absolutely not. The "third world" countries are NOT whining about getting money from the "first world" countries.

      What it is, is an attempt to go "back in time" to the "good old days" before the industrial revolution. In other words, NOBODY should be prosperous.

      What would happen, if Burundi was brought up to "first world" status, and was a major global player?

      These same people who currently admire (possibly worship) the way these people live on such "frugal" means would instantly condemn them for wasting precious natural resources.

      BTW, my predictions were correct, and the parent is getting modded all over the place ... job done.

      --
      Karma? Karma? I don't need no stinkin' karma.
  144. Mother Nature by reconn · · Score: 1

    Oh, so Mother Nature needs a favor? Well maybe she should have thought of that when she was besetting us with droughts and floods and poison monkeys! Nature started the fight for survival, and now she wants to quit because she's losing. Well I say, hard cheese. 4F17

    --
    Everything that was once directly lived has receded into a representation. -debord
  145. Those damn dirty apes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forgot those crafty and intelligent orangs, chimps, and guerillas who are scheming to put mankind in his place.

  146. Do your part: bicycle! by bigberk · · Score: 1

    I know this is just one aspect of all the various problems, but you gotta focus on one thing at a time, right?

    There are way too many cars on the roads in the USA and Canada. How can people justify driving their car two blocks to get to the local convenience store? Pure lunacy! In Europe (Stockholm, Amsterdam) I even saw elegantly dressed business women riding bikes instead of driving. It's not that crazy!

    If the price of gas goes up, people will drive less. If governments tax the shit out of us, we'll drive less. The auto industry is friggin' huge in the states. That's why cities are designed exclusively for cars. But trust me, it's a different world now. Cars are on their way out.

    If I can save a hundred bucks a month, and get daily fresh air, and increase my life span by bicycling I see that as the way to go.

    Live longer and happier, reduce traffic congestion and help save our nonrenewable resources. Ride a bike.

    1. Re:Do your part: bicycle! by forkboy · · Score: 2

      I'd love to ride my bike to the convenience store every time I go...I'd love to ride to work and to school too. There are a few problems with that though:

      -Most places I'd go there are no bike racks, hence nowhere to lock my bike up. People steal bikes that aren't locked up.

      -No bike paths in many areas...and drivers are NOT considerate of people on bikes.

      -Weather. I can drive anywhere when it's -10 degrees Celsius and a foot of snow outside...I'd be insane trying to ride my bike in that. In some parts of the country, it's too cold or too rainy to bicycle more than a few months out of the year.

      I think the ultimate solution is not to bike everywhere, but to develop smaller and more economic vehicles. We had our fun, but time's up...time to start driving vehicles that don't use fossil fuels and don't emit any element or compound that's not naturally occuring in our atmoshpere in large quantities. Hydrogen fuel cells that have water as a byproduct come to mind as a possible solution.

      Bikes are a good hobby and great exercise, but like the Segway, they're not the world's solution to transportation problems.

      --
      This message brought to you by the Council of People Who Are Sick of Seeing More People.
    2. Re:Do your part: bicycle! by berniecase · · Score: 1

      I think the ultimate solution is not to bike everywhere, but to develop smaller and more economic vehicles.

      Smaller and more economical vehicles exist, but there is plenty of room for more of them.

      More importantly, we need to convince the population to use them. The majority of people in this world don't need big vehicles. If you need something large for getting up into the woods, go rent it. Buy something small and efficient for your daily trips around town. I see no good reason for wasting money on a car that has more than what you need, or use.

      I see no good reason buying crap that you'll never use. I try to limit my purchases to stuff that I know I'm going to use, not stuff that's just going to sit around collecting dust. I wish more people would try to do the same.

    3. Re:Do your part: bicycle! by bigberk · · Score: 1

      You're right. The solution is not to bike all the time, but it's still a better way to travel than you might think.

      -Most places I'd go there are no bike racks, hence nowhere to lock my bike up. People steal bikes that aren't locked up

      Be creative! Lamp posts, street signs, door handles, potted plants, trees, and then as a last resort turn the bike upside down, remove both wheels and the seat and chain them all together.

      -No bike paths in many areas...and drivers are NOT considerate of people on bikes.

      You're right. This is a big problem. American cities are designed exclusively for cars because of the immense power of the auto manufacturers. Cars are #1 in cities. But I pay taxes too. Tax payers have say. If enough of us think our cities should be more bicycle friendly, and we demand change, then change will happen. Special bike lanes, even just a painted corner of the street, are standard in many European cities and in some North American cities like Ottawa (Canada).

      -Weather

      Can't do anything about the weather :) I don't commute on bicycle at -40 degrees either. But I do use my bicycle between March and October.

      A lot of this has to do with recognizing what we want, and voicing our thoughts and desires. Changes don't happen on their own. In my city, a group of cyclists are looking to pressure the municipal government into tax breaks for cyclists and other non-automobile users.

    4. Re:Do your part: bicycle! by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      Uh no? You think I want to bike everywhere? What about weather? What about when I'm out on a date? Are we supposed to BIKE there together? WTF kind of a person are you? Not to mention the high rate of bike theft in the US. I've had a bike stolen 2 times when I was a teenage. I used locks. People get tired of that crap eventually you know.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    5. Re:Do your part: bicycle! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, the entire "continent" of Europe could be dropped down in the middle of North American and get lost outright.

      Never mind the elderly and disabled... they should just stay home and think Green Thoughts.

    6. Re:Do your part: bicycle! by blitziod · · Score: 1

      well in the US and Canada we are kinda spread out. Many parts of the US (I live in Texas) are so spread out that owning a car is needed. You can't bike 60 miles to and from work every day, esp. in the rain. And before you hippies even start, we had to spread out to win the cold war.

      --
      The only way to bust a doper--is when you yourself become a smoker!
  147. heh by prmths · · Score: 1

    i'm not much for organized religion or anything...
    but i've heard about someone saying that all the pslams in the bible relate to the cooresponding year in the 20th century --- and there are 150 psalms...

    could they be influenced by that rumor? ;)

    --- just an observation

    then again.. any song/poem could be interpereted in any way --- especially given the length of a year and the number of events that can happen in that given year ;)

  148. I am surprised to read the troll by LinuxMacWin · · Score: 1

    A third of the people seem to be making fun of WWF thinking it is Worldwide Wrestling.

    Another third seem to be saying it is not a serious issue now and saying we will fight it when the time comes.

    Another group seems to be justifying why this will not happen.

    However, no one seems to be talking about the threat seriously. And no, I am not an environmentalist, nor an historian, though today I feel like speaking / writing like a historian.

    We all know the forests are being fscked. We all know the population is increasing. We all know the species are getting extint. We are keep reading about the "sprawls" in US. We do keep hearing about the ozone layer too. And just last week I saw some news about Arctic ice melting to un-forseen levels. Are these by themselves serious issues? Maybe not. But for all you know, they are...

    It is just mankind's tendency to put off serious issues till later. Till it blows over the head. We did nothing till Hitler took over the world. We did nothing till Osama did his trick. And my guess is we will not do anything until people start dying in hundreds of thousands on a yearly basis because of the environmental issues. And of course then we will act on a war footing and probably come up with a department of environment security at a global level. But will it be too late? How do I know - mankind has not seen an environmental change on such a scale in our lifetime. And will we be able to adapt quickly then? I just pray that we do.

    Sorry for sounding too harsh, but sometimes the troll gets you.

    1. Re:I am surprised to read the troll by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      today I feel like speaking / writing like a historian.

      Then, later, you said: We did nothing till Hitler took over the world.

      Maybe you should study some history before just proclaiming your status.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
  149. What, no Civ III reference? by WilConquerNuch · · Score: 1

    hehe, 2050 is the mandatory retirement date for human civilization, damn, and i didnt get stealth yet.....:-)

    1. Re:What, no Civ III reference? by yzquxnet · · Score: 2

      I suck at CiVIII. I admit it, I loose even on the cheiftan level. I get so mad and just nuke my opposition. It never fails, about a decade before 2050 all my friends turn against me and declare war on me. It makes me so mad. It's like the game is trying to destroy me before time runs out.

  150. Easy solution: by Convergence · · Score: 2

    Note the quote:
    ''... without the intense use of fertilizers and pest controls''

    Thats ludicrus. What is the land needed per person if you actually *do* choose to use modern farming methods?

    Thats like saying. `` We need XXX acres of land per person if we assume farming by hand, with no mechanized tractors.'' which is an interesting, but pointless statistic.

    There's nothing inherently wrong with pest control or fertalizer. In fact, they're the foundations of modern society. To quote a radio commercial ``Never before have so few fed so many for so little.''

  151. Re:Insightful? What a load of crap. by Azghoul · · Score: 2

    Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa the sky is falling, the sky is falling!

    Go hide in a box, Chicken Little.

    There is no cliff. What the parent post means by "simple economics" is the fact that as we 'run out' of various important resources (say, oil), the price will get out of control and we'll have to move on to something else.

    Also, Mr Little, one could point out the vastly reduced pollution a fully-developed country puts out per capita compared to any 3rd world... But such ideas run against your alarmist philosophy, so I'm really wasting my time with you. Oh well, if a wonderfully reasoned post like the parent can't make you think, nothing will.

  152. The panda drops dead. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look for the real WWF to include a guy in a panda suit in their wrestling shows; a pathetic wimp that they'll beat up in the first few minutes. They'll be able to win vicariously what their lawyers were unable to stave off.

  153. Re:Insightful? What a load of crap. by spencerogden · · Score: 1

    I'll add a fifth type, people who think others who don't agree with them are ignorant, without giving other reasons. You make no significant points with any evidence, and then decend into an ad hominem attack, how convincing.

    Do yourself a favor, llok at some real numbers in a Julian Simon book...

  154. MOD UP--BSD ISNT DYING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    lamefilterlamefilter lame lame lame.

    20 secs. 15...10...5.......

  155. Rainforest Schmainforest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    god damn hippies!

  156. We're always going to 'run out'... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

    ...as long as we pretend like nothing's ever going to change.

    Let's be realistic here: Let's say that we know Petroleum is going to dry up a year from now. What's going to happen? We're either going Fuel Cell shopping, or we're going to get bus tickets. We'll get by.

    We may 'consume' but we're hardly going to cause the race to go extinct over it. It's not like we're selling 'Perri-Air'.

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  157. It was quite anti-fascist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He took to task the socialist. Hey, Hitler was a socialist too. Socialists have been the worst fascists of all.

    1. Re:It was quite anti-fascist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very clever. But should the weak perish to accomodate the strong?

  158. It's not optimal solution by blinov2000 · · Score: 0

    because they also will kill. Economic blocade is more effective
    --
    visit my_hmpg

    1. Re:It's not optimal solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, what would be most effective is to cease doing those things which cause them to hate us.

      I'd start with respecting their lives as we do our own. Stop killing them. Stop killing their wives. Stop killing their children.

      Then move on to the smaller details. Stop stealing their land. Stop destroying their homes. Stop insulting their religion.

    2. Re:It's not optimal solution by syn3rg · · Score: 0

      >>No, what would be most effective is to cease
      >>doing those things which cause them to hate us.
      Like ceasing to walk into their markets with explosives strapped to our chests and killing their women and children.

      >>Like I'd start with respecting their lives as we do our own.
      ibid

      >>Stop killing them.
      ibid.

      >>Stop killing their wives.
      ibid

      >>Stop killing their children.
      ibid

      Palestinian terrorists (freedom fighters to you Reuters journalists) *target* Israeli women and children; to the tune of 80% of Israeli casualties are women and children. And you (only an AC would post this comment) want US to "cease doing those things which cause them to hate us"???
      Please review the facts.

      --
      The contents of this message have been doubly encrypted by ROT13
  159. Renew that license! by wilkinsm · · Score: 2, Funny

    The earth is going to expire?

    Quick! We better renew that license... The question is who do we call, the manufacturer or um... the reseller?

  160. Jurassic Park anyone? by The_Shadows · · Score: 2

    IIRC, there was a scene in Jurassic Park where they discuss the idea that bringing back dinosaurs could "destroy the world." Ian Malcolm puts it well when he says that us leaving (being eaten) won't end the world. The world will keep going for a long time regardless of what species are on it.

    Or maybe I hallucinated the whole thing. I really can't remember.

  161. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 2
    "Except, here we are in 2002 and those 6 or 7 billion people are eating better than any of their ancestors in all of human history, even in the poorest countries."

    They probably failed to (and could not) account for such things as genetic manipulation of crops to increase yields plus advanced pesticides, fertilizers, storage technologies and so on.

    This both increases the amount of food produced per land area, and also reduces the amount of food decayed per food harvested.

  162. Get over it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I am /SO/ going to go postal if I see one more damn Condo being shitted together in this city, yeesh! Those things look horrid and ARE horrid. Same with MiniVans, ick."

    If you don't like the condo, don't live in one. No one is forcing you to drive a minivan either.

    Go postal? You have to get over these megalomaniac fantasies and become more "laid back", learn not to get upset that people don't live in or drive in the exact thing you demand that they do. You don't control the world (good thing!) Get used to it.

  163. What about the animals ... chosen? by Tjp($)pjT · · Score: 1

    Considering the animal species they used to illustrate the levels of decline are all valued in eastern culture for ivory, horns, or internal organs and are heavily poached, I question this articles validity. It seems more of a political peace with quite a different agenda.

    --
    - Tjp

    I am in wallow with my inner money grubbing capitalistic pig. ... Oink!

  164. A related story.. by NanoGator · · Score: 2

    ... Nasa has launched it's first space vehicle built to suck all the air off of an oxygen-rich planet and contain it in a giant bag for delivery back to Earth. In memory of 9-11, the ship was modeled after the Statue of Liberty.

    Due to recent events, insiders at Nasa are publically questioning a last-minute design change where engineers added an external switch to the vacuum generator. One engineer, who refused to be identified, was quoted as saying "Anybody with a ring from a Crackerjack box could throw that switch. There's no way that ship's coming back full."

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  165. Re:Wrestlers? [OT] by Disevidence · · Score: 2

    So legislate it to "..under Allah", and see how many people chuck a shit.

    A shitload of people, I bet.

    --
    Think nothing is impossible? Try slamming a revolving door.
  166. All the 'used' resources are still here by joshv · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The fact of the matter is not that we will somehow 'run out' of resources - the stuff we have used is all still here, simply in a degraded form. Where's the carbon in those fossil fuels? In the atmosphere as CO2. Where's all that plastic? Landfills.

    Certainly, the easy to use resources will run out. Things like petroleum, fresh water, timber and such - but with enough energy we can replace those things. Sure, it's costly to such CO2 out of the atmosphere and use it to make petrochemicals, but with enough energy it certainly can be done. Sure it's hellaciously expensive to run a de-salination plant instead of diverting another river - but with cheap enough energy it becomes cost effective. Sure, we may eventually run out of easy to exploit copper mines, but all the copper we have ever mined is still out there - it might be hard to find and convert, but again, with enough energy it's doable.

    It's all a problem of energy. If we have enough of it we can keep recylcing the natural resource that are already here, indefinitely. Instead of shipping our idiot progeny off to space, we should be sending up orbital power stations. If they captured just a minute fraction of the solar energy that passes between the earth and the moon's orbit we'd have absolutely no resource problems and the only waste product we'd have to worry about in the long run is heat.

    -josh

    1. Re:All the 'used' resources are still here by davecl · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yes - if you have access to an infinite supply of energy you can sort a lot of these problems out. Solar power stations are a way to do that.

      But hold on, how are you going to build them if all the energy you need for the launch vehicles has been used up already?

      This is a bootstrapping problem. You have to invest energy to get more. If you don't have the initial amount of energy to invest, then you're stuck.

      If we burn all our fossil fuels in SUVs etc., and not in building the solar power stations, that's it, game over.

      We live in a unique period in history. We can either invest the energy we have easily available at the moment to ensure a large future supply - and perhaps have some generations of hardship while that's happening - or we can go on using up the local resources living a good life, and sealing the fate of future generations. This takes conscious planning, and is not something that a blind 'market solution' is capable of, because that always works on a much shorter timescale.

      I don't see anyone taking this long view and doing something about it, so by 2050, we may be stuck on this planet forever.

      Now that's a believable solution to the Fermi Paradox.

    2. Re:All the 'used' resources are still here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a bootstrapping problem. You have to invest energy to get more. If you don't have the initial amount of energy to invest, then you're stuck.

      There's enough nuclear fuel to last for billions of years.

    3. Re:All the 'used' resources are still here by babyruth · · Score: 1

      Not quite true thermodynamically. It is a problem of energy, but also a problem of the QUALITY of energy we have left. Essentially entropy. When you burn gasoline in an engine at 30% efficiency, the rest of 70% is lost as useless heat (generating entropy), which you can never get back or re-use again. That's why you can't keep using the extra heat from an engine to do more useful work (w/o degrading the efficiency, hence the original amount of work done), beyond a certain theoretical limit (Carnot efficiency for heat engines). So we might have by-products left over, but whether we can further extrac energy from those wastes is another question. Of course, things like solar energy are external to this system and can be tapped to further process the waste, but there's a limit to how much we can extract from that as well.

    4. Re:All the 'used' resources are still here by davecl · · Score: 1

      There's enough nuclear fuel to last for billions of years.

      Depends on which technology you use.

      d-p fusion has plenty of available energy, but doesn't work yet.

      Fast breeder fission has plenty available (though not as much as fusion) but is still far from commercial. The available resources are *not* enough for billions of years though.

      Conventional slow neutron fission though has got problems. There are limits to the amount of U-235 out there. Its not as bad as oil yet, but there is a definite limit in the foreseeable future.

      So which nuclear fuel do you want, and are you willing to pay for the development and cleanup?

      Or are you referring to the fusion reactor we have got - the sun? Then you need to get into orbit for solar power farms again!

    5. Re:All the 'used' resources are still here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fast breeder fission has plenty available (though not as much as fusion) but is still far from commercial. The available resources are *not* enough for billions of years though.

      Yes, they are.
      http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/progress/cohen. html

      If you start burning thorium in something like a Molten Salt Breeder Reactor, you can multiply that number several fold.

  167. Al Gore created the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you believe Al Gore when he said he created the Internet, then you are sure to believe these environmental claims from the WWE.

    1. Re:Al Gore created the Internet by slashhot · · Score: 0
      Al Gore created the Internet

      He did not create the Internet, but he invented the algorythm.

  168. BSD is dead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple ate it up.

  169. Malthus - again by CharlieG · · Score: 2

    Sigh,
    Didn't Malthus say this, oh, a century or so ago, and we're long past his date.

    There were also predictions that London would be burried 2 feet deep in horse dropping by the 1930s, becuse they would not be able to get rid of them. Of course, those evil scientists invented the car, which ended that problem

    --
    -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
  170. Like an RTS by Iscariot_ · · Score: 1

    Sure we might run out of resources by 2050, and if we don't prepare then we will be in trouble.

    However, if we save enough of those resources to create new REPLACEMENT technologies by 2050 then we'll be fine.

    I like to think of this like an RTS. If your base gets destroyed, you're fine as long as you have enough gold to build a new base and at least one peon. If you didn't save those ahead of time, then you're truely in trouble.

  171. Re:Insightful? What a load of crap. by orkysoft · · Score: 2
    Also, Mr Little, one could point out the vastly reduced pollution a fully-developed country puts out per capita compared to any 3rd world...

    As the grantparent poster said: "Spreading ignorance under the guise of wisdom is the worst of all sins."

    Amen.

    --

    I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
  172. Re:Wrestlers? [OT] by JebusIsLord · · Score: 1

    good point.

    --
    Jeremy
  173. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by JoeBlows · · Score: 1

    if you look at the resons that there is starvation, it has nothing to do with resources. the famin in the wortld is all political in cause.

    --
    True capitalism = lots of similar companies = jobs for everyone who wants one.
  174. Funding NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Hell, if NASA can't even get a funding boost, how the hell are we going to be able to develope the tech to get us to other planets?"

    Likely, it will be done through the private sector. The space tourist thing could get them lots of money. (for some dumb reason NASA refuses to get involved with this).

    NASA has sort of blown it. They turned something that was a Buck Rogers fantasy into a mere government bureacracy with all the sexiness and cache of the United States Postal Service.

    1. Re:Funding NASA by numbuscus · · Score: 1

      "Likely, it will be done through the private sector. The space tourist thing could get them lots of money. (for some dumb reason NASA refuses to get involved with this)."

      At $10,000 a pound, I'm somewhat skeptical that the private sector is going to be able generate enough revenue from current 'space tourist technology' (aka, Soviet equipment) to justify a huge investment into new propulsion, etc..., to bring the price down. These types of revolutionary ideas cost revolutionary prices and, with an investment climate as it is now, there is no way investors are going to front the cash for a very speculative venture such as new propulsion tech.

      NASA has sort of blown it. They turned something that was a Buck Rogers fantasy into a mere government bureacracy with all the sexiness and cache of the United States Postal Service.

      I agree that NASA is messed up - that it's broken and seriously needs some fixing. However, there is a great deal of knowledge in that organization. If you get rid of NASA, you need to replace it with something. You have to remember, government funding has made modern telecommunications, travel, and lifestyles possible. Where would we be if there was no initial investment in the railroads or in satellite technology or radar or airports. If there is one place that the government does have a place, it's infrastructure. Yes, they may blow a bunch of money, but even so, much of the time these investments pay off over time. Think of the US highway system. I once read that the Fed has spent 6 trillion on roads over the last 100 years (don't know if it's accurate). That's one hell of a lot of money but if you look at it in terms of the amount of money it has generated, hell, most of the goods sold in the US are shipped by truck!

      Anyway, I just think we need to have some sort of serious government investment in the relevant space technology (need better term). It doesn't need to be NASA (and hopefully not only the military), but I think we need something NASA-like (of course, without the bureacracy).

  175. We apologize for the delay... by NetRanger · · Score: 2

    ...but, the inevitable doom of humankind has been delayed until 2050.

    We apologize for the inconvenience of not being able to fix the year exactly.

    --
    -- We live in a world where lemonade is artificial and soap has real lemon.
  176. The Dreamthief's Daughter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Michael Moorcock couldn't have made the point more eloquently . . .

  177. You forgot to mention... by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 1

    You forgot to mention that Tax-payers didn't spend a dime on this ship. It was funded through sales of 'Perri-Air'. Heh

    Funny stuff =)

  178. Better believe it, Kyoto is B.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I cannot believe my eyes, reading shit like this and seeing that people don't have a dammned clue as to what is going on around them!"

    Or, in this case, they know more about it than the wackos who concocted the latest fad climate theory when they really know nothing about it.

    "They simply refuse to believe factual, scientific evidence because they heard somewhere that "oh, that's not true"."

    No, we refuse to believe fallacious theories and patently misleading use of statistics that you mistakenly call "scientific evidence".

    "You choose to believe the "it's not true" voice, simply because it eases your conscience"

    Morality and my conscience has nothing to do with it. Perhaps that is your problem; you are letting emotion run away with your thoughts; real evidence be damned.

    "People like you will eat your words one day. Maybe not in your lifetime, but likely in your children's (if, God forbid, you have any)."

    You will eat your words much sooner, perhaps. How about 30 years from now? Because, 30 years ago, the same chicken littles were moaning that there was scientific proof that there was a new ice age coming, and it was evil industrial practice that was taking us there.

    How long before the crackpots adopt the ice-age theory again.

    1. Re:Better believe it, Kyoto is B.S. by plastercast · · Score: 2

      Or, in this case, they know more about it than the wackos who concocted the latest fad climate theory when they really know nothing about it.

      The EU, UN, EPA, the Bush administration, and any number of enironmentally oriented groups (although it is to be expected, that doesn't inharently discredit their research) disagree with you. Look here for example : look at this.

    2. Re:Better believe it, Kyoto is B.S. by xdroop · · Score: 2
      What's the first rule of scientific inquiry?

      COINCIDENCE DOES NOT IMPLY CAUSALITY

      Assuming that just because humans are doing things implies that the results of those things are the primary cause of climate change is alarmist thinking. We are here, therefore we are the cause is sloppy thinking. It comes from humans arrogantly assuming that they are the center of the universe and therefore are the cause of everything.

      Similarly, the thinking behind Kyoto appears to be:

      • the climate is changing;
      • we must do something;
      • Kyoto is something;
      • therefore we must "do" Kyoto!

      Where is the proof?

      Now, I am not advocating open season on resource consuption -- minimizing our impact on the environment is just good thinking (and therefore will never happen in north america), while minimizing our polution levels reduces ugly things like smog.

      But claiming that rising sea levels are a cause for alarm ignores the fact that sea levels are already three hundred feet above where they were fifteen thousand years ago. I bet if some of these nuts were around then, they would be running around claiming that maybe this "fire" thing was having a greater impact on the environment than could be controlled!

      --
      you should read everything on the internet as if it had "but I'm probably talking out of my ass" appended to it.
  179. A cure for the Kyoto dodo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Visit this link
    Falling Angels

    It is a book by Niven and Pournelle. It makes some excellent points about how little we know about climate change.

  180. Have a little faith in technology by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

    Lets keep in mind that if such a crisis were to actually occur, a LOT more (of the remaining) resources would be devoted to finding technological solutions. Heck, that's how it works now : the only reason we don't use solar power, ect is not due to inflexibility, its that for the power providers burning coal is still cheaper for THEM (although they don't have to pay the true costs of increased lung cancer, ect).

    Keep in mind that using simple fission power with fuel recycling we could easily produce enough energy, even if it were necessary to use vastly expensive machines like desalination plants and other devices to get all our water, for thousands of years. This is with known uranium deposits and 30 year old technology.

    The energy is THERE, it just isn't needed yet.

    Looking farther down the road. Developement of a true artificial intelligence would likely make all of the following issues moot. While its tough to say what exactly would happen, I don't think resource shortages will be on anyone's minds. After all, exponentially reproducing machines would likely be able to utilize all manner of resources currently unavailable to humans.

  181. Kyoto is all politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One has to look at the Kyoto treatment of mainland China, which is "allowed" a lot of "greenhouse gases" a lot of other countries are not allowed.

    If it really had to do with global warming, there would not bee loopholes for giant polluting nations.

    Even if there were evidence to cause signing of the Kyoto Treaty (which there is not), one has to realize that in its present form it is counterproductive, and should be altered to limit greenhouse gases, instead of damage economies of countries that certain countries are competing with.

    1. Re:Kyoto is all politics by plastercast · · Score: 2

      Well, as for evidence, the EPA, EU, UN, and even the bush administration disagree with you on that one. The provisions for certain countries are not so damning as you might suggest. China and India do not pollute as much as the US does, for one. In addition, the costs of reducing emissions would be much greater for those nations than America. For example, according to the NRDC, the average American uses more than fifteen times more electricity in a month than the average person in China, and thirty times more than the average person in India. If you hypothetically cut the US's energy usage in half, we would still be doing pretty good. However, doing so in those other countries would be nothing short of disasterious.

    2. Re:Kyoto is all politics by ElectricRook · · Score: 1
      So now we're down to quoting Chomsky (previous poster).

      --snip--the average American uses more than fifteen times more electricity in a month than the average person in China, and thirty times more than the average person in India. I

      Of course the average american uses more electricity. The average American has hot running water, owns a automobile, a computer, a TV, and lives in a sturdy house. The average Chinese or Indian has no plumbing, never seen a telephone or TV, let alone a computer, and lives in a house that cannot with stand a magnitude 4 earth quake.

      Should the American public go back to the stone age? That would make Chomsky happy.

      --
      - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
    3. Re:Kyoto is all politics by shca1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Should the American public go back to the stone age?

      the article says:

      America's consumption 'footprint' is 12.2 hectares per head of population compared to the UK's 6.29ha while Western Europe as a whole stands at 6.28ha. In Ethiopia the figure is 2ha, falling to just half a hectare for Burundi, the country that consumes least resources.

      The UK does have hot running water, automobiles, computers, TVs and sturdy houses _and_ it is also an industrialised nation..

      Germany also does quite well if these figures are to be believed..

      So does the EU want to 'cripple' the US so it can 'catch up'? (see discussion above)

      I find the US patriotism in these discussions
      a bit scary - does any criticism of the US have to be dismissed as an 'Unamerican' threat?

      what does the US EPA think?

      US Climate Action Report 2002 - chapter 6:
      http://www.epa.gov/globalwarming/publications/ car/ ch6.pdf

      "Based on studies to date, unless there is inadequate or poorly distributed precipitation, the net effects of climate change on the agricultural segment of the U.S. economy over the 21st century are generally projected to be positive"

      I live in Australia which is following the US lead not to ratify the Kyoto Protocol, and is also up there with the US in the per capita greenhouse emissions.. & I don't interpret environmental concern as an "attack" on my country.

    4. Re:Kyoto is all politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Should the American public go back to the stone age?

      Yes. From what I understand they had a lot more sex back then. Also, not having to shower is a plus.

  182. Stephen Baxter Time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like "Time" by Stephen Baxter.

    Someone's been reading their sci-fi at WWF!

  183. Earth? by tswinzig · · Score: 2

    Will the EARTH expire by 2050? No. Will humanity? Maybe.

    As George Carlin once said, the Earth doesn't mind all this non-biodegradable plastic, only we humans do. The Earth doesn't mind it at all, it will simply create a new paradigm: The Earth + Plastic.

    --

    "And like that ... he's gone."
  184. Nature Will Fight Back by Cyno01 · · Score: 1

    i know this will sound like something from some sci-fi channel production, but nature will find a balance with us, i'm personifying nature slightyly, but it will find a way to check our numbers and even things out, probably something in the form of a plauge, currently the aids epidemic is expected to kill tens of millions of people in africa in the next few decades, but thats hardly a dent in the world population of what will soon be 7 billion. the densest populated area of the world, southeastern asia would be a likely place for some form of a common virus to mutate into a deadly form, i'm not saying it should happen, human life is good i guess, blah blah blah, but a 3rd of the worlds population is living in an unequivalent percentage of the landmass and a plauge in that are would even things out, but before that happens, maybe we should just learn to concerve our resources and start looking for alternatives

    --
    "Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
  185. I need a car and a house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You have a car and a house. You don't NEED either one."

    I need both. You may not need them, but you have no idea what I need or do not need.

    "You live in a First World country, and as a result you consume many times the energy of someone in the Third World."

    Remember 7th grade science? Energy is not consumed. It is changed from one form to another.

    "The difference between you with your shitty econobox and someone with an SUV is vanishingly small."

    One is unsafe with insufficient carrying capacity...

    "If you REALLY want to save the Earth start promoting nuclear power"

    Surely you know better. That is the dirtiest most dangerous source in existance. I used to think otherwise until the "near disaster" at Chernobyl. These "near disasters" are so common. And the waste is so nasty we can't do anything with it.

    1. Re:I need a car and a house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >And the waste is so nasty we can't do anything with it.

      SLOWPOKE reactor.

      Read about them. They eat up anything radioactive like a pig eats anything living.

    2. Re:I need a car and a house by thetbone · · Score: 1

      "These "near disasters" are so common"

      Name ten.
      Since they're so common it should be easy.

    3. Re:I need a car and a house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Surely you know better. That is the dirtiest most dangerous source in existance.

      Wrong. That would be coal.

      These "near disasters" are so common.

      If they're so common, name two incidents that resulted in fatalities to the general public.

      Hell, name ONE fatal accident that didn't involve a shitty Soviet reactor design that was rejected as unsafe in the United States long before the anti-nuke hysteria.

      And the waste is so nasty we can't do anything with it.

      You've been lied to. The waste is a non-issue.

    4. Re:I need a car and a house by Treylis · · Score: 1

      Near disaster? Tell you what, you tell me what's better: an estimated 2 deaths, none direct, through the entire history of nuclear energy, or hundreds and hundreds of thousands from coal--real safe there, chief--from massive toxic smog and fires.

  186. Anyone remember Criswell? by MsGeek · · Score: 2
    You realize that "The Amazing Criswell" was making predictions like these 50 years ago. Never mind that he was completely and totally full of it, and that he was basically a huckster who made his "prophecies" up as he went along. (xref "Ed Wood.")

    He had a couple of scary hits: "President Kennedy will not run for re-election in 1964 because of something that will happen to him in November 1963" and "A blonde bombshell will die a tragic death in Dixie" (Jayne Mansfield's weird death by decapitation) were the biggies. But since his "prediction" career went on between the 1950s, through the '60s and into the '70s, you'd expect him to get a couple right just by chance. Kinda like Nostradamus and his "Hister" quatrains.

    He predicted doomsday on August 18th, 1999. Heh.

    Anyway, basically what I am saying here is that it is very easy to pull broad, sweeping predictions out of your butt. Criswell certainly could do it, so can the World Wildlife Federation.

    However, if this gets some people interested in reviving the space program... ;-)

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  187. No worries... by athlon02 · · Score: 1

    Mankind is arrogant to assume we can make the earth uninhabitable such that we would be forced to colonize another planet. Yes I'm interjecting some religion here, but the Bible speaks of Judgment Day and men still being on earth, so all this worrying is all for nought.

    Sure we can make it difficult on ourselves to where we end up shortening lifespans, end up with more diseases & such, but not to the point of having to totally leave Earth.

  188. Bible and Judgement day. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think the language in Revelations precludes the events happing in some sort of far-flung Federation of Planets (Instrumentality, Entire, Empire, Codominium, etc etc etc)

  189. New Space Physics for travel being ignored by NASA by geekster_2000 · · Score: 0

    It looks like the inventor wont be ripped off
    by NASA's tell us what you have and we'll let you
    know if its something we can use ! , BULLSHI_ !!

    NASA and many other scientist must be stupid,
    according to inventor, to even try to pull this
    CON GAME "RIP OFF" ON HIM.

    He says he will sell his invention for CASH on
    the barrel head, no write ups, no white papers,
    no presentations and will take his invention to
    the grave rather than give it away.

    He is going to play the greed game like so
    many American and foreign Billionaires !!

    He says his idea makes him laugh all the time
    as this creation is the only realistic solution
    right now for cheap, reliable, fast, unlimited,
    billions of vehicles possible and he alone in
    all mankind has found

    "THE HOLY GRAIL OF SPACE TRAVEL "

    Space Propulsion Engine for Flying Saucer - New Physics

    Rumor in Silicon Valley -

    Inventor of 3D volume holographic optical storage
    shopping his concept for Space Propulsion Engine
    using Propellantless Mass to US and other countries.

    for further look at biography background goto

    http://colossalstorage.net/colossal.htm

    He says he has researched all propulsion concepts at NASA, Lockheed,
    Europe, Asia, and Russian Space Agencies and knows their technology
    but he laughs when he thinks how well his technology will do next to
    the present technology, there is no earthly comparison !

    He is working in top secret and he says no physicist or scientist
    he has ever studied or researched had this approach and knows his
    concept will work to give near light speed travel thru Galaxy with
    500K/Miles per Hour to start or 138 miles/sec. Nasa fastest time
    are 25,000 mile/hr or 3.9 miles/sec

    He says it is a mankind first concept !!

  190. Re:2nd Postz0r by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Excellent 2nd P0st!

    Every AC post leads to our eventual glory as supreme trolls!

  191. America doesn't have much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ""There are plenty of resources. Plenty of land. Plenty of energy. Oh, of course, but they all belong to america, right?

    America controls a small minority percentage of land, energy, resources.

  192. WWF = dumb muscleheads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is hard to imagine Hulk Hogan being stupid enough to sign his name to this silly bit of imagination and hokum put out by the WWF with the panda.

  193. Obligatory HHGG reference... by Zinho · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't the plan be to put all of the environmentalists and conservationists ^W^W^W hairdressers and telephone sanitizers on the first ships out? I think that would solve the problem nicely, and we'd only need one wave of ships...

    --
    "Space Exploration is not endless circles in low earth orbit." -Buzz Aldrin
  194. monkey? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    monkey president? Shocking!

  195. Re:Insightful? What a load of crap. by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1

    how can we stop global warming... Assume for a moment that global warming is like any force, just beacuse the change is still relatively small doesn't mean that the accelleration isn't huge. Once you want to "change" it's like stopping a car... it will take a while. A long while. If it took us 200 years to start serious warming, it may very well take us 300 years to do the cooling. And by then it may be just too late.

    There are four types of people: those who are ignorant and know it; those who are knowlegable and don't; those that are knowlegable and know it; and those who are ignorant but think that they are knowlegable. You my fellow biped are in the latter category; and what a dangerous person you are beacuse of this. Why a moderator would mark you as insightful is beyond me. Spreading ignorance under the guise of wisdom is the worst of all sins.

    Then you might want to put yourself in that last category, and as one of those horrible people that spread mis-information. You might find a good look at the NASA satellite data, for temperature, enlightening. And before you complain about the fact that this only goes back to the late '70s, and that the "real" picture only shows up when we look at the average temperature since the late 1800's, I would suggest looking up the Pacific Decadal Occilation, which is really where the "warming" in the past century has come from, though most envirometalist extremists conviently smooth the data over and forget to mention that this is the only real source of warming over the past 100 years. And, as a last note, the PDO has been determined to be a natural phenomena, though I am sure the next argument will be that humans are somehow changing it as well. My advice, accept it, we are not that important and don't have that large of an impact on the Earth, its just arrogance to assume that we are the cause of every little fluctuation.

    --
    Necessity is the mother of invention.
    Laziness is the father.
  196. Population Growth by zenyu · · Score: 2

    That's 48 BILLION people in 150 years, which most would agree is a number completely unsupportable, not without some extreme reductions in the standard of living for western cultures, to the level of 3rd world countries.

    It will not reach that number in 150 years. Just like bacteria slow down their growth as their supplies dwindle so will human populations. I'm not saying you should go ahead and have 7 children. There are a lot of animals that grow to the maximum supportable population and then starve whon there is a long draught.

    This has happened to humans too. With a global economy this is less frequent since global food shortages only happen when there is a huge volcano eruption or some other planetary disaster. There are things like farming subsidies in Western Europe and the US and Japan that affect the distribution of farmed land negatively, but still the entire northern hemisphere would need to be affected.

    Population growth is already slowing the growth is likely to peak at some point and stay steady at some level between 10-20 Billion for the forseable future.

    Perhaps in a 1000 years when we're farming everything in greenhouses and colonizing the moon the population will be at levels we couldn't imagine now, but lets just figure out fusion first.

    1. Re:Population Growth by Bitsy+Boffin · · Score: 2

      People will not just "stop" reproducing, people generally believe it's thier "right" to procreate. And unlike bacteria we do not generally allow people to just die off, no matter how shit things are for them. With our advanced (compared to other species on this planet) medical knowledge we keep people alive as long as possible. And BECAUSE of that, there will be less available resources per person, and thus our standard of living must decline.

      It has already been calculated that there are NOT enough resources on the planet for everybody on the planet to have a high (by western standards) standard of living - there just isn't enough space on the planets surface for that.

      But the population keeps growing, and it's not going to stop, because unless forced to do so, people WILL reproduce, through accident or design. Human intelligence and free will is both our advantage and downfall.

      Look at China for example...thier policy (is it still in action ?) of 1 child per family was/is a direct response to a population crisis - it didn't fall back to a natural system where the population growth rate declined because things weren't looking good, people STILL reproduced, so the authorities had to step in and forcibly change the growth rate. Look how abhorrent that was to western cultures.

      But what makes you think that other cultures will be different and not require intervention to prevent over population ?

      --
      NZ Electronics Enthusiasts: Check out my Trade Me Listings
    2. Re:Population Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People will not just "stop" reproducing

      One nasty hole in your theory: People in the developed world have been doing just that for the last several decades.

    3. Re:Population Growth by Bitsy+Boffin · · Score: 2

      Developed being the operative word. Large parts (most) of the world is not considered the "developed world" and thier growth rates just keep on climbing.

      --
      NZ Electronics Enthusiasts: Check out my Trade Me Listings
    4. Re:Population Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are right, people don't STOP reproducing. They don't have to to slow growth in population. You are thinking in three deminsions not fouor like you need to be. If a couple simply has starts having kids later in life (thus putting off there kids reproduction) they can slow (not stop) the population from growing. ALso I might ad that laws against multiple births are not needed. Simply offering a good retirement plan ( so people do not need many kdis to support them in old age) and access to birth control works fine.

    5. Re:Population Growth by ErikZ · · Score: 2

      Oh really? Then how do you explain that the current North American reproduction rate is TWO?

      As in, for every couple, they have two children. Woah! How are we going to be able to handle that kind of population growth!?

      People don't stop reproducing totally. That's ridiculous. But when given the tools they don't have more children than they can handle.

      Statistically speaking.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
  197. Science 101: no manmade global warming! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "well known scientific authorities like Rush Limbaugh, George Bush"

    Pat Robertson? I don't think so. However, Bush's and Limbaugh's statements about global warming have been based on the real facts, not concocted trendy fad theories.

    "and that running out of finite resources of known size is impossible based on pronoucements "

    Which finite resources are you referring to?

    "Reading the posts to this thread, I wonder if there shouldn't be a basic.science.slashdot.org "

    You should visit it first. You have been bamboozled by the P.T. Barnums of bad science.

    "It probably didn't occur to him that there would be people here who actually would not know that WWF would stand for World Wildlife Fund in this case."

    We know it. There are two WWF's that have nothing to do with each other. One of them decided to gain publicity by launching a frivolous lawsuit against the other.

  198. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  199. Current Population Dynamics... by alchemist68 · · Score: 0

    Does this report take into account current population dynamics? Completely? I just read within the past week the HIV/AIDS infection rate is something like 20X the U.S.A. infection rate. If the governments of those nations can't support the infected population now, how will they provide for a larger infected population? Eventually the population will be so infected with HIV/AIDS that it will collapse. And this is just one catastophic disease not including Ebola in this scenerio.

  200. Reminds me of a bad joke... by gusnz · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Q) What's red and orange, and looks good on hippies?

    A) Fire.

    (/me ducks for cover :)

  201. Good riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the world (human 'civilisation') still is a goer in 2050, it will be a pity.

    On the whole, the posts here just demonstrate that there is little worth preserving of humanity anyway.

    Greedy, selfish, arrogant, mean - what else could you expect from the evolutionary path of human kind. These traits are the ones that have been most successful in terms of evolution and spreading ones genes.

    A tiger isn't at the top of its food chain because it purrs like a kitten, its because it knows how to kill other animals.

    Why is the USA on top? Because they've been the best at screwing other people over. People dont hate the USA because they're jealous of how great they are, they hate the USA because they've trounced all over them and benefited as a result of someone elses loss. The same could be said for USA's current society, unless you're a ruthless nasty arsehole: you're a loser, an outcast.

    There is no such thing as the nobility of the human spirit. We're just a greedy, dirty, fithly animal who's only goal is to breed and consume and beat everyone(thing) else in the race to the top.

    Evolution has made us so good at being mean and nasty, we're a danger to our own existance.

    1. Re:Good riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is the USA on top? Because they've been the best at screwing other people over

      Having more freedom and opportunity, such that the brightest grad students in the world flock here and stay here, such that people in other countries DREAM of coming here, does not constitute "screwing people over".

      Hint: Look at what countries have fences and guards to keep people OUT, and what countries have fences and guards to keep people IN.

      That's a foolproof way of judging the quality of a society.

  202. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by jandrese · · Score: 2

    That's not really true. Some famine is political in nature, but the much of the problem comes from areas that are simple overpopulated and have insufficent infastructure to support relief efforts. Frequently both factors are combined and you have areas with no food, no roads, and a government hostile to foreign aid. Sadly there is little we can do for these people, however as their population decreases they will exert less strain on the local agriculture and hopefully recover (assuming the drought isn't extended--extended droughts (changes in the local climate actually) have killed off entre civilizations before).

    --

    I read the internet for the articles.
  203. Read "The Skeptical Environmentalist" by ralphbecket · · Score: 1

    The WWF's science, figures, and publicity tactics are all way open to question.

    It seems the world is in fine shape.

  204. Death of the West... by Shant3030 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A really interesting book that also deals with the same subject but on a socialogical and demographic plane, is the book by Patrick Buchanan "The Death of the West". It is filled with Buchanan's theories (yes, he does have some *interesting* political views, but his proclamations here are all based on UN statistics) on how certain countries will lose their native populations and other races will take them over. More and more, Europe will loose its identity as a predominantly "white" society. Here are some key points the book highlights:

    Relying upon the most recent UN population studies, Buchanan declares:

    By 2050, only 10% of the world's people will be of European descent. One third of Europe's people will be over 60, and one-in-ten over 80. Involuntary euthanasia has already come to Europe.

    Between now and 2050, Asia, Africa, and Latin America will grow by three to four billion people -- 30 to 40 new Mexicos! -- as Europe will lose the equivalent of the entire population of Germany, Poland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland.

    By 2050, 23 million Germans will have disappeared along with 16 million Italians and 30 million Russians.

    Russia will lose Siberia and the far east to China and be pushed out of the Caucuses and Central Asia, where Islamic populations are exploding while Russia's is dying.

    Either Europe must effect a radical cutback in pensions and health care for seniors, or Europe must import scores of millions of Arabs and Africans to care for the elderly and pay the taxes to sustain their welfare states.

    The 4.2 million Palestinians in Israel and on the West Bank and Gaza will explode to 9 million by 2025, and 15 million by 2050, when Palestinians will outnumber Israel's Jewish population two-to-one.

    America's "Dual Containment" policy in the Persian Gulf seems unsustainable. In less than 25 years, Iraq will have 42 million people and Iran 94 million people, more than any European nation except Russia.

    The Islamic invasions of Spain and France in the eighth century, and of the Balkans and Central Europe from the 14th to the 17th centuries, will be reenacted in the lifetime of most of those now living. Islam has already surpassed Catholicism as the largest religion on earth.

    It is the Christian nations -- Catholic, Protestant, and Orthodox -- that have begun to die. In a chapter titled, "Where Have All the Children Gone?" Buchanan explains why, and why it is unlikely the West can solve the demographic crisis before it leads to The Death of the West.

    In his chapter La Reconquista, Buchanan contends that an invasion of the United States is taking place and that America now harbors a "nation within a nation."

    There are 30 million foreign born in the U.S. today, and between 9 and 11 million illegal aliens, or as many undocumented aliens in the U.S. as there are people in Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut.

    Mexico is exporting its poor and unemployed for U.S. taxpayers to employ and educate. Radical and militant Hispanics and Mexican leaders alike believe this will lead to the cultural and demographic recapture of the Southwest from America, reversing the results of The Mexican War.

    By supporting open borders, the GOP is committing suicide. First-time Hispanic voters chose Clinton 15-1 over Dole. Of the seven major immigration states -- Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Illinois, California, Texas and Florida -- Mr. Bush lost five, and perhaps six. Of the 10 states with the smallest share of immigrants, Bush won all 10.

    European-Americans are a minority in America's most populous state, California, and by 2004, will be a minority in Texas.

    The political agenda of California Hispanics includes race welfare for illegal aliens, racial preferences, bilingual education, open borders, dual citizenship, Cinqo de Mayo as a California holiday, and, in one case, replacing a statue of an American hero of the Mexican War with the Aztec god Quetzacoatl.

    White Americans are fleeing California at the rate of 100,000 a year.

    MeCHA, the student organization that claims chapters on hundreds of campuses has a program that reads like a Mexican version of the agenda of the white-supremacist Aryan Nation.

    In 2001, an Office for Mexicans Abroad in Mexico was providing survival kits with everything from dried meat to anti-diarrhea pills to condoms to Mexicans setting off to break in to the United States .

    As of 2000, there were 8.4 million foreign born in California, as many foreign born as there are people in New Jersey, a primary cause of the state energy and schools crisis.

    Among Third World immigrants, poverty rates and incarceration rates are double and triple what they are among native-born Americans.

    Shooting up the flares and waving the flag, Buchanan argues that the 1960s "counter-culture" has become America's dominant culture, and the iconoclasts of that counter-culture are systematically demolishing America's history and heritage.

    Under Political Correctness, America's greatest heroes -- soldiers, explorers and statesmen from Columbus to George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson -- are under savage attack as genocidal racists and exploiters of indigenous peoples.

    The history books of American public schools are being rewritten with the old heroes ignored or trashed and Western civilization disparaged and demeaned.

    When Mel Gibson's film, "The Patriot," came out in 2000, it was savagely attacked for presenting black Americans as fighting patriots in the Revolutionary War.

    With the assault on Confederate books, symbols, flags, heroes, and holidays almost complete, the attack is now proceeding against the Puritan fathers, soldiers who fought in The Mexican War, and, in New Jersey, even against the Declaration of Independence itself.

    In some school districts, Mark Twain, Flannery O'Connor, and any realistic portrayal of the America South, including Harper' Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, are now forbidden.

    Even the great museums on America's Mall, to introduce school children to the greatness and glory of America's past, are being used to indoctrinate children in how wicked and evil our forefathers were.

    In his chapter, "The De-Christianization of America," Buchanan argues that the death of the Christian faith in Western countries is a primary cause of their dying populations. Whenever faith dies, the people die. A new atheistic civilization is arising, he argues, and is using its dominance of the culture and the courts to drive Christianity out of the temples of our civilization.

    Secular Humanism, widely mocked and disparaged, a few decades ago, is now the dominant faith of the nation's cultural elites. The moral tenets of humanism are replacing those of Christianity in our public life.

    Even Christian churches are rewriting their hymnals to make them acceptable to the dominant culture.

    Anti-Catholic films and filthy and blasphemous anti-Christian art are the deliberate insults of a triumphant pagan and secularist faith.


    He does bring up very valid points that we can all use to change our lives. He stresses faith, family and a return to a more moral society. His right wing ideals shine through on some points but others are applicable to all beliefs.
    Culminating these two sources, the future does not look very bright. But humans have always evovled to survive their elements, and I think we will continue to do so.

    --
    100% Insightful
  205. Run Out? Yeah right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article is totally scare tactics. We wont be 'running out' of anything, its more of a shades of gray situation. Resources will just become more scarce and more expensive to extract. Prices will go up, and the more expensive-to-extract resources will be used. It will just become too expensive for the poor nations/people to do things like drive their gas powered cars. when gas becomes too expensive, other technologies (electric, methanol, etc) will become economically feasible.
    For example, primary reason solar isn't used much is its just plain cheaper to generate the power vith fossil fuels. When they get too expensive to burn for power, solar, nuclear, etc, become the 'cheaper' alternatives. I just hope that we have the wisdom/foresight to guide the transition without too much pain of change-over.

  206. You should know this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The World Wildlife Federation sued the WWF for infringement (me thinks they just wanted the domain name)....well, they won and now the WWF is the WWE -- hence there being no confusion in the topic's title.

    Hell, this is slashdot, they expect everyone to be up to date with all the frivilous lawsuits. Now go home and code in LISP for two hours as your punishment!!! ;)

  207. America isn't the only overconsumer, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "America controls a small minority percentage of land, energy, resources"

    Inside the contiental US, yes that is true, something like 5.8% of the worlds H2O, and other such resources equivalent to its size. However the US basically operates most of North and South America on its political (big biz) whims. Need minerals? Go south of the equator, need cheap labour? Mexico, need more H20? Canada. The list goes on. And most of the world goes with it for fear of economic and military response.

  208. learn to swim... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i sure could use a vacation ...
    (sigh)
    anon.coward.

  209. hmmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, steven hawking calculated that at our current rate of reproduction, we will be standing shoulder to shoulder by the year 2600, and that something big has to happen, weather its a dissaster or we migrate to other planets, etc.

    Wether its 2050 or later, we're screwed :P

  210. thanks mom, dad, grandma, grandpa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Glad you voted republican in that last election, too.

  211. Well, I suppose it's time to bring back Nature Boy by samsara · · Score: 1

    Oh wait, he was WCW...

  212. Right on. by Dan+Crash · · Score: 2

    Lack of cheap energy is at the root of so many of the world's major problems, it's a wonder we're still pumping petrochemicals around. Lunar-generated solar power could be beamed to Earth via microwave and easily solve our energy shortage. We could have more power than we'd know what to do with AND begin colonizing our solar system at the same time. What could be better?

    As a side note, I wonder, too, if orbitally-generated solar power couldn't solve some of our political problems here on Earth. If we could destroy the oil economy, we'd destroy most of the funding that Middle Eastern terrorist organizations depend upon.

    Even as Bush prepares to attack Iraq we continue to import millions of barrels of oil from Iraq every month -- as much as they will sell us. Our oil money directly funds terrorist organizations like Al Qaida and the regimes that harbor them. Dry up the oil economy and you dry up their funding -- it's an interesting hypothesis, at any rate. In my opinion, instead of national ID cards, so-called Patriot Acts, and new cabinet-level Terror Czars, we ought to be spending our money in a much more productive way -- solving the energy problems that fund terrorism in the first place.

    --
    He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
  213. AMEN!! by MtViewGuy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think folks who think we'll run of oil very soon are deluding themselves.

    The problem with the alarmists who think we'll run out of oil are only considering the idea that the last deposits of oil will be in the Persian Gulf.

    How wrong they are! Considering the following factors of the last 12 years:

    1. The oilfields of the former Soviet Union are now being exploited on a very large scale by Western oil companies. There are massive oilfields in Siberia and Kazakhstan have barely been touched, not to mention we haven't even begun to exploit the Caspian Sea oilfields on a large scale.

    2. China has large oilfields in Xinjiang Province that haven't been exploited due to transportation issues.

    3. Afghanistan is potentially sitting on top of a big oilfield.

    4. The Gulf of Mexico--according to British Petroleum engineers--have an amazingly large amount of oil yet to be exploited. The only reason why we haven't gotten more is the high expense of drilling for oil well into the Gulf of Mexico.

    5. Canada has huge tracts of oil tar sands that could yield enough oil to equal all of the Persian Gulf states combined.

    6. The Saudis are only concentrating their oil production on the oilfields near the Persian Gulf, not yet exploiting oilfields in other parts of the country. Tests by ARAMCO engineers have shown there are large oil deposits in the southern part of Saudi Arabia (called the Empty Quarter), but the Saudis have yet to tap these oilfields.

    As for the issue of food production, the very rapid development of farm machinery, agricultural chemicals and better means to store and transport food has increased the amount and variety of food available to everyone on a scale that is mind-boggling. Think about it: compare what is available at your local food market in 1902 versus 2002, and you can eat foodstuffs today from literally all over the world.

    In short, the alarmists don't know what they're talking about--a classic case of junk science.

    1. Re:AMEN!! by demaria · · Score: 2

      "The Gulf of Mexico--according to British Petroleum engineers--have an amazingly large amount of oil yet to be exploited. The only reason why we haven't gotten more is the high expense of drilling for oil well into the Gulf of Mexico."

      No that's more politicial than economical. Good luck getting a proposal to drill in the gulf through congress without the environmentalists flipping out. We can't even get some drilling in a remote frozen section of hell in Alaska.

    2. Re:AMEN!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      http://www.google.com/search?q=%22+Athabasca+Oil +S ands+Project%22

    3. Re:AMEN!! by thales · · Score: 2
      "Good luck getting a proposal to drill in the gulf through congress without the environmentalists flipping out."

      So we have a case of enviromentalist policy creating a desired shortage which will be an excuse for more political power for those "protecting our declining resources".

      This artifical shortage will have dire economic consequances, but it seems that throwing thousands out of work and into poverity isn't important to the eco movement. NOTHING matters to them except their quest for power.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    4. Re:AMEN!! by dunstan · · Score: 2

      The issue with oil is the cost of extraction relative to the market price. If supplies start to dwindle then the price will rise, and supplies which are currently too expensive to be viable will come online.

      There's plenty of oil out there, but why mess about in inhospitable places if we can just stick a pipe into the ground in the Middle East.

      Dunstan

      --
      The last scintilla of doubt just rode out of town
    5. Re:AMEN!! by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

      You have to remember that further out you go into the Gulf of Mexico, the costs rise exponentially because you end up drilling in waters several hundred to over 1,000 feet deep. Oil drilling platforms that could support such deep operations are extremely expensive, as the ones installed in the North Sea have proven.

      But the oil is out there, and eventually we'll have to use these deep-water oilfields.

    6. Re:AMEN!! by thorgil · · Score: 1


      (troll)
      I do wonder if the US will buy the oil from these countries or just invade and take it.
      I mean if the oil in the US runs out it must be considered a legal reason to start a new war right?
      I mean running cars on ethanol isn't cool at all.
      Duh!

      --
      Warning: This sig contains a small bug. ==> *
  214. many European countries don't by Trepidity · · Score: 2

    Many European countries have declining indigenous populations, and the overall populations are only kept from declining by immigration.

  215. Enviros getting in over their head again by WaxParadigm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is just like the 50s when US enviros were screaming that the 1/4 mile-wide clear-cutting in the Rockies would ruin the forest forever. Thanks to their lack of forsight these 1/4 mile "fire barriors" were nowhere to be found this year. We lost far more wooded acres this year alone to forest fires than would have been clear cut in the last 52 years (and this summer is just getting started).

    Then you start thinking about all the unused lumber that went up in flames that would have been cut down (usable)...which really would have saved many more acres and you just get sick.

    Thanks to them I'm personally out five acres of personal land and the nice camping trailer that was on it.

    I'm sure the smoke was great for the air too...yah, that reminds me. The old-lady neighbor of my parents died the day after the worst forest-fire-smoke day and complaining about breathing problems.

    They're extremests and nothing more. There needs to be compromise and smart management of forests...and we've been letting these whacos (with strange ideals and no knowledge of logic, reasoning, and cause-effect) tell us how to manage our natural resources.

    If we continue to listen to groups like the WWF we probably will do something stupid to make the earth expire by 2050.

    I vote for common sense.

  216. Road Warrior? by bilbobuggins · · Score: 2

    somehow i keep getting this image in my head of, 50 years from now, tina turner coming to kick my ass for fuel.
    not fun, although i suppose we get to wear cool jackets.

  217. Re:It's The End Of The World As We Know It by Equinox · · Score: 1

    I'm curious...do you take requests?

  218. Use your heads people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a solution: Shoot all the shit-colored people! That will dramatically reduce the population growth. We can use their rotten corpses as fertilizer or something.

  219. assistance? by rzbx · · Score: 1

    The truth is that those countries are overpopulated based on their own resources and require outside assistance from countries like the US.

    Your view on "assistance" and "resources" is vague. The U.S. including many other nations exploit these poorer nations. The aid that these nations receive depends on the nation, but can include anything such as food, water, medicine, clothing, etc. Yet, you have to ask yourself where the U.S. and other nations get all their resources. A lot of resources these more developed nations get are from these poorer countries. Also, how many Ethiopians are driving around in vehicles, using washers, dryers, dishwashers, vacuums, electronics, etc.? How many of them are building these items, which happen to require resources? Next time, please think about the problem before posting a comment. I hate reading through all the garbage on /.

    rzbx

    --
    Question everything.
    1. Re:assistance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Your view on "assistance" and "resources" is vague. The U.S. including many other nations exploit these poorer nations.

      Your use of "exploit" is vague. Industrialized nations trade the natural resources of undeveloped countries for food, water, medicine, etc. Of course, since our demand for natural resources is much less powerful than their need for food, we end up in a pretty good bargaining position. Similarly, since the food they receive is promptly turned into new population, their plight has no apparent end.

    2. Re:assistance? by rzbx · · Score: 1

      I didn't do to well going through my own comment. I could have made it 20 times longer if I really watched every word I said. Your right, but don't forget that trade is not what it seems.

      --
      Question everything.
  220. More hipporcracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The basic problem isn't the scaricty of resources. The problem is people breeding!

    "America's consumption 'footprint' is 12.2 hectares per head of population compared to the UK's 6.29ha while Western Europe as a whole stands at 6.28ha. In Ethiopia the figure is 2ha, falling to just half a hectare for Burundi, the country that consumes least resources."

    If Ethopia's comsumption footprint is 2 ha, it they need to start giving away condoms and birthcontrol pills and get people to use them. Those are much cheaper than rice or grain. These people need to realize they while the my have 4 or 12 children, they might actually not be starving if they only had one or maybe 2.

    Humans are really the only creatures out there that can voulentarily restrict our breeding habits.

    The "right to lifers" and "anti-birth-control advocats" need to realize that the poverty ridden child in Burundi or Etheopia will probably starve to death. And those who claim they love the children so much are nothing less than hippocracy. Because how many of them would rather go out and buy a new SUV than drive a used Geo Metro and use the difference to feed the poor starving children.

    The people in the poverty ridden countried need to learn that if they want to keep their children from starving, they need to stop having children.

  221. Does this mean that by Penguin2212 · · Score: 0

    Fifty years ago, scientists were saying that in 50 years the Earth will have expired. I think taht it can't be accurately predicted, it's one of those things you kind of have to play by ear.

  222. Only Heat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Only Heat"

    If you don't consider waste heat a problem you obviously don't live in texas.

  223. What About the Oil Crisis? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello, OIL Crisis?

    They didn't mention the oil crisis. We're still running out of oil fast.

    US Geological Survey has gone into BS mode already. Look at their estimated world oil supply:

    A few year ago they estimated just under 1000 M barrels, last couple of years they estimate 2000 Mb. Magically doubled, how?

    They get this number by adding "Known Oil being exploited" to "Found Oil but not yet exploited" to "Oil they think might be there but haven't found yet".

    That last one is a pure guess, they use to use 95% probability of oil being present for that last guestimate. Now they use 50%.... but they still include 100% of the oil that has only a 50% chance of being there... bingo, almost double the number.

    Most of that estimated oil reserves is oil they *believe* is there, they haven't actually found it yet.

    Want more proof? Remember last year, oil price was sky high, Saudi Arabia said it was near full pumping capacity, it was a demand side problem.

    Let me repeat that, DEMAND SIDE PROBLEM.

    Oil costs big energy to pump out. Use more energy than you get from the oil and bingo, you can't use that oil for energy.

    We're not doomed though. Most oil use is just wastefull - driving an SUV to work, driving to work at all, travelling to work at all. All of that will end. But there has to be less people aswell. No more oil for nitrogen cracking for fertilizer, too energy expensive. Less food production means hungry people means less people.

    So the world will go back to balance, just not with so many of us.

  224. Sounds like a story I read... by jat2 · · Score: 1
    Seriously, doesn't this sound just like Colony by Ben Bova?

    Everyone starts running out of resources. The poorer countries get hit harder, but eventually all countries are effected, and there is rioting and marshall law everywhere. And, people from a space colony orbiting the earth have to try to save the day without being corrupted by the same power structure that threatens to destroy the earth. Anyway, it was a good read. I recommend it, though it wasn't as good as Mars.

  225. Didn't they learn the first time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Environmentalists said the same thing 30 years ago. That the earth would run out of food by 2000. But we are still here and can feed the world 3 times over. The only problem is crappy governments and economies make sure people stay poor.

    Shame on WWF for using scare tactics to get money

  226. Oil as a resource was created 100 years ago by Gorimek · · Score: 2

    Not sure if this is what you mean with "resources are created, not found", but one interesting way to look at things is to observe that until the explosion motor was invented, oil was mostly a slimy substance that nobody wanted on their land.

    Or in other words, oil, as a resource was created a little over 100 years ago, by a human invention.

    1. Re:Oil as a resource was created 100 years ago by Tokerat · · Score: 2

      Dont' you mean "internal combustion engine"?

      ;-)

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
  227. We are all going to die by Eric+Damron · · Score: 2

    we can't keep growing forever. We are continuing to chip away at our ecosystem and eventually we will either settle into a ?no growth scenario? or push the ecosystem over the edge and all die.

    The real question is will our wisdom grow fast enough to balance out our intelligence? I'm betting that it won't.

    Anyway, we may have already crossed the point of no return. That's the way it will be. We will bicker about not being the ones to make a sacrifice and rationalize about how we don't really have concrete data until things start to get really bad. Then we'll pass all sorts of laws to try to reverse the situation but it will be too late.

    The ecosystem will begin to collapse causing dramatic climate changes which will cause the ecosystem to collapse at an ever accelerated rate. Entire species will die, man being one of them.

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  228. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 2
    sorry but i dispute the fact that all 6 or 7 billion people in the world are eating well, it's more like half at best.

    He didn't say all, and data f rom the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization disputes your claim that it's only "half at best". They estimate that a total of 790 million people in developing countries are undernourished, and that the number is declined by approximately 8 million per year. They state that a further 34 million undernourished people live in developed countries.

    That's well under a billion people in all. Still alarmingly high, but nowhere near as bad as you would make it out to be.

    One thing to understand is that there is no shortage of food on the planet. (The other night a friend and I were discussing this, and we looked up some numbers and determined that the current agricultural production of the U.S. alone could easily feed every person on the planet, if everyone were vegetarian; meat is pretty inefficient way to deliver calories.) It's just that the food is not always in the hands of people who need it, whether because those people are living on poor land, or they don't have the money to purchase it, or their government is corrupt... but it's not that the earth can't provide enough food to support all these people or for that matter twice as many people...

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
  229. Re:but according to the WWF... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I can see it now.

    "You're breakin the People's planet!"

  230. **Science**: Will Earth Expire By 2050? (+1 Funny) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I can't believe they put this in the Science section.

    Corrected topic title: Propaganda: EARTH WILL EXPIRE BY 2050!!!

  231. Mod parent up (Re:Hmmm... perhaps a bit overblown. by schussat · · Score: 2
    Thank you, thank you, for making a thoughtful argument that suggests the apparently heretical notions (around here, anyway) that

    a) environmentalists can in fact sometimes be right

    b) but being critical of them does not involve insulting their intelligence or calling them names.

    -schussat

    --
    The hour of noon has passed. Let us go and get some Kentucky Fried Chicken.
  232. Flamebait? by thales · · Score: 4, Funny

    Ah the expected response from a coward liberal with mod points. Anything that dosen't agree with their PC viewpoint is a flame. They are less open to views crictical of their view than Stalin and Hitler.

    --
    Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    1. Re:Flamebait? by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 1

      there just might be a difference between modding a post as flamebait and rounding up millions of people and shooting them. just a suggestion. not that i agree with the mod, but hey, don't call the kettle black, pot. every time a brash conservative gets disagreed with, it's "a coward liberal". anyway, much too serious a topic for early monday morning...

      --
      MORTAR COMBAT!
    2. Re:Flamebait? by thales · · Score: 3, Offtopic
      Moding a post down based on it's political content is an abuse of the system. IF you disagree with a post just because of it's political content, and resort to the use of Mod points in an attempt to make the post less likely to be read then you are engaging in Censorship rather than modaration. This is equally wrong if the post is modded down for failing to comply with a Liberal, a Conservative, or any other label you care to name's viewpoint.

      Regardless of someone's political views, if they reply to a post based on it's political content by modding it down rather than replying to it, they are a coward.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    3. Re:Flamebait? by operagost · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Wish I had mod points for you. What a lot of the people proselytizing for speech rights forget is that for that notion to even exist requires the acceptance of another, the famous "all men are created (well, treated as) equal".

      I saw a great example of this on "The Education of Max Bickford", a CBS TV series of all things. Some ultra-conservative who was the worst of Rush Limbaugh, Howard Stern and David Duke all rolled up into one was invited to speak by the campus conservatives club. Naturally, every left winger on campus objected, and some of them tried to stop him. Max, being an old school Liberal, detested the guy himself but spent the whole show trying to bang into their heads that by definition free speech means just that. If any self-righteous group assumes responsibility for deciding what is and what isn't allowed, the whole concept is lost. The ruling authority could call anything they object to 'hate speech'. The speaker did make it to campus, and the protestors made their point by attending the speech, then walking out and leaving him with a nearly empty auditorium.

      THAT is the essence of passive resistance. Attempting to crush the opposition under your boot-heel is never looked upon favorably in the long run, and you'll soon find out with horror that your methods have suddenly turned you into the 'bad guys'.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    4. Re:Flamebait? by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 1

      yeah, your whole speech kinda AGREES with my "not that i agree with the mod", while you phrase it like a rebuttal. very interesting.

      --
      MORTAR COMBAT!
    5. Re:Flamebait? by thales · · Score: 2

      One thing I've noticed about the leftwingers who scream "hate speach" the loudest. Look at one of their rants about "the Wealthy". Most of the accusations are exactly the same as the worst anti-semite's steerotype of Jews. Substitute the word "Jews" for "Rich" or "Wealthy" in a leftwingers speach and you'll have one that looks like it was delivered by a Nazi Party member. Most of the "hate speach" on campuses is comming from the left, not the right. Basing hatred on economic status is just as vile as basing it on race or religion.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    6. Re:Flamebait? by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      Not to sound like a troll, but I never got the whole Left vs. Right thing? What makes me a Leftist? Or a Rightist? I'm not even sure what I am....

      Thanks for listening. ;-)
      -Chris

    7. Re:Flamebait? by jafac · · Score: 2

      Since my grandmother in law grew up in Nazi-era Germany, I do have some knowledge of the anti-Semitic propaganda from that era.

      I have never heard a lefty claim that the "rich" killed our savior. I've never heard a lefty claim that the "rich" were a genetic plague on the purity of our race.

      And the arguments you're probably referring to (about the anti-jew and anti-rich arguments being the same - "they control the money to be a game that you and I can't win" etc.) had more to do with the stereotype of Jewish people being rich, than something that was innately Jewish. Those arguments then, were fundamentally rich - with the false assertion that the rich that were making the German people's lives miserable were the rich Jews. When it was really leftover economic malaise from the punative surrender conditions at the end of WWI.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    8. Re:Flamebait? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How stupid are you? The mod *system* is (generally, although certainly stemming from political process, although on /., more an aristocratic one) apolitical. The moderators are not apolitical, and yet here you are stating that they should be. They are certainly not, as humans are political motivated nearly always.

      Just as you were in your post. It's ironic that you are using your mod points (or someone else with mod points) to puff up your own political viewpoint that mod points should not be used to censor. If you were a true trooper, you would reject both the help and reject your own mod points (and post via AC, although not necessarily anonymously).

      Oh, yeah. Before I forget...."Oh, please. Liberal moderators have been bashing what they consider inappropriate on /. ever since the implementation of the mod system."

      Hypocrite.

    9. Re:Flamebait? by mestreBimba · · Score: 1

      I believe the original qutoe from which you are taking your sig is "Nuke a gay whale for Christ!

      --
      Fly Fish? Participate in our forum
    10. Re:Flamebait? by thales · · Score: 2
      " I believe the original qutoe from which you are taking your sig is "Nuke a gay whale for Christ!"

      No the sig is the original, from late 1970's bumper stickers and T-shirts. "No Nukes", "Gay Rights", and "Save the Whales" were the trendy political slogans of the day. The Christian Right had not started to flex it's muscles yet, so they weren't part of the anti-slogan slogan. (Yes I'm that old)

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    11. Re:Flamebait? by ahde · · Score: 2

      alot of them have started adding "jew" to the "rich" epithet. And even more say "rich" with a very conspicuously missing sense of irony.

    12. Re:Flamebait? by ahde · · Score: 2

      Since my great-great grandmother grew up in pre-Nazi Germany (before the Jews were kicked out), I can confidently speak as a definitive authority on the subject and say that those filthy kikes manipulated the rest of the world into believing that they were innocent and unjustly persecuted and that 3000 of those anti-Christs didn't show up to work at the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001.

      Palestinian is not the opposite of Israeli, its the opposite of Zionist.

    13. Re:Flamebait? by ahde · · Score: 2

      and now they say it's the rich Christians (Republicans) as opposed to the rich Atheists (Democrats). Because when they say "the Rich" they mean that minority of the rich that is not politically allied to themselves.

    14. Re:Flamebait? by thales · · Score: 2
      You are omitting the international conspircy, the charge of formenting war for profit and the control of the media.

      The reason I selected the Jews is most people realize that anti-semantic propaganda is hateful, yet the Left is saying many of the same things, so why isn't it classed as hate spaech?

      "The _________ are conspiring to rule the world." Why is it hate speach If I insert "Jews" into the blank, but isn't if I insert "Rich"?

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    15. Re:Flamebait? by antirename · · Score: 1

      Ok, who modded this moron up? Yes, he has a right to free speech. So do I: The PLO is a terrorist organization. They BLOW THINGS UP! Much like the terrorists that flew planes into the trade center. And yes I know its offtopic. Palestian is not the opposite of Israeli, it's the opposite of civilised.

    16. Re:Flamebait? by thales · · Score: 2
      Given the PLO's history of attacking important "military" targets like Olympic Atheletes, kids eating Pizza, Civilian Air liners, and families having a holiday dinner, they are not only Terrorists, but they are beyond a doubt the stupidest terrorists on the face of the Earth. Every time Isreal does something dumb that helps the Palestinian cause you can count on the PLO pulling some barbaric act that replaces any feelings of sympathy for their cause with revulsion.

      If Palestine had a Ghandi they would have an independant country. Instead they follow a murderous thug like Arafat who destroys any chance of acheving an independant country

      Golda Meir summed them up correctly over 30 years ago. They never miss a opertunity to miss a opertunity.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
  233. ummm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    1) wrestling = WWE now
    2) anyone heard of Malthus?

  234. Thank goodness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Being an old fart I was beginning to worry about having to metamoderate for more than another 48 years. (Us old folks actually think about crap like that)

  235. tell us! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I keep hearing people say we have to do this we have to do that, & for about 80% of people, we have no idea how! how can we as people help do our part! Create a book that will help teach us, have the Gov, force us all to take a weekend class! etc. etc. etc. teach us how we can help & understand whats going on, & the future may be a better place!

  236. Cool Rant -- Was Re:Balderdash by Jack+William+Bell · · Score: 2

    Not a bad rant there buddy. I have one moderator point left and I would give it to you if there was a 'Cool Rant' moderation choice...

    OTOH I often find that people who are true believers in natural selection figure that it doesn't apply to *them*. I tend towards that myself. But then my motto is 'Live forever, or die trying'.

    Jack William Bell

    --
    - -
    Are you an SF Fan? Are you a Tru-Fan?
  237. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You're still a moron Canada boy. Stop posting when you have no idea what's going on. The point is still valid that the studies can't take into account everything that's going to happen in the future. And even without genetic manipulation the USA can provide enough food for the whole world. The only reason they don't is because the government pays farm subsidies to keep prices up.

  238. Random comments by Tablizer · · Score: 2

    There is no way that a billion+ people are going to be transported to another planet using today's technology. Colonization will happen gradually and probably by local reproduction.

    (* Experts say that seas will become emptied of fish *)

    Most neurishment comes from farming anyhow, not the sea. Fish-farms are the wave of the future anyhow.

    (* while forests - which absorb carbon dioxide emissions - are completely destroyed *)

    Houses will then be made of bricks and iron.

    BTW, I heard there was a plant that could be turned into paper, and was more productive than tree farming. What ever happened to that?

    (* The study will also reveal a sharp fall in the planet's ecosystems *)

    A changed planet is not necessarily an unlivable one. True, there may be some unpleasentries ahead.

    (* Figures from the centre reveal that black rhino numbers have fallen from 65,000 in 1970 to around 3,100 now. *)

    Humans are doomed because there are no Rhinos or Hippos? How logical. Just put fat chicks over there to replace them. Nobody will know the difference, and there are plenty of them, as the study complains.

    (* The report, which will be unveiled in Geneva, warns that the wasteful lifestyles of the rich nations are mainly responsible for the exploitation and depletion of natural wealth. *)

    Perhaps, but it might also contribute to increased human wealth. Imports to the US keep the world economy going. The dictactors cannot find any other way keep their citizens alive.

    Contribute to the Condum Fund. Besides, why fuss about per-person consumption and not about cranking out humans at incredible rates? Bigots!

    We got our population growth under control, what about you? US men discovered that they don't need to get married to get some booty. (Well, some of them at least.)

    1. Re:Random comments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (* Experts say that seas will become emptied of fish *)

      Most neurishment comes from farming anyhow, not the sea. Fish-farms are the wave of the future anyhow.


      & I guess you have never read anything on fish-farms have you ? because if you have you would know how damaging to the environment it can be!

    2. Re:Random comments by Tablizer · · Score: 2

      (* I guess you have never read anything on fish-farms have you ? because if you have you would know how damaging to the environment it can be! *)

      One person's changing is another's "damaging".

      We may have to learn to "engineer" the environment anyhow. It would be nice if things stayed the same, but with all the babies people are cranking out, I don't think it will last.

      Simple evolution will favor those who have more kids. Sure, being wealthier currently reduces one's chances of having kids, but that can only last so long.

      Kid haters tend not to leave offspring, so there will just be a higher percentage of kid-lovers in the future. Nature didn't really care about that before because people had no real choice-- craving sex was sufficient. But now that we can seperate having sex and making babies, there will be evolutionary pressure favoring those who crank-em-out.

      In some women being pregnant releases endorphines (or similar chemicals). Thus, they actually get high by getting pregnant. A friend of mine has a sister like that. In others, taking care of (their own) kids also creates a high. Darwin is now going to crank these up over time.

      Gonna be fun.

  239. Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by rolofft · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There was a guy in the '70s named Paul Ehrlich who became quite popular making these sames claims: the Earth would be destroyed by pollution and overconsumption before the next century. Ehrlich relied on the same Malthusian theory: that a population growing at a geometric rate would outstrip its resources growing at an arithmetic rate. The thing Ehrlich (and Malthus) didn't consider was human ingenuity. Ehrlich thought we'd all be starved by now; instead we're all too fat for our own good. Sure environmental problems can be devastating and tricky to solve, but the sky is not falling. Humanity enjoys better material conditions now than ever before.

    The best resource for countering doomsayers is the writings of Julian Simon. People who get a perverse pleasure from proclaiming doom hate him. A good introduction to "doomslaying" is Wired Magazine's interview with Julian Simon.

    --

    "Give a man a fish and he will ask for tartar sauce and French fries!"

    1. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "People who get a perverse pleasure from proclaiming doom hate him. "

      People who have any idea how science works don't particularly like Simon. The reason Simon is so popular is that he allows people to think that there are no consequences to their actions, that they can do whatever the hell they please and it's all for the best. Granted, Ehrlich was a little too hasty (just like Malthus), but the simple fact is that we ARE continuing to use resources faster than they are replaced. It doesn't take a genius (just a person with a modicum of intellectual honesty) to realize that that is not sustainable. Even assuming we can continue to support every human being born in terms of food and fresh water, there eventually simply won't be ROOM for all of us. Exponential growth is a bitch, but it's a fact of life. And our ingenuity, as has been amply demonstrated, has led to MORE consumption, not less.

    2. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Got any examples of a country that's exhibited exponential growth for more than a few generations?

      2) There's no shortage of food and fresh water, and there's no prospect of such any time soon.

    3. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by junkgrep · · Score: 2

      Whether or not they have any merit, you're being very dishonest to characterize Simon's arguments in this way. Simon's position is not one of lackadasical "anything goes": but rather on focusing on what he believes to be the right problems: political repression, economic barriers, technology solutions, etc. And his position on resources is NOT that they are infinate: but rather that what is and is not an important resource changes over time, often in response to the quantity available: which quite naturally forces a shift to alternative sources.

    4. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Salsaman · · Score: 2
      It's simple mathematics.

      Malthus claimed that food production increases arithmetically, whereas population increases exponentially. Thus he foresaw a problem occuring.

      However, he didn't consider the effect of technology, which increases as an exponential of an exponential (i.e an exponential increase in the number of scientists, and for each scientist an exponential increase in what they can achieve).

    5. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just nonsense. Humanity is not the same as the American society. The USA is the only part of the earth where people are too fat for their own good.

      This is just the problem right now. The whole world realizes it's time to act, and the Americans are just blinded by the shiny luxury they suck from the rest of the planet, saying 'hey, this is how it works, stop whining about us being too fat/rich/...'.

    6. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1

      Whats wrong with consumption - We have an entire universe to consume. We need more consumption not less.

    7. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by sean23007 · · Score: 2

      Ummm... only the US is too fat for its own good. The citizens of many other countries have to fight for their food, or hope that the doughboys across the Atlantic have the kindheartedness to send some aid packages over that week. The USA consists of ~0.04% of the world's population. I don't think 100% of Americans are too fat for their own good, but I think it's safe to assume that at least as high a percentage of people overseas are in a reciprocally bad situation. Probably 0.04% of people are too fat, and at least 0.04% are too starved.

      Humanity does not enjoy better material conditions than ever before, unless you count humans as only the ones living in the good ol' US of A.

      By the way, I should point out that the sky is not falling, and human ingenuity will win out and make the ingenious fat. But ingenuity cannot just help the one, it harms the other. As one person grows fat, another one or two will starve. Keep that in mind as you wallow in American blindness.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    8. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by colmore · · Score: 2

      Yes, while Malthus and Ehrlich severely underestemated our ability to find new resources, I still think that we're going to run out of material before we run out of people. The world simply cannot support 12 billion people (a common estimate for the population when growth finally levels off) comfortably.

      I doubt we'll completely run out of food, and I doubt we'll start colonizing other planets, but this is going to be an ugly, greedy, overcrowded century.

      --
      In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
    9. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The USA consists of ~0.04% of the world's population

      No, the US holds ~4% of the world's population.

    10. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by brybigs · · Score: 1

      "The world simply cannot support 12 billion people (a common estimate for the population when growth finally levels off) comfortably." I know it's cool to be negative (thanks, Boomers for that bit of legacy). Frankly, I do think we can support 12 billion people pretty easily. In my (short) lifetime, we've gone from 5 to 6 billion people on Earth. And we'll hit 7b soon. I remember reading old textbooks in grade school implying the world would fall apart at 6b (I'm sure inspired by pseudo-scientists like Ehrlich). Let's do some math, shall we? San Fran proper's density/square mile was 15,681 people as of 1997. While not open prarie, SF is hardly some nightmarish sardine can. It's very livable from a density perspecitve. Texas and Alaska have a combined mi^2 of 882K (+/-). Now, this is just an exercise, but in a land mass the size of those 2 states at SF density, you can fit 13.8 billion people. The whole rest of the world could be used to make food if so needed, or to let your favorite animal roam, or for Nascar races, whatever. Point is, we as humans have trouble with big numbers, and we also love to believe in doomsday stories (almost all societies have end of world stories). This is the EOW story for the eco-religion. It's not a land issue. It's not a resource issue. It's a people issue. I'm sure we had starvation in societies of 100K when people decided to fight one another rather than use that human effort productively. And if you look at most areas of starvation, there's a war directly behind it. Now, please bring on the flames...:)

    11. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Got any examples of a country that's exhibited exponential growth for more than a few generations?

      Pretty much every developed natiion has been experiencing exponential growth since the birth of modern medicine, ~250 years ago. It started out slow and has increased in speed, which is what exponential growth does.

      2) There's no shortage of food and fresh water, and there's no prospect of such any time soon.

      Maybe where you live. Where I live we're already fighting for water with larger cities upstream. WE're not the only city in this situation, either.

    12. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't characterize Simon that way, I characterized his proponents that way. The fact of the matter is that we will ALWAYS need fresh water, breathable air, and space. Exponential growth in a closed system is unsustainable in any case, and unless we can come up with some means of cheap teleportation, there's no way that earth will ever be anything other than a closed system. I for one don't have my fingers crossed.

    13. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by crawling_chaos · · Score: 2
      I still think that we're going to run out of material before we run out of people.

      Actually, I agree. I just think it's a hell of a lot farther off than the current crowd of alarmists are saying. No one has ever been able to define the "carrying capacity" of the Earth. Probably because it's a moving target. We couldn't maintain the current population with pre-Green Revolution agriculture.

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
    14. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Humanity enjoys better material conditions now than ever before. Not entirely true. And the "advances" that allow current relative comfort to westernized society result in rampant pollution and probably global warming. It's also fallacious to think the USA can escape the consequences of the "Tragedy of the Commons" for so many reasons: we are susceptible to terrorism, climate change, depletion of natural resources, etc.

    15. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by rolofft · · Score: 1

      John Stuart Mill believed, in the 1800's, that the world was running out of new music. There are only 12 notes in our scale, and every pleasant combination would soon be used up. Mind you, this was before a note of Jazz, Bluegrass, Rock, Rap, or Techno had ever been played.

      Paul Ehrlich thought in the 1970s that Earth's environment would be used up by the end of the 1980s. Guess what? People have continued to create better, cleaner methods of production.

      "The main fuel to speed the world's progress is our stock of knowledge, and the brake is our lack of imagination." - Julian Simon

      "The increase in the world's
      population represents our victory against death..." - Julian Simon.

      --

      "Give a man a fish and he will ask for tartar sauce and French fries!"

    16. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by matthewr84 · · Score: 1

      Eh? Check out the population figures for developed countries. In Japan and in areas of Western Europe, population growth is actually negative. In America, growth is slowing and most of it now comes from minorities. The exponential growth in the world's population actually comes from undeveloped countries, not developed ones. You know, the ones with little access to modern medicine.

    17. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Dr.Diablo · · Score: 1
      Pretty much every developed natiion has been experiencing exponential growth since the birth of modern medicine, ~250 years ago. It started out slow and has increased in speed, which is what exponential growth does.
      I do not know about you, but according to the US Census Bureau, the rate of population growth has been slowing since 1960. From what I've been reading, this has proven true for all developed countries - in fact some are actually in decline and are dependant on immigration to slow/reverse this trend.
      2) There's no shortage of food and fresh water, and there's no prospect of such any time soon.

      Maybe where you live. Where I live we're already fighting for water with larger cities upstream. WE're not the only city in this situation, either.
      As someone else pointed out, the problem is not so much that resources are running out, but rather they are not being distributed to where they are needed. Currently we have the capacity to produce enough food to feed the world's population, but because of human issues (wars/greed) the food cannot get to where the people are.

      The Doctor is Out...(Enlisting in the racks of the Doomslayers!)
    18. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Paul Ehrlich thought in the 1970s that Earth's environment would be used up by the end of the 1980s. Guess what? People have continued to create better, cleaner methods of production."

      Which is why emissions have decreased, right? Oh wait, THEY HAVEN'T. Emissions now are higher than they've ever been, because our technology has NOT kept pace with our expanding consumption. We are burning each gram of fuel cleaner, sure, but we are burning much much more than we ever have before. These new farming methods that those living in denial are so thrilled about are killing enormous numbers of fish and inverts all over the world. We haven't solved a single environmental problem, we've just moved them to where we don't have to look at them any more. Your little aphorsims from Simon's books are ooooohhh so reassuring, given the enormous (>7,000 sq. mi.) anoxic zone off the coast of New Orleans caused by runoff from farms upstream, the new "black zone" in the Gulf of Florida that's likely traceable to sugar farms north of the Everglades, and the skyrocketing incidences of fish tumors and amphibian MUTANTS being found worldwide. Production isn't the problem, it's SUSTAINABLE production that matters.

    19. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by thetman · · Score: 1

      The earth is not a closed system.

    20. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Ummm... only the US is too fat for its own good.
      You sound very USian-trying-to-be-cultured here. The US is not the only country to fat for it's own good. The US does not have the highest GNP. Don't say it is, it's called 1st world country here.

      Second, do you really expect to be taken seriously when you can't even do simple mathematics to accurately compute the US population percentage in regards to the world? 0.04%? Are you nuts? That would mean that the US consists of about 26 million people. That's pretty small.

      Humanity does not enjoy better material conditions than ever before, unless you count humans as only the ones living in the good ol' US of A.

      Yes, humanity is on a whole. Go read a damn book.

      By the way, I should point out that the sky is not falling, and human ingenuity will win out and make the ingenious fat. But ingenuity cannot just help the one, it harms the other. As one person grows fat, another one or two will starve. Keep that in mind as you wallow in American blindness.

      Nice troll, but anyone with half a brain and math skills can see how pointless your arguments are.

      What's worse, American blindness or Blindly thinking Americans are the root of all evil?

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    21. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by pianophile · · Score: 1

      The population of the US is ~4%, not ~.004% (four-thousandths-of-one-percent = only 240,000 people!).

      --

      'Your brain is God.' -- Dr. Timothy Leary
    22. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by pianophile · · Score: 1

      Oops! Parent said .04% not .004%, but that's still wrong.

      --

      'Your brain is God.' -- Dr. Timothy Leary
    23. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by jafac · · Score: 2

      You can estimate the "levelling off" all you want, but nobody yet knows what kinds of innovations or new resources will be discovered - or how that will impact population growth. We could reach a point where there are 24 billion, and a massive plague kill off half because they're starving and living in unsanitary conditions in too close-quarters. We'd level off at 12 billion, but I wouldn't call that comfortable.

      That and any other scenario you can come up with all really come from the same place, and your doctor can put on some rubber gloves and show you that place with a flashlight.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    24. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "As someone else pointed out, the problem is not so much that resources are running out, but rather they are not being distributed to where they are needed. Currently we have the capacity to produce enough food to feed the world's population, but because of human issues (wars/greed) the food cannot get to where the people are."

      And do you think that this is going to magically change? We also have the capacity to deliver all of that food now, and it's not being done. Furthermore, I should go on record as saying I do not agree with the article in question. I think the crisis is probably farther off than that, but it's still inevitable. If growth continues, it is ultimately unsustainable. I'm aware that some countries are showing slower growth rates, but the global situation is not much improved. The slowing of growth of whites in the US is not a decrease in population, and as more people immigrate into the US and take up our consumption patterns, the problem still arises. Resource use doesn't particularly care where the people come from.

    25. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No flames for you, my friend.
      I remember reading in elementary school (1974) a phrase from one of our textbooks: "By the year 2007, the Earth will stagger under the weight of 25 billion people." This s**t was everywhere. So why the WWF? Do they think that if a different voice talks this smack, more people will listen? Let's just see how their donation intake does after mouthing this foolishness.

    26. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Granted there is energy coming in from the sun, but something that most people seem to ignore is that the move into space, even if we were a hundred years more advanced, can't possibly compensate for growth at current rates. Even if population growth stayed at today's rates, we would have to launch just short of 200,000 people into earth each day to counteract births. Do you see any chance of that happening? If you're suggesting that we can bring in resources from space, I personally doubt that will ever be economically feasible. It would require a dirt cheap delivery system, and there is no such thing and no indication of any such thing in the near future.

    27. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by ahde · · Score: 2

      If you wan't to believe the numbers, there are more than half again as many people in the world since the 70's (when they decided the 4 billion number had been reached), and there is at least 4 times as much fossil fuel based production. Not in the US, but in places like China, India, and South America.

    28. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by ahde · · Score: 2

      You mean the ones with nearly infinitely more access to modern medicine than they had just a few years ago? A generation or two ago, Penecillan was a miracle cure in most of the world. And they're jsut learning to piss downstream in some of those countries. HMOs aren't as common yet in India or Nigeria, but there has been more than just a bit of "modern medicine" helping those countries grow.

    29. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod this up!

    30. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by cp99 · · Score: 1

      Likewise in the '70s there was a guy named Julian Simon who became quite popular for making claims that "natural resources have become cheaper rather than more expensive".

      He was so confident about this that he took a bet with David South about the price of Pine Sawtimber, and lost it. David South is now $1000 richer.

      --
      Warning: Some ideologies on the Net are smaller than they appear.
    31. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It started out slow and has increased in speed, which is what exponential growth does.

      No, it hasn't. The developed nations made rapid gains for a while then the population growth stopped.

      That's not continued exponential growth.

      Where I live we're already fighting for water with larger cities upstream.

      Did it ever occur to you to live somewhere else?

      Yeah, if you live in a fucking reconstituted desert (most of the Southwest, a big chunk of Texas, and much of California) water is going to be scarce.

      That's a far cry from a generalized water shortage.

    32. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by sean23007 · · Score: 2

      Which country has a higher GNP? Last time I checked, the US's GNP was like 2x the second highest (China).

      There are still a whole hell of a lot of people living in the world that are living the same way their ancestors were (see: Africa). Unless, of course, AIDS is a modern marvel that we should view as a good thing. Yes, humanity as a whole. That includes the people living outside the US and Europe. A lot of people live in Africa and the Middle East, and they're not all swimming in cash. Go read a damn book. A book, not a comic book, not a magazine: a book. With words, not pictures.

      What's worse, a simple calculator error or a web of lies?

      Half a brain, eh? Sounds like you just volunteered.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    33. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      GNP per capita, actually. Go check out statistics charts, UN economic papers they are readily available. Japan is higher, just for your information. Quite a few other countries are too. You seem to be forgetting all the people in the US that live in poverty too.

      Have you been to Africa? Well, I have. Can't say I liked it much really. I stepped over a corpse that was in the center of a city sidewalk. Looked like it has been there for a few weeks too.

      It's all relative though. I know someone who lives in Morocco who makes $300 a month, and has a really nice apartment. His brother, who has a doctorate and teaches lives a lifestyle that would make 75% of USians green with envy and makes 75% less than they do. Yeah, you gotta live in Morocco to do it, though.

      I've read books. I've seen sights with my own eyes. Try a little harder. I still think you are an absolute idiot. More so since you say that my comment was a "web of lies" without doing the slightest bit of research into it. I'm thinking your web of lies, "The US is the only country too fat for it's own good.", and your calculator error is the worst of all. tsk tsk.

      Funny that Japan has less than half the population that the US does and it's total GNP is 70% of the US. Yeah, the US is sure the pinnacle of it all isn't it?

      Still didn't answer if you were a USian too. Sounding more like one of those green peace equal rights clueless folk.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    34. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by sean23007 · · Score: 2

      Yeah, it is pretty funny that Japan has less than half the population of the US. Actually, I don't get it. And the term GNP is over a decade out of date, so let's go ahead and use the GDP from now on, shall we? I don't know where you got your information that Japan's GDP is 70% that of the US's, because it's really closer to 30%. And the US's GDP per capita is 50% higher than Japan's.

      Why don't you try a little reading? I promise, it won't hurt.

      You, sir, are the idiot. Indeed, I don't know where you got the idea that I ever said "The US is the only country too fat for its own good." You seem to be mistaking me for your ingrained stereotype of "other people." Your precious enemy, the "green peace equal rights clueless folk." My take on the issue, which you would probably know if you'd actually read my previous posts, would actually be closer along the lines of "Just because the US is wealthy, doesn't mean all the other countries are too." If the US has the highest GDP, and the highest GDP per capita, wouldn't it then follow that there are a lot of countries that are poorer than the US? Namely, all of them?

      Funny that you're calling me clueless, but your facts are all wrong. It seems to me that the accuser would be better suited to being accused. (If you didn't catch that one, it means that you're clueless.)

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    35. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Look at other economic sources, and you'll see different numbers. I don't really trust the CIAs figures. Most other sources report the US GDP per capita at approximately $22K (+-$1K). Even so, in the sources you cited I'm not sure how a GDP of $24,900 is 50% of $36,200. You sure do have a problem with big numbers. Have you thought of retaking 6th grade math where they teach percentages?

      Indeed, I don't know where you got the idea that I ever said "The US is the only country too fat for its own good."

      Gee, I don't know where I could have gotten that idea.

      I still stand, I don't care if the US does have the highest GDP per capita, because people here still can't have half what someone else has elsewhere. Short of London where a decent residence to buy is going to cost you well over 500K.

      You've discredited yourself again by not even remembering your own dumbass comment that started this. We've successfully proven you don't have any math skills what so ever, have no memory span, and trust what the CIA tells you in contradiction to a lot of other economic reports.

      Yeah, I'm going to really believe you. At least I know that 36/2 is 18 not 24. And I didn't even have to use a calculator! 48 is a lot different than 36.

      What's worse than clueless Americans? Clueless Americans who think their cultured.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    36. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by sean23007 · · Score: 2

      I didn't say 24 was 50% of 36. I said 36 was 50% higher than 24. Good job, pal. Try actually reading it. 50% of 24 is 12. 24 + 12 = 36. 36 is 50% higher than 24. And I didn't even need a calculator! Get a fucking dictionary.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    37. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Sorry, I guess I assumed it went alon with the rest of what you were saying and was stupid as well. So you made one valid point, to one source of information that is off from other sources.

      At least you didn't try to spew more stupid shit.

      US quality of life is definitely not top. Try travelling around and maybe you'll see that. My guess is you are 15, and your parents wont let you leave your much-disliked country anyway.

      Get a fucking high school education, then go travel.

      I admit, I made one mistake. What's that to your 3. I'll give you a hint, my previous statements were from an economic fact book that was sponsored by the UN. I'm sure they have a website, go look it up.

      Anyway, if that's all you can say: YHL. HAND.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    38. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by neocon · · Score: 1
      So let's get this straight: you can't do basic math, you can't spell, you insist loudly that you `don't trust the website' of anyone whose basic, well-documented statistics don't back your worldview, and you want us to believe that Sean23007 is the `stupid' one here?

      Bzzzt, thanks for playing.

      And while we're on the subject, if you're so sure that the US does not have the world's best standard of living, perhaps you'll tell us your criteria. The citizens of the US have the honor of living in the most free, the most democratic, and the most prosperous nation on the face of the Earth. Where are you arguing that they should prefer to live?

    39. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Uh, I can do basic math. I can even do advanced math, all the way into multivariable calculus. Please find a spelling error I made as well, and my math error previously wasn't one in math -- it was assuming his stupid comments carried on and progressed.

      Well-documented statistics that don't back my worldview? No, that isn't it. I'm more trusting in the UN Fact Book which has different well-documented statistics. I didn't say I don't trust the CIA Worldbook, I just trust the UN a bit more than an agency that is known for skewing facts and statistics to better suit it's agenda. It's not tin-foil conspiracy, it's just the way life goes.

      The citizens of the US have the honor of living in the most free, the most democratic, and the most prosperous nation on the face of the Earth. Where are you arguing that they should prefer to live?

      Maybe you missed Sean's retarded comment of, "Only the US is too fat for it's own good." That's what started this, not freedom or democracy. Standards of living is a touchy subject, because it all goes onto whose standards one is talking about. Thanks for changing the subject, if you don't have anything to do with this thread (Which you don't as it seems, because you were not aware of the original topic of the thread (Fatness of US)) why are you commenting? Are you Sean's locker mate or something?

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    40. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by neocon · · Score: 1
      Interesting. You `trust more' a group which names Syria, China, and the Sudan to it's human rights committee? Well, I guess it takes all types...

      At any rate, perhaps you can post a link to whatever part of the UN Fact Book you feel disagrees with the cited statistics?

      As for the larger thread, I happen to feel the idea of `too fat for their own good' is just silly -- it stems from a basic misunderstanding of how economics works, namely the mistake of considering economics as a zero-sum game. Arguing that the US is not the fattest in the world is even sillier though, as even a basic look at the statistics will show you.

    41. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      As for the larger thread, I happen to feel the idea of `too fat for their own good' is just silly -- it stems from a basic misunderstanding of how economics works, namely the mistake of considering economics as a zero-sum game. Arguing that the US is not the fattest in the world is even sillier though, as even a basic look at the statistics will show you.

      I never said that the US is not the fattest. I'm arguing it's "own good" and the fact other nations don't need as much to live a much more extravagant and posh life.

      Defining the fatness of a nation as it's GDP is pointless, because there are a great number of other economic factors that relate to the actual quality of life. I think that the reason why the US is perceived as too fat for it's own good does not rely at all on the GDP or any other economic factors, but the corporate ethics and government buy-in programs that senators and congressmen love so much.

      As for the factbooks, it seems the CIA is estimate for 1999. The figures I'm looking at are 2001 est. I can't find a link online, but I doubt the changes from 1999 and 2001 are as drastic as the deficit between the figures. Maybe my source is wrong, I don't really know. Statistics can be skewed by whoever is writing or reading them. That's the wonderful thing about them.

      As for the UN appointing Syria, China, and the Sudan to it's human rights committee, why not? Is it not better to have both sides on a committee? What's wrong in one persons eyes is acceptable in another. Education, and compromise can make the world a better place -- not forcing other people to converge to your way of life. I do not agree with sweatshops, ethnic cleansing, and all that. Then again, what they do in their country is their business. If they don't want it, have a bloody revolution or a democratic reformation. The masses can win, the US did it as did many other nations. I have no sympathy for countries that support a government they hate so much. Sacrifice yourself for the good of the whole, if you believe in the cause.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    42. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by neocon · · Score: 1
      Again, I welcome you to provide links to any credible sources from the UN or anyone else which contradict what the statistics in the CIA factbook say. I would point out though that the US exceeds all other nations by many more measures than GDP -- try pre-tax income, post-tax income (median or mean in either case), consumption per capita, you name it.

      As for `hearing both sides', one need only look at the stated aims of the UNHRC to see the absurdity of listening to `both sides'. In a committee allegedly dedicated to basic human rights, it is not sensible to hear the pro-human rights and anti-human rights side, as only one of these sides is in line with the aims of the comission, and the presence of the other undermines any credibility the comission may have held.

      And finally, `what's wrong in one person's eyes is acceptable in [those of] another' tells us nothing. Some things are right and some are wrong. If the UN did not at least in principle believe that the types of torture, murder, and denial of liberty practiced in China, Syria, and the Sudan are unacceptable, they would not have a human rights committee in the first place. To have such a committee, and then place such nations on it is simply hypocrisy of the worst sort.

    43. Re:Paul Ehrlich vs. Julian Simon by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      As for `hearing both sides', one need only look at the stated aims of the UNHRC to see the absurdity of listening to `both sides'. In a committee allegedly dedicated to basic human rights, it is not sensible to hear the pro-human rights and anti-human rights side, as only one of these sides is in line with the aims of the comission, and the presence of the other undermines any credibility the comission may have held.

      Wrong -- it is important to hear the sides of those who you are trying to change. If you think that a lot of these human right violators think that they are doing something wrong, you really need to open your eyes. A lot of cases, the people doing the sweat shop work and child laborists getting beaten in the back room, these people are disliked minorities. You wouldn't see them as people, only as tools. How can tools have rights? In order to solve a problem, you must understand all the variables. The countries you list have a very good place on the committee.

      "Consequences dictate our course of action and it doesn't matter what's right. It's only wrong if you get caught."

      Placing nations that violate basic human rights on the committee is not hypocrisy. What you view as right, I view as acceptable. When is murder justified? What would drive you to murder? Why is it murder when you kill one, but a war when you kill millions? If you can get the worst countries on the committee, and convince them, as well as educate, that they are wrong than the goal is achieved. Not giving these countries a chance to speak, or listen, to what goes on in the committee, but only handing mandates for them to cease the way they've done things for the duration of the people in charges lifespan is not the way to go about it. That will result in hostile conflicts.

      Did you know in Morocco it is illegal to take a picture of a member of the military? You go to jail for that. Does that make sense? It does to them. I had an AK-47 pointed at my head and was one step away from being shot for hiking and stumbling across the king's beach house. That's there version of a no tresspassing sign. A lot of things in the world don't make sense to outsiders. Racists aren't wrong in their hate because that is what they were raised with, right? Well, go tell them that they are wrong. I'm sure they will listen with open minds.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  240. A *REALLY* large grain of salt needed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Human consumption has doubled over the last 30 years and continues to accelerate by 1.5 per cent a year."

    First the obvious stuff: So has total human population. Control the rate of increase of population, and you control the rate of increase of consumption.

    "America's consumption 'footprint' is 12.2 hectares per head of population compared to the UK's 6.29ha while Western Europe as a whole stands at 6.28ha. In Ethiopia the figure is 2ha, falling to just half a hectare for Burundi, the country that consumes least resources."

    The numbers don't work out.

    Information from CIA World Fact Book (area in hectares), except for the Guardian's claimed "footprint", which was apparently pulled out of someone's oriface:

    Claimed Arable Irrigated
    Country Footprint Land Land

    US 12.20 174,020,240 20,700,000
    UK 6.29 6,120,500 108,000
    Ethiopia 2.00 13,436,196 190,000
    Burundi 0.50 1,128,600 14,000

    Thomas Malthus at least had believable numbers...

    For extra points, multiply the population of the US by 12.20 to get the number of hectares the Guardian claims the US actually requires; divide by 100 to get Kilometers:

    21.20 * 278,058,881 / 100 = 33,923,184 ... or roughly 3.5 times the area of the US itself.

    Any guesses as to whether the numbers manufacturered by the guardian really represent percentage of total land divided by GWP (Gross World Product) multiplied by GDP for each of the nations?

    Seems to me it's a measure of the distribution of wealth, rather than a distribution of resources. Resoruces don't equal wealth. If they did, Ehtiopians should have a standard of living about twice that of the UK, right?

    -- Terry

    1. Re:A *REALLY* large grain of salt needed... by darthCodex · · Score: 1

      Judging by the fact that most americans are overweight these days, I'm not so sceptical about these numbers ;-)

      And where do you think the US's tradedeficit originates from? The US imports much more than it exports, so why not food? Even so, 3,5 times the area of the US itself is a bit overdone.

      --
      Supplies!
  241. your lack of concern is incredible by Foxone · · Score: 1

    First things first: It IS known for a fact is that many species are dying and becoming extinct. The WWF is a non-profit organisation, they are not in this to make money but to preserve the earth for future generations. They are not doing this to get more funding and if there wasn t a problem, they would not be there in the first place. Also if there were no more threat to wildlife anymore the WWF would just close and they would be happy about it. but nowadays most of the population doesn t give a Marsbar about extinction. People are not sensible enough about the global effect that we are having on the world. I once went to see a friend working at the London zoo. he showed me the last of a species of rare frogs. two weeks later that specie was extinct, they couldn t save it and even if it was a freaking frog I felt bad having witnessed its extinction. Anyway, I am not going to spend too much time on this but any of you who sincerely say that there isnt any problem with species becoming rapidly extinct in the last 50 years because of us is an idiot...period. You can use all the sarcasm you want but Endangered species are a fact and any organisation that fights to preserve diversity on the planet is good. i for one want my granchildren to be able to see a living tiger, not a picture of one in a book.

    1. Re:your lack of concern is incredible by money_shot · · Score: 1

      I figure we'll just engineer some new animals when we need them.

    2. Re:your lack of concern is incredible by rogerz · · Score: 1

      The WWF is a non-profit organisation, they are not in this to make money but to preserve the earth for future generations.


      There are many egregious errors in your post, but this is perhaps the most naive statement therein. What the WWF and other enviro organizations are after is: <b> power </b>. They want the power to control my life (and yours, by the way), through coercion. Also, their staffers get paid; don't let the "non-profit" misnomer mislead you into thinking they're working for free.

      --
      If humans are mostly water, and beer is mostly water, then humans must be mostly beer.
    3. Re:your lack of concern is incredible by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 1
      The WWF is a non-profit organisation, they are not in this to make money but to preserve the earth for future generations.

      You mean that none of the top executives of the WWF make any money? Wow, you could have fooled me!

      quote:

      World Wildlife Fund president, Kathryn Fuller, was $241,000.
  242. WWF's real problem is biodiversity loss by Bob+Violence · · Score: 1
    It's a shame that the WWF report comes to such an absurd conclusion, because their actual concern--the loss of biological resources, i.e., wild habitat and wildlife species--is a serious problem.

    As the report points out, many species have declined precipitously over the last century or so, and if this trend continues, a lot of wildlife is headed for extinction. In addition to the rhinos, elephants, birds, and fisheries mentioned in the article, the numbers of many African primates have gone down dramatically, to the extent that some have predicted populations of chimpanzees and gorillas may be at non-viable levels within 5-15 years. (Also try a google search for "bushmeat"; another good site for more general conservation issues is conservation.org.)

    Does this mean that humans are going to go extinct? I doubt it. I'm pretty sure that we could wipe out most of the wildlife on the planet and still support human life. However, I doubt that many people want to live in that world. I sure don't. The WWF could get a lot of support, probably more support, by highlighting the problem of species loss without claiming that the world will end if we don't colonize Alpha Centauri. [Although that does mean we get a space race victory.]

  243. Which people? by fredistheking · · Score: 0

    The article has nothing to do with the amount of fossil fuels we will have in the future. Like you said, many, if not most, scientist's don't see us running out of fossil fuels any time soon, however, this is part of the problem. The large supply of these fuels will only help to accelerate the rate at which the environment is affected. Oh yeah, the article is about the human impact on wildlife, hence the WWF. It is hard to doubt that the numbers of certain species are dropping. There are many people here whom would like to avoid the real questions such as what do we really want panda bears and fresh water fish or cheaper consumer goods and bigger engines.

  244. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by rbook · · Score: 1

    Sure, lots of complicated factors go into determining an individual's weight. But access to enough food is a necessary (though not sufficient) condition for being fat.

    In the past, not all rick people were fat, but practically no poor people were. I once saw in an early 20th-century book, "skinny" given as an antonym for "rich." In those days, a poor portson who was lazy would be in danger of starvation, not fat.

    (BTW, I wish I could eat 30% less than you an weight only 30% more!)

  245. Liberal's Delimma... by ClarkEvans · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is the classic Liberal's delimma. The liberal screams and shouts that something is very wrong -- people open there eyes a bit and things get quite a bit better. Then the conservatives come along later and say: "Gee, the liberal was wrong, see we're ok now."

    About 15 years ago I remember the "Skeptical Environmentalists" saying that the temperature of the earth won't even go up one degree by 2050. Well. It appears as if they are wrong. In some parts (the artic regions) we are anywhere from 4 to 7 degrees warmer. As I remember, it may have even been Julian who made these predictions (or who re-quoted them).

    It's clear that we are seeing an acceleration in global warmth which is going to dramatically change our climate (and is doing so as we speak). What are you going to do about it? Close your eyes and say that we humans will adapt? Do you have that much faith in technology... I don't. How can you be sure it doesn't warm even faster?

    I don't know about you, but I'd rather err on the "conservative" side of things and take action now rather than wait till it becomes a crisis. No?

    1. Re:Liberal's Delimma... by thales · · Score: 2
      The Earth's history shows many periods of warming and cooling. In the middle ages the Vikings had a thriving colony in Greenland. Historic records show Wine being produced in areas of England where grape cultivation is impossible today. European records show crops being harvested at altitudes where they won't grow today. It was WARMER 750 years ago than it is today, WARMER despite the fact that CO2 emissions were far lower than they are today.

      Then the little ice age, a period of global cooling begain. The viking colony died out. The shorter growing season coupled with the poor transportation system of the 1300's resulted in local cases of famine. Glacers started to advance placing villages in their path in danger.

      This period of cooling was a natural phenomia that continued well into the 1600s. Then the cooling era ended and a warming era begain. This is the present warming peroid. It started BEFORE the industrial revoulation.

      Now the Eco movement has selected a random tempature from a peroid when the Earth hadn't recovered from the effects of the little ice age and declared that the "normal" tempature, and any variation from their self serving "normal" tempature to be the work of us "evil" humans.

      Sorry it's pure junk scince based an arbitrary selection of a tempature as "normal". There is no normal tempature, just natural cycles of warming and cooling eras.

      Now it is possible that the greenhouse emissions MAY be accelrating the rate of warming during an otherwise natural warming era, but an old concept of real scince comes into play. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. The backers of the global warming scare refuse to even accept the natural warming cycle, let alone provide any proof that humans are affecting it.

      Sorry the idea of disrupting the Global economy in an effort to reverse a natural warming cycle is absurd and the effort is futile. Disrupting the economy because himans MIGHT be affecting the natural cycle without a shread of proof is as absurd as disrupting the economy to construct an elaborate defense system because of the equaly unproven claim that visits from alien spacecraft are occuring.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    2. Re:Liberal's Delimma... by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      The thing is, the temperature has rised 7 degrees where it's warmer anyway, not the caps, so when it gets even warmer, the caps will eventaully feel it.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    3. Re:Liberal's Delimma... by Plonk · · Score: 1
      In some parts (the artic regions) we are anywhere from 4 to 7 degrees warmer

      Try taking measurements over a more reliable timescale to measure global climactic changes.

      1000 years might do it.

  246. sustainable population is not by drwho · · Score: 1

    humans are so stupid. Time and time again we'll be at the brink of famine because of overpopulation, and some genius will find a way to make life better, feed us all, etc....and then we'll reproduce until the NEXT breaking point. The cycle begins again. Stupidity.

    What we need is a massive campaign to wipe out short sightedness. I suggest a reverse lottery: you go to the covenience store, stick your hand in a device that will most likely give you a dollar (or a pack of cigarettes, or a shot of heroin), but there's a one in a 500,000 chance that you will be killed on the spot.

    That should help with overpopulation pretty quickly. for only $500,000 per head. But less, really, if you count the damage that the cigarettes do.

  247. And this affects me how??? by Pedrito · · Score: 2

    This is the question anyone will ask. Nobody cares about the world their kids will grow up in (okay, I'm not speaking for all the responsible parents on Slashdot), but really, people don't care. Their kids will, sure as shit. My kids will care. Their world will be going to shit and I and my generation will be largely responsible.

    Show me how to get others of my generation to take responsibility and fix this mess. Otherwise, you're wasting my time with and OLD issue.

  248. Earth not set to expire until 06-Jun-2003 by tlambert · · Score: 2

    It turns out that all this fuss is over nothing... it seems that it was just Verisign sending out another one of those fradulent "renewal notices". You think people would have learned to read the fine print on the back, by now...

    -- Terry

  249. no, not 50 or 5000 years, try 10-30 years by El+Puerco+Loco · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually, this is going to happen, and sooner than most people think. Points 1 and 2 in the above post are simply wrong, and point 3 may be irrelevant. First of all, fuel efficiency, although it roughly doubled since 1975, mostly because manufacturers reduced engine sizes, has been slowly but steadily decreasing in the U.S. since 1987.

    As for the claim that more fuel is being found, it is simply not true. Oil discovery peaked in 1960 and has been steadily declining ever since. The current rate of consumption exceeds new discovery by a margin of 3:1 and demand is increasing at a rate between 2 and 3 percent every year. New technology does not solve this problem, at a certain point the laws of thermodynamics kick in and standard economic paradigms fail. at some point, it takes more energy to recover the oil than the oil contains. after that, there is no longer any point in trying to recover more oil.

    In 1956 a geologist named M. King Hubbert published his prediction that U.S. Oil production would peak by 1970. Most people in the petroleum industry ridiculed him, but he was right. Oil production in the U.S. has been declining since 1970, Dr. Hubbert was spot-on in his predicition. Recently Dr. Hubbert's theory has been applied to estimated worldwide reserves. One study estimates that global oil production will peak by 2010. This study has also taken some heat from the establishment, but even if you accept the most wildly optimistic estimates of the people doing the ridiculing, peak oil production is only pushed 20-30 years into the future. After the peak, production declines every year, until it becomes uneconomical to produce more oil. When production peaks, demand will exceed supply permanently, a situation that will get worse every year from then on. For a good example of what happens to prices when demand for a commodity exceeds supply, check out the prices for real balsamic vinegar these days. Prices would skyrocket so quickly that the average person would no longer be able to afford to run a vehicle, not even a hybrid one.

    What about alternative fuels and energy sources? What about them? they aren't being developed. politicians pay lip service to alternative energy, and cut funding. We don't need them right now, oil prices are still cheap. The killer here is that oil prices stay cheap, right up until it becomes clear that production is decreasing. after that oil prices climb. So does the price of everything else. Suddenly, the economy is too weak to support the development of other energy sources, even if we wanted to.

    What about coal? there's like 1000 years worth of coal left. What about natural gas? Well, the 700 million automobiles in the world today don't run on coal or natural gas. neither do the airplanes and railroads. and neither does the equipment used to mine and transport the coal and natural gas. heh heh.

    Our economy is based on oil. in a very real sense, at this point in human history oil is food. oil is everything. and it's running out. there is no good substitute for it, and we don't seem all that interested in finding one. we're all gonna die. really. it's probably too late already, so no point in worrying about it now.

    1. Re:no, not 50 or 5000 years, try 10-30 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well first off, fuel cells are real. They do work. They are in use in cars now. None of teh cars have been mass produced yet, mainly because oil is still cheap. Secondly, we have been able to produce fuel from sugar, corn and hemp since henry ford's time. If fuel cells NEVER became practical we could still use coal and natural gas and simply use ethanal from corn or hemp to power the machines that could not run off coal or gas.

    2. Re:no, not 50 or 5000 years, try 10-30 years by El+Puerco+Loco · · Score: 1

      fuels cells are not magic, they require hydrogen. hydrogen requires slightly more energy to produce than it contains. at best it is a means of storing energy produced by burning fossil fuels or nuclear, solar, wind, hydro, whatever it's not an energy source. ethanol is even worse. it takes 70% more energy to produce ethanol than it contains. and every acre used to grow biomass fuels is an acre that cannot be used for food production.

    3. Re:no, not 50 or 5000 years, try 10-30 years by cp99 · · Score: 1

      hydrogen requires slightly more energy to produce than it contains.

      Minor anal correction...

      Hydrogen realeases exactly the same amount of energy as what it takes to produce it. It's just that we can't use all of the energy that it produces.

      --
      Warning: Some ideologies on the Net are smaller than they appear.
    4. Re:no, not 50 or 5000 years, try 10-30 years by Hittite+Creosote · · Score: 1

      re: the railroads. Maybe your statement applies to the Americas, but Europe has a lot of electrified lines, so they probably are running on electricity generated from coal or natural gas.

    5. Re:no, not 50 or 5000 years, try 10-30 years by El+Puerco+Loco · · Score: 1

      right, but if you're producing it by electrolysis, you need a source for the electricity. if that's coming from a coal plant, well, the best coal fired power plants are about 75% efficient. if the electricity comes from wind or OTEC (solar is really totally inadequate for large scale production at this point, and probably always will be) efficiency is less of a problem, but generating capacity isn't as great as with coal or nuclear. so in reality, you're always going to end up with a net loss.

    6. Re:no, not 50 or 5000 years, try 10-30 years by moogla · · Score: 2

      No really, it takes slightly more energy to remove the covalent bonds from hydrogen then the energy released when it forms those bonds (though the difference is tiny). I think the reason is buried in quantum mechanics. Anyone care to correct me?

      --
      Black holes are where the Matrix raised SIGFPE
    7. Re:no, not 50 or 5000 years, try 10-30 years by cp99 · · Score: 1

      Are you sure about this?

      I'm doing a PhD in chemistry, and have never heard of this. Are you sure that you aren't getting some of the 2nd law of thermodynamics mixed into this?

      If somebody else knows, more information would be great.

      --
      Warning: Some ideologies on the Net are smaller than they appear.
  250. Jesus H. Christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At this rate, this thread might expire by 2050.

  251. Encourage this meme even if you don't believe it by alizard · · Score: 2
    This presupposes you think that colonization and exploitation of Solar System resources is a good idea.

    Moving heavy industry off earth would make it possible to turn this planet into a garden.

    An space business infrastructure means it will be possible for ordinary people to go to space, meaning there will be jobs up there for everything from network admins to fry cooks.

    The US "powers that be" aren't going to move by themselves on cleaning up the environment or space colonization, given that the horizon of the CEO of a publically traded company is next quarter's financial results.

    Encouraging public panic and channeling it into towards the solution that the WWF (WORLD WILDLIFE FUND!!!) apparently thinks impossible might actually work in getting some money thrown at the technological problems that mostly remain to be solved with respect to space industrialization.

  252. Ignorant peasants.. by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 0



    I remember when I was in Junior High, we were shown a old, yellowed film from made in the 1950's on non-renewable resources. I only remember it because of this dumbassed claim:

    "The world's supply oil supply will only sustain us for another 30 YEARS." ....And the film was older than that!

    There is no "energy crisis", kids. A greed crisis, yes, but not an energy crisis. Were not going to use up all the oil, we're not going to die because of the ozone layer, and asteroids arent going to fall out of the sky and kill us. Nuclear reactors wont burn a hole into the center of the earth, your main isnt infected with anthrax, your antibiotics wont cease to be effective, global warming wont drown us, and you're not going to catch a fucking flesh-eating virus. You'de think that science would have allowed the world to realize when they're running around like scared chickens, ignorant peasants in a medieval tapestry that blame cats for the plague.

    --
    Bowie J. Poag

    1. Re:Ignorant peasants.. by shilly · · Score: 1

      Christ on a bike. I understand your main point, but your details are pretty inaccurate. Antibiotic resistance is a very large and very rapidly growing problem across the world and is killing many people every day. While necrotising fasciitis (flesh-eating disease) is unlikely to kill you, HIV is reducing life expectancy across Africa to rates not seen since the 19th century, and Strep A (which is the cause of flesh-eating disease) is a huge killer, responsible for scarlet fever and rheumatic fever. Less than a hundred years ago, influenza killed between 20 and 40m people, more than had died in the first world war. Microbes thrive in a huge range of circumstances and are opportunistic, exploiting change wherever possible. Infectious disease remains the world's number one killer and will do so for the foreseeable future. While improvements in technology, both low (eg sanitation) and high (eg sterile conditions in hospital theatres) will help, other changes will lead to the increased spread of disease (travel and urbanisation are particularly important) and it is important to remember that we are engaged in an evolutionary arms race with bugs--i.e., fighting disease is a continuing process, not a one-off that you can "win".

    2. Re:Ignorant peasants.. by shilly · · Score: 1

      One additional fact I forgot to mention: the 1918 'flu pandemic saw the infection of one fifth of the entire world. It was bigger than any previous pandemic, and the trend remains in upwards, not downwards direction.

  253. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by vectra14 · · Score: 1

    except for the people in africa that are eating as little as ever and plus dying by millions of aids and molaria

  254. hard won A by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I was lucky enought to have a cool enough History teacher that I got an "A" for my treachery" ...and alienated your classmates and spent the next three (?) years of your life flogging the dolphin. ..and most geeks wonder why they're disliked. Your misanthropic behavior in history class probably mirrors your misanthropic behavior in the rest of your life.

    Sheesh.

    1. Re:hard won A by pumkinut · · Score: 1

      OOOOOOOOHHH, you really cut him to the quick didn't you?

      Jesus, get a life. Because he showed some ingenuity and problem solving skills you think he's some kind of monster. Where, in your small little mind, do you get to judge him by the actions taken in a high school class of all places. Maybe he saw the futility of the exercise and decided to play the ame better than everybody else. This automatically makes him a bad person? Grow up and perform some self-examination before cutting on people for actually engaging their brain.

      --
      "It's hard to be a man when there's a gun in your hand"
  255. Earth to expire in 2050? by hkhanna · · Score: 1

    In other news, the .Earth zone was found to have its $TTL set a few billion years early and will expire in 2050, leaving billions of authoritative slave servers querying the soon to be lamely-delegated master .Earth zone for a massive update of the .Earth domain. This will overrun our current DNS infrastructure. Al Gore, creator of the internet, stated that, "this is quite opportune as it will force everyone to update to LDAP, a brand new protocol I have just released."

    ICANN was not available for comment citing international security and the terrorist threat.

    --

    Think nothing is impossible? Try slamming a revolving door.
  256. creation scientists by Servo · · Score: 1

    Creation Scientists aren't scientists, their religous nuts pretending to be scientists so they can pass nonsense as fact.

    --
    A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
  257. Win - Win situation... by 0rx · · Score: 0


    Either humans learn how to decrease their populations (mostly through programs which give the entire world the equvalent to first-world status, thereby eliminating the need and ignorance causing people in third world nations to have kids) and learn how to utilize other forms of energy (instead of allowing right-wing oil companies to destroy alternative energy innovations), or humans die off in great numbers and possibly become extinct, allowing the planet to recover.
    What it seems like people are failing to realize during these times is that the Earth is more important than all of us combined, especially because all life we know of depends on it's balance.

  258. The article ignores technology by hoffmang · · Score: 1

    Wackernagel's research which this is all based on doesn't take into consideration the rate of increase in effeciency that technology has and continues to create in production and utilization of resources.

    For an in depth look, read this rebuttal at Reason Online.

    I find it more than ironic that this forum misses the fact that technology is the enabling factor that makes this argument specious.

  259. Laughable stupidity by Ogerman · · Score: 2

    You know what's most ridiculous and illogical about these types of predictions? They assume that technology does not or can not change. And in fact, they don't even look at current technological developments. In 25 years, let alone 50, almost everyone will be driving a fuel-cell based or other non-polluting vehicle. Roofing tiles and mirror windows will be commonly made of ultra-cheap photovoltaic cells, supplying 30% or more household energy needs. Photonic computers will be so small that they'll require only miniscule amounts of resources to produce and negligible energy to run. More people than ever will work at home thanks to massive telecommunications advancements, 3D immersion technologies, etc. Paper will be nearly forgotten. Materials research will have replaced most of todays use of wood and steel with a diverse assortment composite and organic plastics. Advances in agricultural science, such as hydroponics, combined with a growing desire for organic foods will multiply the efficiency of production by at least an order of magnitude. At long last (mostly due to computer modelling), we will figure out human dietary science once and for all, quickly transforming the American diet into one with lower intake, greater nutrition, and paradoxically greater enjoyment. The same advances will carry over to properly feeding nearly all of the world, albeit with less emphasis on taste. Who says the world's gonna end in 50 years because of resource shortage? Not I. Although there are other issues that may render the same effect. See Revelation for vague details. (-:

    1. Re:Laughable stupidity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "fuel-cell based or other non-polluting vehicle" will be made how and from what?
      The "ultra-cheap photovoltaic cells" will be made how and from what?
      The "Photonic computers" will be made how and from what?
      Plastics come from where and what?

      "we will figure out human dietary science once and for all, quickly transforming the American diet into one with lower intake, greater nutrition, and paradoxically greater enjoyment"

      This is a joke right? You seriously think that certain high street fast food chains will allow this?

      "The same advances will carry over to properly feeding nearly all of the world, albeit with less emphasis on taste" and become eye sores on every high street.

      You really don't see anything beyond your PC screen and mp3 player do you? Technology changes nothing except how we perceive quality of life and that is usually achieved at the cost of nature when you bother to look further than what's in the shopping malls.

      Don't get me wrong, technology does many great things for US. But to say that it will solve all our future ecological problems is like saying that the dotcom bubble will never burst.

    2. Re:Laughable stupidity by money_shot · · Score: 1

      Bullshit.

      Technology has solved many problems. For example, it has starved the problem of starving. Now the problem is getting the food where it's needed.

      The car solved transportation problems in the US. Shortly, completely new designs will reduce direct pollution to 0 (with manufacturing and electricity production still being a problem.) Before 50 years, we'll have working nana and fusion.

      Think it won't happen? That's what nearly everyone said about every tech gadget in your life and most major discoveries.

    3. Re:Laughable stupidity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The solution to starvation comes at no cost to our biosphere? It will not change nature? Of course it will and nature changes all the time but this is a forced change imposed by man, the consequences of which are unpredictable.

      "Now the problem is getting the food where it's needed." and that will be done how and by what?

      "The car solved transportation problems in the US" and you or others never sit in traffic jams wasting fuel and pumping crap into the atmosphere.

      "with manufacturing and electricity production still being a problem." think further on these lines and investigate deeper to finally make that penny drop.

      "That's what nearly everyone said about every tech gadget in your life and most major discoveries" so where's my matter transporter and warp speed light cycle?

      So far technology consists mainly of computer power, that's what gadgets as YOU understand them are about. How many millions did Nasa spend and how much palnetary resource was wasted developing the space pen and what was the Russians solution... a pencil.

      How much does it cost (in ecological terms) to develop these technologies and how many such projects (that we never hear of mostly) fail wasting huge amounts of resources in the process?

    4. Re:Laughable stupidity by scaryman · · Score: 0

      the food problem could have been solved a long time ago but it wasn't , why? it is not profitable?
      we could easily make transport cleaner and more efficent but there is no profit in that, most people don't care how much there car pollutes.
      do you remember the prodictions that nuclear power would lead to everyone haveing free electricity?
      nuclear power is the most expensive way of producing electricity.
      advances in technology can solve many problems, but the economics and politics stop most of them.
      then we get people who just stick there heads in the sand or say it's allright, i don't have to do anything, someone else will do it for me.

  260. Food Supply and Population Growth by crulx · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Many of the slashdotter's responses scare me. We have strange arguments about carrying capacity that don't understand that you can OVERSHOOT the carrying capacity by a long shot, through environmental destruction. We have arguments about simply needing more energy, as if we do not require the other life forms on the planet to maintain our oxygen, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, water, and a million other biosystems that keep us alive. We have discussions on the first worlds slowing population with assurances that everything will just work itself out when the third world "grows up" which ignore basic scientific law on the subject of population growth.

    I will list what I know of population dynamics, in order to show you my point of view.

    1. Humans beings belong to the animal family. We obey laws of population dynamics like all other animals. That we can effect the situation to take better advantage of biological laws doe not make us immune to their effects.
    2. All animals have a population size that food supply appears as a principal functor. Any "win" on the amount of food produces a "win" in the population size. "You are what you eat" does not only have meaning as a cliché. It speaks a truth about animal populations. The more we have to eat, the more of us we can make.
    3. Through our agricultural processes, we have embarked a journey of converting all biomass into human and food for humans. We did this by denying our competition any food. Chickens must live so foxes must die. Cows must live so wolves must die. Corn must live so bugs must die. We currently consume about 200 species a day to make room for humans and food for humans.
    4. Each year, on average, we produce more food. Each year, on average, we had more children. Our outlook on Nature as an infinite resource meant for human taming covered up the dynamic nature that species depend on each other.
    5. We require several biosystems to survive. We need oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen to form our atmosphere and grease the wheels of us and other life forms we depend on for food. We need dense plant cover to prevent erosion and facilitate temperate climates. We require fungus and bacterial systems to dispose of waste. Without these systems, we will not survive.
    6. The only variable of the food/population cycle that we have the strongest control over seems like the food side. Extra food always brings a win on the population side, if not where the food grew then where that food got shipped.
    7. Thus to reduce the human population in order to stop the consumption of our life support biosystems, we must produce less food.

    Even if a 50-year limit seems like an alarmist position, many conservative scientists agree that 100 years looks like the maximum timeframe. Change must happen quickly for us to save a habitat that humanity can live in.

    Some possible research materials for you:

    http://www.ku.edu/~hazards/foodpop.pdf

    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/10/011 02 6074943.htm


    http://www.ishmael.com/Education/Science/

    ---
    Jt
    crulx@iaxs.net

  261. Nah... by Any+Web+Loco · · Score: 1

    We're sweet. The expiry date on the bottom of the packet says July 3050 - heaps of time! Best before date says September 1550 though - bit worrying.

  262. Re:Easy solution: but wrong by Servo · · Score: 1

    See, the problem with using "modern farming methods" is that they end up causing an upward cycle of utilization. It gets to a point that you end up spending more to produce than you are getting back. That is why so many independant farmers are going out of business these days. They can't afford the increased cost of having to put a little more fertilizer on each year, and having to upgrade to the latest farm tractor, etc etc. Not only that, but it ends up burning the land out, causing massive erosion and other problems, causing less and less production.

    I don't buy into the WWF's doomsday warning, but I do think that we shouldn't just ignore all environmentalist reasoning. We ARE causing damage to the earth. Can we stop the impact? Not unless we cease to exist. But if we can do our best to highten the quality of life for every living thing on earth, why not? It pisses me off that people have to be one extreme or another.. neither helps us in the long run.

    --
    A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
  263. I can't wait! by 0rx · · Score: 0


    Although there are some aspects of Patty's book that can be seen as scared right-wing christian paranoia (the same thing can be said of some of the literature from white supremicist groups reporting the population increases of Black and Latino Americans), most of what Patty's pointed out can be considered promising, as long as it can be seen without taking all the conservative negatively-perceived events to heart. He makes it seem like th demographic change in the US and the world is something to dread, when it most likely is the natural process of the human species. It seems that it's the first step towards to total intermixing of human populations which will lead towards the eventuality of there being one "race" of humans on the planet. This eventuality, however, doesn't consider the possible "races" of humans that may develop due to isolated gene pools once space colonization begins.

  264. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Zaak · · Score: 1

    The fat part is genetics and laziness more than eating a lot.

    While it's true that genetics and physical activity have a lot to do with body weight, bear in mind that in order to build that much body, you need food to build it out of.

    The very fact that we have poor people who can be idle and still get enough food to build a large body with says a lot in my opinion.

  265. Green = Red by pink_cup_and_hanger_ · · Score: 1

    Mark my words, the Left won't be satisified until there's mobs of 'Green Guards' (ala Mao's Red Guards) roaming the streets, dragging SUV owners out of their cars, and beating them to death. I wish I was kidding.

  266. Should i Live or Die? by Malicious · · Score: 1

    I agree, the population must be thinned. Let the Funny, and the Informative live! Kill the Trolls and Flamers!

    --
    01101001001000000110000101101101001000000110001001 10000101110100011011010110000101101110
  267. Re:Typical Honda driving coders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This happened due to the third world countries taking out loans in the 70's, interest peaking at the 80's, leaving them with an unpayable debt.

    Sounds like a self-inflicted problem to me.

    You can hardly blame the people who lent them the money for expecting them to start producing some goods and services to pay it back.

    If they'd all abandon their socialist experiments they'd be in better shape.

  268. My solution by money_shot · · Score: 1

    I'm building a biodome and arming it with heavy weapons. Screw the poor countries.

    - money_shot

  269. Earth Expire by 2050 by balloonhead · · Score: 1
    By 2050? I thought Microsoft had only licensed it for one year? Is this extension because of anti-trust legislation?

    On a similar note - seen that onion.com article "M$ copyrights ones, zeroes"?. Fscking hilarious

    --
    This idea was invented by Shampoo.
  270. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by DarkEdgeX · · Score: 2

    Yah, the 'out of food' thing was a big joke-- take the U.S. government for example. I saw a story recently on CNN.com (can't find the URL, but hopefully someone else can find a story based on it, it was pry an AP story) talking about how the government is buying surplus food from farmers in order to artificially inflate the prices. The government has SO much stockpiled that it was said that it could feed the entire U.S. for a rather lengthy period of time.

    All that, and we're supposedly running OUT of food?

    Now I'm not one to totally ignore their statement, because in all honesty we as a people SHOULD try to tone back our consumption of natural resources, and specifically, tone back our destruction of natural forests and other growth areas. As for finding inhabitable planets, this should be our goal anyways, if not finding Earth-like planets to colonize, finding ways to colonize planets such as Mars. (In another hundred years, this stuff probably won't be the thing of movies, but real-life-- eg: cnnmars.com, for example.)

    --
    All I know about Bush is I had a good job when Clinton was president.
  271. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by rbook · · Score: 1

    Not only that, the U.S. government has been buying food to inflate prices since the 1920s! Also, for some crops they just plai make it illegal to grow more than your quota, and you have to destroy any excess. Western European governments do the same sort of thing, too.

    We could feed the entire world, easily if it weren't for political problems. And that's on both sides -- a lot of African countries with starving populations ban food imports!

  272. Utterly Clueless Attack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's hard to know where to begin criticizing an idiotic comment like the one above.

    George Bush's corporate welfare state is certainly more communist than anything Chomsky's endorsed.

    You wanna talk stench? Try smelling the stench the US leaves in its wake throughout the world.

  273. 50 year upgrade by hokanomono · · Score: 1

    Did someone forget to pay the upgrade? I just hope the company does not cease support for earth.

    --
    This sig is a true statement, but I cannot prove it.
  274. dismissing without considering the evidence by gnoser · · Score: 1

    Most people with objections to the article seem to be doing so on the basis that people have made similar predictions previously that didn't actually come true.They go on to assert that the WWF is just coming up with junk science to prove its hysterical points. While that may have been true in the past, it's not now. Population biologists agree with the central premise of the article. They describe the current trend as the "6th great extinction"(E.O. Wilson and National Geographic have both written on the subject). So it's not junk science by any means. Also, addressing the argument that the humanity will be self-correcting. Population biologists disagree. They argue that we're nearing a point of no return, a time at which the damage to the ecosystem becomes a self-perpetuating downward spiral, the death of a few species will cause the rest of the ecosystem to fall apart(the biological version of a deflationary spiral in economic terms). The UN FWIW agrees with the WWF.

  275. extinction happens! by j_zero · · Score: 1

    who cares?!?!?! i am by no means a damned hippie, but this is the way things work in the natural world. species die out every day, some through our "work", some from their own. why should we be any different?
    deal with it!

  276. asshole by emmons · · Score: 1

    "Asshole" is what the loosers call the winner who figured out how the game works before they did.

    So by your definition, yes, assholes win the world.

    --
    Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    1. Re:asshole by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 1

      the reason he did not get an 'A' was because the teacher was not trying to teach the student how to play the game, or how the game works. the grade has nothing to do with figuring out how to play the game. the point of the class was to teach how diplomacy really works. if the "asshole" really pulled the things they did in the "game", millions of people would have died. if you want to call that "winning", well, go ahead. that's not how i define victory, by the relative size of the corpse piles.

      --
      MORTAR COMBAT!
    2. Re:asshole by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

      The problem is that this is how diplomacy really works. The actions of this particular player are very reminiscent of Germany's behavior under Hitler. In fact, there are several world rulers today that are probably worse than this particular player. Take a look at the people playing diplomacy for keeps in the Middle East, for instance.

    3. Re:asshole by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 1

      so you are arguing that the kid deserved an A because his actions were very reminiscent of Germany's behavior under Hitler. can't argue with that.

      --
      MORTAR COMBAT!
    4. Re:asshole by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

      You need to separate Hitler the genocidal maniac and Hitler the diplomat. Had Hitler concentrated on conquering England before dragging Russia into the war, and if Japan would have forestalled their attack on Pearl Harbor most of Europe would probably be speaking German right now. Hitler conquered nearly all of Western Europe with relatively few casualties. As a conqueror (and a diplomat) Hitler has few equals.

      Besides which if the leaders of the rest of the world had been paying attention Hitler could have been stopped the Germans long before they became the serious threat that they were after the fall of France. Poor diplomacy was certainly part of the problem that lead to World War II. I would much rather have the future diplomats of the world learn this lesson in a harmless game in their history class than learn it in real life.

      The irony of this example is that this particular kid deserves an A because he actually studied history and used the knowledge he gained to his advantage. Notice, for example, how he had historical precedents for each of his actions. Had the rest of the students been paying attention to their history lessons then they could have countered his moves. But they didn't, preferring instead to experience history first hand.

  277. AC IS Worried by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just read that there's a possible link between Nitrate and stomach cancer. AC has been having diarrhea and a large stomach that can't be rid of. Increase use of fertilizer in modern agriculture isn't always good.

  278. The solution! by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

    Just predict that in five years there will be everywhere enough food for everyone, and since food grows faster than predicted, there will be more than enough food for everyone in five years. Now we only have to predict the same for all time, and famine is a thing of the past. Hooray!

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  279. ...some attitude by ketilf · · Score: 1

    What I find alarming is the attitude of a lot of people posting here, something to the effect of "Yadda yadda, heard it before. Didn't happen then, won't happen now!". I don't think the Earth will die by 2050, but don't people realize that WWF are trying to raise consciousness here? They are trying to get people to think. Apparently that didn't work with the majority of posting slashdotters (who seem to think the acronym is funny). It's clearly not John Doe's credit that some people take alerts like this seriously and actually do something about it. We live in a generation where kids eat beef, but cry when they see a cow getting slaughtered. People need to be educated about how things work and how to live more efficiently. I'd suggest reading a bit about the projects on journeytoforever.org for a different view.

  280. Expiring life... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do lefties always talk such unconscionable bollocks?

  281. *BSD is dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It is official; Netcraft confirms: *BSD is dying

    One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.

    You don't need to be a Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.

    FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.

    Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.

    OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.

    Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.

    All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS dilettante dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.

    Fact: *BSD is dying

  282. Decrease population by Kidbro · · Score: 2

    Or, we could try to decrease our numbers.

  283. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Quila · · Score: 2

    Some famine is political in nature, but the much of the problem comes from areas that are simple overpopulated and have insufficent infastructure to support relief efforts. Frequently both factors are combined and you have areas with no food, no roads, and a government hostile to foreign aid.

    The point is that the Earth can support these people. In the past, they just moved to better pastures. Look at a current example in Zimbabwe, which is currently in the middle of a drought, and there is widespread famine.

    But neighboring, poorer Zambia is doing okay under the same drought. The only difference is a government that ruined the means of food production and distribution.

  284. The US is literally burning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've lived in New England for 30 years and seen many extreme weather phenomena. Today I see the skies filled with some sort of haze that is actually blocking out the sun. It's not smog, it's smoke from all of the wild fires burning out of control acrros the US and Canada. I have never seen anything like this in New England in my entire life before now. If this is not a cry from Gia I don't know what is. The environment is not media friendly news and Americans especially don't want to hear about it because we consume the most per person in the whole world. Of course the earth is dying, at this point to deny this fact is Science Fiction, not the other way around. Million year old chunks of Antartica don't drop off into the ocean for no good reason.

  285. Treat the earth as you would your computer by YeeHaW_Jelte · · Score: 2

    Listen, the question if the world is going to go bust in 2050 or not is not very important. That's the future. The important thing now is to treat the earth as the valuable thing it is; the most valuable on earth for each human isn't on earth, it's the earth itself.
    If you had this really nice new computer, and you knew you could overclock it to make it even nicer, although that overclocking would reduce the lifetime of the computer so much that you wouldn't have the money to buy a new one before this one runs out, would you do it?
    I know I wouldn't, and I think the same thing goes for the earth, and that all we westerner should be very aware that we should be the leaders in reducing pollution, because in the coming years the pollution from developing countries will increase manifold, and they don't have the money nor the interest yet to do something about it. Reduce your energy and material consumption!

    --

    ---
    "The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
    1. Re:Treat the earth as you would your computer by yzquxnet · · Score: 2

      um, my computer is a tool and it gets used as such. I am very hard on it. It is a mobile computer so it sees wear and tear that most system are free from. Look, I guess what I mean is that this. Sure, maybe you might treat your first computer as a holy grail, but after you've had a few you tend to abuse them a little.

      Overclock the Earth, now that would be a killer hack.

  286. That's why they calculate in land-use by YeeHaW_Jelte · · Score: 2

    Dude, everything you say here just strenghtens their point, and I think it's pretty arrogant of you to assume they haven't taken into account your objections to their method. They calculate in the one resources that doesn't replenish itself and is constant: land area. Pretty smart huh?
    And until we find a reasonable way to colonize planets, this will be a constant.

    --

    ---
    "The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
  287. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by barryk · · Score: 1

    Except, here we are in 2002 and those 6 or 7 billion people are eating better than any of their ancestors in all of human history, even in the poorest countries.
    This is bullshit! People are starving in Africa every day. Did you know that on September 11 2001, 38000 babies died of hunger in Africa! There is a big problem, and ignoring it like you would like to, will not make it go away.

  288. Run out of *cheap* oil by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1

    Oil production in the US peaked in the 1970s, as predicted by the people (not WWF) who predict that global oil production will peak real soon now. Prices will increase. This will be more noticeable in the US than in the EU since fuel taxes in the US are so low, which means the price is more volitile in percentage terms.

  289. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Treylis · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and the fact that a number of these countries ban food imports doesn't exactly help. In any case, AIDS is going to make things a lot different over there in a few years.

  290. Negate (invert) your subject by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Supposing your brain will be transferred to a robotic body, everything will be A except for the I.

    BOTOH, someone opting for this might be in need of a bit of AI lacking the real kind, so you may be right after all ;-)

  291. Get a smaller boat then! by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
    You can fit two of these boats onto the roof rack of a station wagon. Bazooka Boat in a Bag: www.onaero.com Which saves on hassle when towing :-)

    Of course the trucks they use for tourists travelling cairo...capetown are quite meaty, when I've seen them at shows (lots of ground clearance, sleeps 20 people).

  292. What should are world do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    What should are world do?

    I think that if we start teching are kids at a young age in school about the wonders of atoms and subatomic particles that we would have more smart people that can help with major breathroughs in the field. If we have more people in one area then we can tackle problems very quickly. Like get 1 million nanotechnology proffesional one very critical problem that is made of lots of problems but still has one ultimate goal. For example have all of them work on nanobot's. Once we get them then we can build more specilized teams and break them up into sub thinktanks. Basically give more grants and let more people know about nanotechnology. Make atom realated topics a daily part of your life and tell everyone about what you know. We all know nanotechnology will solve about every problem we as a race have and our planet has. So why not invest more now and train more people. Forget about money. The USA has plenty of funny money. The USA is in debt $6,121,692,487,637.44 as of 08/07/02 at 8:15:15 A.M. GMT. Check out the current debt here. A lot of people think give it time and we will have more break throughs. I think though if we are that much in debt then why not through more debt money at nanotechnology. When we make a couple of breack throughs sooner then it's finances now then we can pay off the debt without a problem and turn the usa into a money making government then we will be more powerful and money will not be an issue because we can just make whatever we want out of sand or whatever cheap easy to use aboudend substance we can use. It's just my opinion that we can make thinks happen a lot faster then they are now. Give nanotechnology a trillion or more dollars of funding. The pay off is so good that we should not even be thinking about the money. Think about mankind and how many things we can solve that will make all of our lives better. We have the powor\people\money to do it now so why don't we.Good article on what nanotechnology is.

    didn't bother will spell check or grammer. Screw it, hehe.

  293. Re:Typical Honda driving coders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You purposefully misunderstand. But your ignorance is not my problem, unless you try and enforce it on other people.

    HAND.

  294. Ummh, yeah... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2

    Then came the black choppers and Dustin Hoffman was chasing a monkey.

    Good movie...

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  295. Algae by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just make sure you leave your fridge door open.
    Photosynthesis doesn't work in the dark, and I'm a bit suspicious about temperature too.

  296. Guardian Unlimited sez: Join us or throw rocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to the Guardian, those who oppose a One World-One Mind-Leftist Mantra should be called

    balaclava rock-throwers with their nihilist ideology

    Always nice to see such Progressive thinking on the 'Net :)

  297. Stark by martinmcc · · Score: 1

    "Using the image of the need for mankind to colonise space as a stark illustration of the problems facing Earth, the report warns that either consumption rates are dramatically and rapidly lowered or the planet will no longer be able to sustain its growing population."

    No Pun intended! (Think of the Ben Elton Book)

  298. "off the planet"??? by g4dget · · Score: 2

    There is no place to go. If we can't live sustainably on earth, how could we colonize another planet, a place where the slightest mistake or waste means instant death? We either make it here on earth or we don't make it at all.

  299. Not all world is in the US or Western Europe by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2

    And don;t start with the " is a distribution problem, not production" lame excuse.

    The reality is that people are starving or going hungry every day, it is of no use to tell the hungry that we are producing enough food but we can deliver it where is needed (as the Afghanistan campaign showed it, where ther is a will to get things done, things get done).

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Not all world is in the US or Western Europe by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

      I think you need to take a look at the instances of mass starvation since 1900.

      Most, if not all, instances of mass starvation were induced by deliberate acts of government or wars.

      Consider the following:

      1. World War I and the Russian Civil War caused mass starvation in the former Soviet Union.

      2. The forced collectivization of the Kulak farms in the Ukraine from 1928 to 1933 also caused mass starvation.

      3. China has suffered through several waves of starvation, an effect of the civil wars, the Japanese invasion of China and the unfortunate Great Leap Forward from 1958 to 1963.

      4. The massive famines in Africa since 1950 are caused by either deliberate government policy and tribal wars. This is especially true in Sudan, Ethiopia, Zaire (and the countries surrounding Zaire).

      Even effective use transportation technology at 1925 level (with trains and trucks) would solve much of the famine problem in Africa, but government policy and local civil strife are hindering these efforts.

    2. Re:Not all world is in the US or Western Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Even effective use transportation technology at 1925 level (with trains and trucks) would solve much of the famine problem in Africa, but government policy and local civil strife are hindering these efforts.

      REALLY???!!!??? I thought the problem of famine in Africa was due to the history of colonization by European countries, the current imperialist policies of those countries, and the use of the IMF and international aid in general to screw the third world over among other things. It is certainly true that local governments are corrupt and self-serving, but who do you think sells them the arms that keeps them in power and does various other business with them on a daily basis?

    3. Re:Not all world is in the US or Western Europe by thetman · · Score: 1

      "I thought the problem of famine in Africa was due to the history of colonization by European countries"
      You thought wrong.

      "who do you think sells them the arms that keeps them in power and does various other business with them on a daily basis"
      Perhaps, but this doesn't erase the fact that they are the most direct cause of the problems.

    4. Re:Not all world is in the US or Western Europe by jafac · · Score: 2

      The fact that the massively costly effort to airlift food to starving people in remote regions of Afghanistan was largely undermined by soldiers on BOTH sides (Taliban and NA) stealing the food underscores the point that - no matter how hard you try to help someone living in a lawless region, the only way you can ultimately help them is by giving them a stable and honest system of government. An effort which has largely failed in every place we've tried it.
      You can't GIVE someone the rule of law. They have to take it, and build it, and maintain it themselves.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    5. Re:Not all world is in the US or Western Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought the problem of famine in Africa was due to the history of colonization by European countries,

      You thought wrong. Or perhaps you don't think at all.

    6. Re:Not all world is in the US or Western Europe by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree more. Where a republican system of government has spread (as opposed to government dictated by the whims of man or men - pure democracy is just as tyrannous as dictatorship), so has prosperity. Where Christianity has spread, so have republican governments. Dumping foreign aid into an unreformed government never goes to help the problem it's supposed to, because the corrupt gov't squanders it time and time again.

    7. Re:Not all world is in the US or Western Europe by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

      It's staggering to realize the number of people killed in the 20th century by their own governments. Clearly we need less government, not more. At least the Constitution and Libertarian parties are supplying that option in the US.

  300. We should be developing an open source alternative by chefren · · Score: 1

    We can only blame ourselves, using planets whose licenses expire after some time. We should all be building an open source alternative to Earth, named for example FreeEarth or OpenEarth. Sure, if we have to move in less that fifty years, FreeEarth may still be unstable then, but I can stand the sky falling down once a week, if the planet if truly free. Also, I know that if the planet suddenly blows up, the maintainers will be hard at work to fix the bug that caused it. I mean, has God offered any bugfixes for Earth? We'd all be much better off.

  301. B-u-l-l-s-h-i-t. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2

    Oil and gas fields are finite, idiot. One day they will be empty. Moron.

    The methods of exploration have become very sophisticated, but that was necessary because little by little it is more difficult to find oil.

    Even countries like the Gulf States are beginning to worry about what are they going to do when the oil dries out. Not to plan for that certainity (it is not a matter of if but when) is most cavalier and irresponsible.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:B-u-l-l-s-h-i-t. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No need for name calling, Beavis. For the past 50 years we have been drilling only the most shallow land based reservoirs and only recovering 20% of the oil from them. Within the industry the current guess is a 100 year supply with the knownledge that there is plenty more available after that (tarsands, offshore) but at a higher recovery cost.

  302. those predictions were right by g4dget · · Score: 2
    The predictions were right: the world is overpopulated, and the world is experiencing the dire consequences right now.

    Perhaps what is confusing you is the way in which those consequences play out. People who can't feed themselves where they live don't just quietly die, they move around, they burn down rain forest, they overgraze their land, they settle in mosquito-infested areas, they fight wars, they become economic refugees, etc.

    The consequences for the planet have been devastating. Foremost, the number of species going extinct is unprecedented in earth's history. We are consuming resources far in excess of sustainable levels. And human activities have already had profound influences on weather and the environment, and this will only get worse.

    As long as the West has a strong military and know-how, we will be able to continue to live comfortably. Deterioration of our environment happens slowly enough that we don't really notice it day-to-day and don't really miss much. Global warming won't kill you or me, although it may start making life uncomfortable in half a century. We're well separated from the starving and sick masses of the third world. Well, at least it's a fairly comfortable way to go to hell.

  303. Accepting what you say for the sake of argument... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2

    What do we do once all tha oil is gone?

    Which much of what you said is BS anyway, but would be nice to hear your solution...

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  304. If you want something without bias ... by jsebrech · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The UN performs thorough studies regarding the state of the environment. They recently released a new report. (The link goes to the press release, with a link to the full report at the top) It's really something you have to read to realise how much we've screwed up the planet. Some quotes:

    "Twelve per cent or 1 183 of birds and nearly a quarter or 1 130 mammals are currently regarded as globally threatened."

    "Just under a third of the world's fish stocks are now ranked as depleted, overexploited or recovering as a result of over-fishing fueled by subsidies estimated at up to US$20 billion annually."

    "The Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that forests, which cover around a third of the Earth's land surface or 3 866 million ha, have declined by 2.4 per cent since 1990."

    Not all news in there is bad. In fact, a lot of it is good. But it should be better, a lot better.

    Anyway, I strongly suggest reading the full report. It's very educational.

    1. Re:If you want something without bias ... by CarrionBird · · Score: 1

      Not meaning to flame, it's a good post. But the UN is hardly without bias. That doesn't mean that their reports are untrue, but I wouldn't go so far as to call them unbiased.

      --
      Free Mac Mini Yeah, it's
  305. Your PDF suggests otherwise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On page 7, for example:

    "Despite the devastating impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, the populations of the most affected countries are expected to be larger by mid-century than today. This is due to continuing high fertility in these countries."

    (Emphasis mine)

    IOW, they don't have condoms and a monogamy-oriented society over there.

    1. Re:Your PDF suggests otherwise by spencerogden · · Score: 1

      Yes, but other countries are shrinking. And as countries become more developed there fertility will decrease.

  306. But.... by oliverthered · · Score: 2

    They all predict we will run out sometime.

    And as for:

    "The world as we know it will likely be ruined before the year 2000
    and the reason for this will be its inhabitants' failure to comprehend
    two facts. These facts are (1) World food production cannot keep pace
    with the galloping growth of population. (2) 'Family planning' cannot
    and will not, in the foreseeable future, check this runaway growth."

    I think we live in a prity fucked up world, look at the spread of AIDS and the lack of family planing. It may seem fine to some people who've been brain wased and have a different set of rose tinted glasses for each day, but the the rest of the world it's all fucked up and getting worse.

    Don't forget that the average American has an IQ of 100.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  307. you're arguing against the wrong concerns by g4dget · · Score: 2
    in short, the alarmists don't know what they're talking about--a classic case of junk science.

    I suggest you read E. O. Wilson's book "The Future of Life". Wilson is one of the top biologists in the world.

    As for your points, we are clearly not running out of oil, and Americans are at no risk of starving. What we are running out of is habitats and species. 10 billion people may be able to eke out a living on earth, but it won't be much of a life, and it won't be much of an earth either. And at some point, growth has to stop anyway--why not now?

    1. Re:you're arguing against the wrong concerns by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

      Mind you, if we ever get a viable private commercial space program going, one thing I hope for within 100 years is that we'll be building space colonies that can support large numbers of human inhabitants.

      Imagine many millions of human beings living on space stations, the Moon and possibly even Mars. Don't laugh about Mars--given that water is available on that planet relatively easily cities could eventually be built on that planet that could support many millions of humans.

      I think the biggest issue environmentally is the fact we need to teach the Third World to stop doing this bad habit of slash and burn agriculture. Teach them truly modern farming techniques and we might have a chance to save our forests.

  308. Snowpig by ellem · · Score: 2

    I had a 91 Escort that was the best car I ever drove in the snow. I used pick my Jeep Grand Cherokee friends when the got stuck in the snow all the time. Back when we used to have Winter in NY.

    I even wrote this song about Snowpig:

    SNOW PIG

    W&M LM

    EIGHTEEN HUNDRED POUNDS OF FURY AND STEEL

    SPEED IS LIFE AND DEATH'S BEHIND THE WHEEL

    INCHES OR FEET IT GETS ME WHERE I'M GOING

    YOU JUST LET IT SQUEAL WHEN IT STARTS SNOWING

    SNOW

    PIG

    SNOW

    PIG

    NINETY ONE HORSES FROM MY ONE POINT NINE

    EATS FOUR WHEEL DRIVES AS THEY SLIP AND SLIDE

    YOU SEE MOUNTAINS OF SNOW BUT I SEE HILLS

    THIS IS THE MEANEST ESCORT FORD EVER BUILT

    CHORUS

    SOLO

    STARTS EVERY MORINING NO SNOW CAN STOP IT

    EVERY DENT AND DING IS A BADGE OF COURAGE

    FIVE ON THE FLOOR AND SO DAMN GUTSY

    MY FRIENDS CALL FOR RIDES WHEN THEIR CAR IS BUSTED

    CHORUS

    --
    This .sig is fake but accurate.
  309. Does it hurt to be so ignorant? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2

    In places like Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand people regularly have to use masks that allow them to breathe, specially during the burning of fields in Indonesia (look for "haze" and the name of each country).

    In places like Chile and Argentina people have to use UV blockers regularly to avoid skin cancer thanks to the destruction of the ozone layer.

    So I think the fake is you.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Does it hurt to be so ignorant? by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

      In places like Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand people regularly have to use masks that allow them to breathe, specially during the burning of fields in Indonesia (look for "haze" and the name of each country).

      This clearly points out the silliness of the whole idea of the Kyoto Protocol. It appears that the Indonesians are still enamored (sp?) of the idea of slash and burn agriculture, the most destructive form of agriculture there is out there.

      They need to learn modern agricultural techniques (careful use of agrichemicals, learning how to increase crop yields per hectare, good water management, etc). This would drastically reduce the need to burn forests for arable farmland, for starters. And all that vegetation in the fields--instead of burning them how about building industrial plants to turn it into fertilizer or better yet use it to create biomass fuel or biodiesel fuel?

    2. Re:Does it hurt to be so ignorant? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1
      In places like Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand people regularly have to use masks that allow them to breathe, specially during the burning of fields in Indonesia (look for "haze" and the name of each country).
      And yet, in the evil US, source of all pollution, we don't wear gas masks yet!
      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  310. Your buses will be very fast... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2

    ...using all that non existen petrol....

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Your buses will be very fast... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      Couldn't use any imagination couldja? "Hey look, I can shoot holes into his post instead of understanding his point."

      Didn't occur to you that mass-transit would be first to get not only rations of oil, but new energy technologies as well. Some people can't afford to just turn around and buy a new $20,000 car could they?

      Funny, you just illustrated exactly what was wrong with that article: Your response, just like that article, assumed everything'd remain constant. Never taking into account that things change.

      It's kinda like saying "If we all keep breathing air, we'll run out of oxygen in 12 years!", without realizing that trees would turn the Carbon Dioxide back into O2.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
  311. Might makes right -- The end of ethics by ClarkEvans · · Score: 2

    Yep. You hit it right on the head, you summed up our culture perfectly. Makes me sick to my stomach. This is the exact opposite type of behavior that a super power should have.

    Everwhere in this discussion I see this sort of attitude: (a) I've got the money and therefore I am right. If I wern't right, I wouldn't have the money, now would I? (b) Everyone is cooked, if I'm not I'll get screwed; ooh, look at that poor idiot with ethics (c) I can do what ever I want with the world beacuse its mine, if you think that I'm hurting it, prove it; it's not my responsibility to prove that I'm not going bad (d) I got all of the statistics and research to back what I say, never mind that the scientists making the reports were paid very well for their opinion (e) everything is opinion, there isn't a right or wrong, everything is relative (f) well, we are animals afterall... what do you expect?

    Good lord.

  312. All starved by now... by thevoice · · Score: 1

    Most of the "western world" is too fat for its own good. That certainly doesn't apply to the majority of humanity, who are just as important as you and your world.

  313. Science Fiction by ONOIML8 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why is this being posted as science when it's actually science fiction? Anyone who's really in that part of the science business knows that it would take a minimum of 100 years before we could leave earth for new in any signifigant numbers. Even then those numbers wouldn't be large enough to make an impact......

    If you believe that enviromentalist wacko crap.

    No, here again we see "enviromentalists" pulling at peoples emotions. If they were really concerned about the enviroment they would use some actual science and come up with some real answers.

    Sorry but camping in trees, jumping nude in front of logging trucks, or posting sci-fi stories on the internet doesn't make anyone appear knowlegable. It certainly doesn't do anything towards presenting a solution to whatever you think the problem is.

    --
    . Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
    1. Re:Science Fiction by ONOIML8 · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, watch that post get modded down just because I said something that the enviromentalist wackos don't like. Happens every time.

      --
      . Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
  314. Re:predictions... of all kinds by thevoice · · Score: 1

    Seems that prophets of all kinds are prone to getting ahead of themselves, aren't we sposed to be on Mars now?

    Doesnt mean it wont happen though does it?

  315. Think about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) Nobody wants to see any countries industry crippled

    2) Nobody wants to see the earth polluted / mined / farmed / drilled to death.

    Instead of screaming, arguing and flaming ... thought about actually discussing options.

    Can anyone here tell me that hand on heart they believe that industries throught the world, US, Europe, wherever are actually doing everything they can to be as environmental and energy efficient as they can be ? cos I don't think so.

    Cleaning up you act does not have to mean the end of an economy ... and at the same token are people doing everyhing they can ... do you boil a whole kettle for one cup of coffee ? do you think about fuel / energy efficiency when heating your house or running your car ? and if not, why not ? Is it your god given right to burn away fuel until their is nothing left for future generations (whether this is in 50 years time or 10,000 years time, this is irrelevant) ...

    Sometimes people are just so blinkered they can't see the whole picture ... and really I dont think the attitude that we have loads left, so whats the problem is an argument at all ...

    But anyway, that just stupid idealist crap isn't it ? No-one is actually going to do anything about it, no-one is going to change ... why should I care ... it won't affect me ... and lo there is the reason why people think the way they do.

  316. Of course Kyoto is all about politics. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Politics is where people work out their differences (sometimes a bit loudly) with words, treaty, and law rather than with the gun. Politics is a good thing, the alternatives are UGLY.

    Ahhh. You are talking about American Politics; where the politicians are literally *owned* by people in the Fortune 400. Ahh, that's not politics, that's corruption. There is a difference, don't confuse the two.

  317. Government controls fortune 400 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ahhh. You are talking about American Politics; where the politicians are literally *owned* by people in the Fortune 400.

    If it was as you claim, these people would be paying no taxes, and there would be no regulation. Instead, they pay much more than their fair share of taxes, and there are more and more regulations all the time.

    1. Re:Government controls fortune 400 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they pay much more than their fair share of taxes

      Oh Please. This is the most absurd thing I've heared. If this is true, how come the Fortune 400 have, since '97 on average quatripled their net worth while the average american went up, ohh, say .04% -- with appx 10% of the middle class moving into the lower class (less than 1% moving up).

      Let's just talk about estate tax, for example. The estate tax paid by people worth 1-5 million dollars was appx 35%; while the estate tax paid by people over 50 million was less than 7%. Who has the loopholes?

      Don't be so niave. Why is it that this very very small group of americans are worth one million times the average? Are they that much smarter? Work that much harder? Please.

    2. Re:Government controls fortune 400 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it was as you claim, these people would be paying no taxes, and there would be no regulation

      It takes patience and a few decades to destory a once thriving democracy.

  318. anti-environmentalists by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 2


    What is it about you rabid anti-environmentalists? Are you a Troll or mindless Fool ? I'm going to assuming the latter even though I strongly suspect assume the former.

    You choose to believe the obvious propaganda of entities that clearly a vested interest and seek to belittle these FACTS of global climate change and environmental damage.

    Yet simply ignore the counter or impartial evidence, (http://directory.google.com/Top/Society/Issues/Ec onomic/Environmental/?tc=1) which surounds us.

    I constantly wonder how somebody could be quite so greedy and short sighted, to ignore the evidence of massive damage to the environment and ecosystem, from the most trustworthy sources in the world, Science, EPA's, Governments, NGO's, etc.

    It should be a simple matter of the application of Occams Razor, 'who is more likely to be telling the truth' the vested interests of global Polluters like Monsanta, Exon, Shell, or the UK Metrological Office (http://www.met-office.gov.uk/corporate/annualrepo rt0001/4_customer_needs/4_climate.html)

    I cannot help drawing a parallel with the the myopic mindless creationists, they too unable to see what is plain to everybody who has a brain.

  319. US leaves the world smelling like roses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You wanna talk stench? Try smelling the stench the US leaves in its wake throughout the world"

    Smells like roses.

    "George Bush's corporate welfare state is certainly more communist than anything Chomsky's endorsed."

    Ah, the myth of corporate welfare. Yes there is some, yes there is too much. However, a majority of what the left-wing kooks claim is "corporate welfare" is actually tax breaks. A tax break is not welfare; it is just letting someone keep more of what they earned.

  320. Global warming for 12-16yo by DEFRA by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 2


    Perhaps you might be able to understand this

    'Global warming for 12-16yo' by DEFRA, the UK Governments Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.

    http://www.defra.gov.uk/environment/climatechang e/ schools/12-16/index.htm

  321. America controls little by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However the US basically operates most of North and South America on its political (big biz) whims. Need minerals? Go south of the equator, need cheap labour? Mexico, need more H20? Canada"

    North and South America outside of the US consists of self-controlling countries, except for a few extremely tiny islands controlled by Britain, US, etc.

    Get water from Canada? Are you referring to the Columbia River flowing out of Canada or something?

  322. SCIAM Rebuttal by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 2


    'The problem with Lomborg's conclusion is that the scientists themselves disavow it.'

    http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000F3 D4 7-C6D2-1CEB-93F6809EC5880000

    1. Re:SCIAM Rebuttal by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 1
      'The problem with Lomborg's conclusion is that the scientists themselves disavow it.'

      http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000F3D4 7-C6D2-1CEB-93F6809EC5880000

      Naughty, naughty.
      See Lombords rebuttal at: http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000001E 0-157B-1CD4-B4A8809EC588EEDF

      Funny, how a scientific publication uses 11 pages in attacking the book but only allows a one page rebuttal.
      This is what convinced me to cancel my subscription to sciam.

      Also see the Economists' review: http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?Story_ID =965718

      The arresting thing about Scientific American's coverage, however, was not this barrage of ineffective rejoinders but the editor's notion of what was going on: "Science defends itself against the Skeptical Environmentalist," he announced.

      That is amazing. Mr Lomborg's targets are green scare-mongers and their credulous servants in the media. He uses the findings of scientists to press his case. How can using science to criticise the Kyoto agreement, to show that the world's forests are not disappearing, to demonstrate that the planet's supplies of energy and food will suffice indefinitely, and the rest, constitute an attack on science? If that is so, the scholars whose work supports those positions are presumably attacking science too, and had better stand in line for a pie in the face.

      --
      Karma to spare...

      What!? You mean <i></i> is not an irony tag?

    2. Re:SCIAM Rebuttal by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 2

      Funny, how a scientific publication uses 11 pages in attacking the book but only allows a one page rebuttal.

      'Funny' perhaps alternatively that could be viewed as an indication of the relative 'weight' of the arguments.

  323. Vince McMahon can kiss mah ass! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People shouldn't worry so much about running out of resources and having colonize other planets. Not being a religious man, I can still tell you that we are coming up on the end days. Think about it. When people start arguing over the bodies of old dead baseball players, where do you go from there?

  324. Research/Studies from Oxford University by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 2

    For more info, see The Ultimate Resource [juliansimon.org] by Julian Simon [juliansimon.org], and The Skeptical Environmentalist [cambridge.org] by Bjorn Lomborg [lomborg.com].

    Frankly I'm much more inclinded to believe this list of Research/Studies from Oxford University. Than some lacky for the Petro-Chemical industry. Simple application of Occams Razor

    http://www.eci.ox.ac.uk/

  325. What we need is a crack or a keygen by neonstz · · Score: 2

    "This trial version of Earth 1.0 will expire in 50 years. Click OK to continue, click Order to go to the order webpage or click Register to enter your registration code."

    Yep, someone has to make a crack or a keygen.

  326. Returning in better condition then you borrow. by ClarkEvans · · Score: 2

    Disrupting the economy because himans MIGHT be affecting the natural cycle.

    When I was young, my grandfather told me to always return something that I borrow in better condition than I found it. During each human's life time we borrow the land and our environment for a short period of time. If we are going to modify the envionment (in many many ways) we should always be asking if our changes are reversable and at what cost so that when that human's life is over, the resources he/she borrowed can be returned so that another human can use them.

    We know that polluting the land (while ecnomically advantageous) runs counter to this general idea. Putting alot of carbon dioxide in the air may very well also be problematic. In short, if we are changing the environment we need to look carefully at what we do.

    Claiming that I have to prove that your changes are going to cause harm is just bunk. You should have to prove to the community that your change is harmless. You have it exactly backwards. You are putting a short-term economy ahead of long-term environment that our children, grand children, great-great-great grand children will have to deal with.

    If we continue to act irresponsibility then the burden will fall on our children... oh well, at least we won't be around to suffer. Or will we?

    1. Re:Returning in better condition then you borrow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You haven't done a good job of countering his argument, and you have failed to persuade me that he is wrong.

      I'm not 100% convinced that he's right, but I want to encourage you to respond to his claims with data other than stories that your grandfather told you.

      -- anonymous Slashdot reader and critical thinker

    2. Re:Returning in better condition then you borrow. by thales · · Score: 2
      Oh, so all you have to do is make a claim and if anyone asks for proof that is "bunk"?

      Some people claim that the UFO's are alien spacecraft. Is reqiuring proof before constructing a defense against alien invaders "bunk"?

      Some people claim that the Illumaniti are involved in a conspircy to dominate the worlds governments. Is requiring proof before arresting the agents of the Illumanati "bunk"?

      King Canute ordered the tide not to come in. His orders were futile against a natural phenomina. The Kings order did little more than make him look foolish. Trying to stop a natural global warming cycle will be equally futile, but rather than just make the proponants of the theory look foolish as King Canute it will disrupt the global economy affecting the lives of millions of people.

      Maybe you don't give a damn about all those people, but I do. It sure as hell is NOT "bunk" to ask for proof before starting a project that will have strong negative effects on millions of people and which may prove to be a futile and expensive waste of time and money.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    3. Re:Returning in better condition then you borrow. by BluFinger · · Score: 1

      I think you missed the point. I don't think he's saying that air pollution is causing global warming. Perhaps he's merely suggesting that air pollution more than likely will cause bad things to happen. It's not something that occurs naturally and didn't happen until recently. Perhaps since we don't know what the effects will be and since they have the potential to be harmful, we should try to limit the amount of junk we put in the air.

      I think it should be blatantly obvious that there's a difference between saying, "Hmm... this hasn't been in the environment before in these quantities, maybe we shouldn't do that" and "Hmm... there's a light moving in the sky, we better build a huge battery of nuclear weapons so we can shoot it down in case it attacks us."

      --
      Lib.BENCH the only site you'll ever need!
    4. Re:Returning in better condition then you borrow. by ClarkEvans · · Score: 2

      You haven't done a good job of countering his argument, and you have failed to persuade me that he is wrong.

      The difference lies in what you want to consider the status quo; with the basic assumption that you don't want to fiddle with dials unless you know what you are doing (cuz it could hurt alot of people). There are two perspectives. The first perspective is that the status quo is defined by our current industrialized society and its action. The other status quo is that of the earth over centuries.

      The question is if we should spend a big investment in technologies now to prevent pollution now (and clean up the messes we've made). From the "economic" perspective, the answer is NO. You don't divert any large amount of economic resources to making cleaner and more renewable technologies since it's not clear that the current population would be better off. From the "earth" perspecitve, the answer is clearly YES. We (the current population) are guests here and should pick up our own toys so that future generations can enjoy the planet as we have had a right to do.

      The first perspective is "might makes right" or "all animal population approaches the carrying capacity, humans are animals too". It says that we don't need to clean up or invest in newer technologies untill the older ones are clearly going to be more expensive and we are suffering pain from pollution, etc. This perspective is spend now, pay later; the psyche of a child.

      The second perspective is one of moderation, understanding that we humans have a brain and are capable of long-term sacrifice, something which animals do not. As such we humans don't necessarly have to hit this carrying capacity and experience horrific suffering if we do a bit of planning now for the possible course our future may bring. This one is invest now, reap the interest later; the psyche of a man.

      Quite clearly the first choice is the easiest. And with recent *huge* cuts in SuperFund and continued focus on fossil fuels we, the United States, have clearly chosen the former. IMHO, we've done so blindly and are being the child.

      SuperFund is a good thing. I grew up a few miles from a toxic waste dump. People get this strange attitute that they "own" land thus they can do with it anything they wish... including dump wastes on the land and pollute it for generations to come. The reality is that they are merely borrowing the land for a few decades before passing it on to another owner. Which one is more realistic? Lots of companies and individuals have used the "it's my property, I'll do with it as I wish" logic and have then gone bankrupt; in the mean time the pollution they left has seeped into the water table, poisoned rivers, etc.

      So. This debate is not about facts, statictis, or anything like that. And to ask for numbers to back assertions isn't the point. The point is the phlisophy in which we choose to run our life, our country, and our world. Philosophy matters. And IMHO, our current phliosophy sucks. It is short-sighted and selfish.

  327. Paying much more than fair share of taxes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ridiculous? No. Fair? Yes: the idea that people should pay the same fair flat percentage of taxes.

    "how come the Fortune 400 have, since '97 on average quatripled"

    Quatripled? Is that like quintdoubling or octaquintupling? It does not matter. it has nothing to do with tax fairness.

    "Let's just talk about estate tax, for example. Who has the loopholes?"

    There should be no estate tax, as everything in the estate has already been taxed. Thankfully, it appears to be on its way out.

    "Why is it that this very very small group of americans are worth one million times the average? Are they that much smarter? Work that much harder? Please."

    You hit on it. They work harder and are smarter. That is how they get rich.

  328. one thousand four hundred 14? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "When scientists take random data, they sometimes get more accurate values for sqrt(2) than 1,414."

    Sometimes, all you need is an $8 calculator from K-Mart. 1,414 is the square root of 1,999,396. You are only off by a factor of a million.

    With science like this....

  329. AGAIN? by ZoneGray · · Score: 2

    Oh, man, this is getting to be too much. Seems like the earth comes to an end every twenty years or so.

    Hey, somebody explain something to me... why is it that an SUV is a threat to the planet, but the same vehicle with different bodywork is just fine when it's called a pickup truck or minivan? Why is a housewife who drives her SUV around town for 5000 miles a year more of a threat than the guy who drives his Civic 30,000 miles/year? Why are movie stars who fly halfway around the world for a weekend getaway exempt from criticism?

  330. Nuclear far more dirty than coal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "[Surely you know better. That is the dirtiest most dangerous source in existance.]Wrong. That would be coal.

    Do you really think so? OK. I'm going to offer you two cars. One will have a grocery bag full of lumps of coal in the back seat. The other one will have a golf-ball sized lump of plutonium.

    Which car do you choose to drive around for a week, Ms. Silkwood?

    "[These "near disasters" are so common.]
    If they're so common, name two incidents that resulted in fatalities to the general public."

    There were two in the USSR. However, by "near disasters", I'm referring to the ones that did not result in fatalities and were stopped only by luck.

    "You've been lied to. The waste is a non-issue."

    It is a hot issue that has not been solved.

    1. Re:Nuclear far more dirty than coal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      K. I'm going to offer you two cars. One will have a grocery bag full of lumps of coal in the back seat. The other one will have a golf-ball sized lump of plutonium.

      Neither one would hurt you in the slightest.

      The people who told you that crapola about plutonium were LYING, and you were gullible enough to believe it.

      Now, when they're burned for energy, the coal produces FAR more toxics than the plutonium does.

  331. No, one point four one four. by wheany · · Score: 1

    LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL your 2 funi I laf at ur joke!

    Well sorry for being Finnish and using a ',' as the decimal point.

    Okay, let me try this one more time for all you Americans: When scientists take random data, they sometimes get more accurate values for sqrt(2) than 1.414.

    Did you get it now?

    1. Re:No, one point four one four. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do they really do that in Finland or are you just trying to cover up a stupid typo? :p

    2. Re:No, one point four one four. by wheany · · Score: 1

      Yes, we really do that in Finland, and I pasted the result from a localised version of Windows calculator.

    3. Re:No, one point four one four. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Context is everything... Especially on a Finnish site like Slashdot... What, Slashdot is a US site? Jeepers, why didn't you think of that???

    4. Re:No, one point four one four. by wheany · · Score: 1

      Oh my, aren't you clever. What, you are actually a retard? Jeepers, why didn't I think of that???

      Context is everything. Anyone with half a brain figured that I typoed and meant 1.414, especially when I wrote sqrt(2). Those who didn't, started to nitpick.

  332. The left has great patience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just increase taxes and regulation a little bit year by year, and next thing you know we are in a socialist utopia.

  333. Oh dear God!! by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 2
    Oh dear God!!! The sky is falling!!!

    Everyone, quick, run for your lives, the enviornmentalists who've been predicting the end of the world for the past 60 years are right!

    Oh... wait... they're not, nevermind.

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
  334. immortal? by thevoice · · Score: 0

    seems much of humanity thinks like a teenage boy with his first car.

    We can kill ourselves people, and individualy we can help or hinder that process, there is no innate mechanism within humanity towards avoiding extinction any more than there was in the dodo.

    We are not invincible and neither is the planet. We cannot possibly deny that the world is less healthy than it once was, largely through human activity. The earth will not suddenly one day stop supporting life, it is gradual and it is already happening. Whether it happens in fifty years or not is not really the issue and almost impossible to accurately say anyway.

    The issue is that it is happening and will continue to unless we change the way we live.

  335. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Past predictions were all wrong, why believe this? These are the same folks who predicted that the world would run out of food by 1980, then predicted we'd run out of oil by 1985. And of course Thomas Malthus predicted imminent mass starvation in the early 1800s.


    There is a shortage. What has been happening for the last hundred years is that we've been buying time. While you naysayers go about deluding yourselves, there some of us who took the trouble to find short-term fixes (short-term in the scale of decades). Resources are finite. Sooner or later, our oil supply will run out. Granted, you probably won't live long enough to see it happen but it will. The only sustainable renewable energy comes from the sun which is fixed for the next million years. This means, if America consumption keeps growing, it will be at the expense of other countries. It is already happening: billions of people are out of food and out of oil. You don't see it because you are surrounded by people who are as fortunate as you... and the number is shrinking. When push comes to shove, I hope you will be the first one to be kicked out.

  336. The solution of this problem... by little1973 · · Score: 1
    --
    Government cannot make man richer, but it can make him poorer. - Ludwig von Mises
  337. To the Rescue! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quick!!!! Somebody call Bjorn Lomburg!!

  338. The WWF is right by CommieLib · · Score: 1

    Though surely the Rock can save us from the Undertaker's evil plan...

    --
    If your bitterest enemies are people who hack the heads off civilians, then I would say you're doing something right.
  339. I would tend to agree - and I AM and american by Neutropia_1 · · Score: 1

    Facts about this article that are hard to ignore:

    1. Most of all of the industrialization of the planet has happened during the past 70 years or so. Look at how much pollution, desicration of land, and global warming has happened during that period of time!

    2. 50 years may seem like too short of a period of time - but again - look at all that has happened in the past 50 years!

    3. Not all ameriacans are fat, lazy slobs - some of us actually DO care about the planet - don't chastise ALL of us.

    4. Do YOUR part! WRITE your congressman to stop accepting money from big buisness. STOP DRIVING AMERICAN AUTOMOBILES - The big three detroit auto manufacturers REFUSE to play catch up to import auto makers. The fact of the matter is, the technology to create a more environmentally friendly auto exists TODAY - not 10 years from now as THEY would WANT you to believe.

    It can still be stopped! But it requires the help of everyone - next time you decide u want that SUV - THINK! Or better yet, next time u decide to eat at a fast food restaurant - remember where the food comes from (such as McDonalds) - farmers who have savaged the land from the rainforest for their damn cattle - all because of our insatible appetites for "quarter pounder's with cheese" for christ's sake.....

  340. This is crap by devilbat · · Score: 1

    I think every five or so years some pinhead comes out and declares the end of civilization in x number of years. Total crap. I remember reading a paper in like 1980 that predicted that we only had about 8 years of oil left.

  341. Free trade is not exploitation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Free trade is not exploitation, and can never be.

  342. new SUV's /do/ pollute less... by caveat · · Score: 1

    ...than beatup old cars with horrible emission-control systems. my old car, a 1988 Subaru GL, had at least three holes in the exhaust /before/ the catalytic converter, the thing spewed black smoke every time i ran it. i'll bet a year's earnings that the crap that came out of that 2.0-L engine was MUCH worse than what comes out of the tailpipe of a brand-new Ford Excursion with fresh, working dual cats and a much more advanced engine management system. THINK before you speak...he did say "more than five years old"...

    --

    Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
    1. Re:new SUV's /do/ pollute less... by Scrameustache · · Score: 2

      THINK before you speak...he did say "more than five years old"...

      I do think before I speak, my mistake was to assume that others would think as they read...

      Yeah, a brand new engine burns fuel cleaner than an old beat up dirty engine.
      But you're still burning MORE FUEL with an SUV. Buy a brand new SMALL engine. Geez, is that so abstract?

      You guyz got some kind of magic anti-pollution device that stops carbon mon/dioxyde from being produced when you burn things? Because if you don't, burning twice as much fuel produces twice as much of it. Simple math...VERY simple math, actually.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:new SUV's /do/ pollute less... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ever heard of EGR? exhaust gas recirculation lowers NOx emissions. how about catalytic converters? they lower carbon monoxide and hydrocarbon emissions. so, a car equipped with these technologies can burn twice as much fuel and pollute less.

    3. Re:new SUV's /do/ pollute less... by caveat · · Score: 1

      i think our problem here is how we're all thinking of "pollution". yes, CO2 is a "pollutant", but i'd call a small engine that's emitting a lethal cocktail of NOx, CO, hydrocarbons, and the like a much more polluting engine than a huge SUV motor that only emits CO2, H20, and a trace of N2O, even though the total exhaust volume is three times as much as the small engine. [i do have a magic antipollutant device btw, it's called a catalytic converter]

      of course a small new car is gonna pollute less than a huge new SUV...but it looks like his brother was fixed on getting the SUV, so he might as well do the environment at least a small favor.

      --

      Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
    4. Re:new SUV's /do/ pollute less... by jafac · · Score: 2

      Actually, keeping and PROPERLY maintaining an older car (with a small engine) is better for the environment than having the auto industry suck out the resources necessary to build a new car.

      The problem is, the technology of engines has changed so much that it's now no longer necessary to keep our disposable cars in tune - they don't require maintenance for tens of thousands of miles (other than routine oil changes).

      The OLD car technology, can be just as efficient and clean - as long as people take the effort to properly maintain them. My 30 year old VW engine gets 30 miles per gallon (better than any SUV I'm familliar with) - and passes smog testing (which is not required for a car that old, but if it were, it would pass) - because I adjust the valves, replace plugs and points, and keep the mixture set properly every 1000 miles. I do it myself. But that's too much to ask of most people these days, (and of course, we're all driven to buy new cars every 2 years, and simply MUST have 5 liter behemoths) so the old car technology would be driven, by most people, in a poorly tuned and polluting state. SO in that respect, the new technology is better - but that doesn't mean you have to replace your 5 year old car. Or especially your 2 year old car. And in 10 years, the car you buy today will still be in good running order, and should NOT need to be replaced. Where do you think the energy and materials come from to build every man woman and child on this planet a new car every two years?

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  343. Hey Newt! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your grasp of politics was far above your classmates, and you believe you deserved an "A" because of your insights.

    Your tactics may work in the real world (California legislature, a corporation), but you need to remember that you may encounter people wise to this kind of thing as your colleagues get older.

    The question remains about what you were trying to optimize. If your goal was to gain experience in how politics is really done, I think you were successful beyond even your own imagination. If your goal was to get an "A" in the class, not only did you fail, I think you know why you failed and I think you could have known it in advance.

    Think of the teacher has an outside political entity to your model legislature: in the real world that outside force could be the press, an influential opinion leader, the courts, an environmental group, a labor union, a foreign country, or simply a widespread public perception, perhaps influenced by one of the former.

    If you had really wanted an "A", it would not have been hard to suck up to that teacher given your political skills. In your case, both the "A" and sticking to your philosophical principals were not possible.

    Lyndon Johnson was famous for his political skills of persuasion and for getting Congress to do what couldn't be done. His tactics ranged from the personal -- literally twisting arms -- to the dispensing of legislative favors and punishments. You know, he tried this on Vietnam. He would not wage all-out war on account of the Bomb, and his limited war of proscribed bombing and counter-insurgency infantry tactics was in a way arm-twisting of a nation state. And he failed to persuade Vietnam.

    More recently, Bill Clinton was Bugs Bunny and each man who took him on -- Gingrich, Starr, Netanyahu, Milosevic -- was Daffy Duck. Everyone, that is, until Mr. Arafat came along, the uber Bugs Bunny who has his compound a smoldering ruin surrounding him, but walks out wisecracking.

    I think you did well to go for your principles instead of the grade, and sometimes a grade is just a grade and nothing more. But I hope you realize that there are minds that cannot be persuaded, no matter how just your cause and effective your tactics.

  344. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, but people can't rely on food donation. We live in a capitalist world, so everyone must pay their meat. If they accept freely food donation, theirs producers will not compete, they will crash, there will be more hungry people, and, of course, there will be more american owners of land.
    There is no easy solution whitout fixing the system.

  345. Can't we hang on 13 more years? by checkyoulater · · Score: 1

    Damn, I was waiting until 2063 to see if Odyssey 3 would in fact come true. Now I will never know.

    --
    Is that a real poncho? I mean, is that a Mexican poncho or is that a Sears poncho?
  346. You should have gotten at leat a B by FreeUser · · Score: 2

    And my grade? I got a D. Why? Because, in the words of the teacher, "I wasn't being cooperative and participating in a constructive manner.."

    You should have gotten at least a B. Maybe not an "A" as ethics is a part of what any polisci education should include, even if our country has degenerated to the point where they are seldom, if ever, apparent (with economic results like Enron et. al. to show for it).

    Why would I give you a B, and perhaps an A? Because you probably single handedly not only provided the rest of the class with a solid, realistic lesson in what politics in America has become, you also probably disillusioned most of that class and insured they would never consider a career in politics.

    20-30 less potential politicians in the world...that alone would earn you an "A" in my gradebook.

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  347. Earth is not crowded by JCMay · · Score: 2

    I've said this before: Everyone on earth could live in nice single-family houses on quarter-acre lots in a subdivision-style neighborhood a little bit bigger than Texas.

    People starving in Africa are doing so for political reasons, not ecologic.

  348. move the consumption curve by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Force the Ford Excursion (4 to 8 mpg) and the rest of the truly horrendous waste off the road (I'm sorry, unless you get 24 mpg average you may not place that vehicle on the road...). GM is developing hydrogen cell powered cars - encourage that. Force corporations into long-term strategies by external pressures (regulation - R-E-G-U-L-A-T-I-O-N - remember that word?). By demonstration no current corporation has any ethics and is forced into short-term solutions by erroneous concepts such as "shareholder value". Balance a business friendly environment with laws and regulations forcing development in directions that have long term benefit to man as a whole. F**k all of you I'm moving to Mars.

  349. Yawn... Yet another doomsday by FJ · · Score: 1

    Back in the 50s they predicted that massive planetary starvation would begin in the 70s. In the 70s it was predicted that starvation would begin by 2000. The last time I checked, the government is still paying some farmers not to produce to keep the overproduction of food at a minimum.

    Both my father & father in-law are farmers and trust me, the US products much more food than it needs despite the fact that there are fewer and fewer acres being farmed. Advances in pesticides, herbicides, fertilizer, & seed genetics are very impressive. For example, there are soybeans now which are resistant to Round-Up. Round-Up will kill a tree if you spray enough on it. This allows for better weed control which allows for better yields. They are also chainging the way they farm. No-till drilling & other method changes are becomming the norm now. There is much less soil erosion & farmers seem to be much more conscious about crop rotation to preserve the quality of the soil which also increases yields. The funny thing is that farmers are in a catch-22 situation. They produce so much that their product isn't worth much. To make a living they need to increase yields so they have more of an income. When they increase more they produce more of a surpluss which drives the prices further down, increasing the need for more bigger yeids to make a profit.

    As for the forests, most people don't realize that there are more trees in the US than there were 100 years ago. The reason for that is urban areas around cities. Before the 'burbs most of that land was farm land. The first thing the farmers did was cut down the trees because it is difficult to plant in a forset. When a new house is built in the 'burbs, the first thing they do is plant trees.

    I don't think that better fuel economy & preservation is bad, but let's look at the whole picture before we sound like chicken little. I'd also be highly sceptical of any group like the World Wildlife Fund. Groups like this are no different than any business sponsored research. They survive by private funding, so the best way to increase your funding is to shout alarming reports and gain attention.

    Most people disregard studies that Windows is better than Linux if they are sponsored by MicroSoft. Why should we treat this any different?

  350. Socialism and islam causing starvation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ethiopia used to grow so much food it could export it. Then the USSR conquered it in the 1970s and instituted Marxist "land reform" (which means slave plantations). The famine resulted.

    The famine in the Sudan is the result of a planned genocide: the country is ruled by an Islamist regime which wants to wipe out the non-Muslims of South Sudan if it can't forcibly convert them to Islam.

  351. People can't (and won't) change by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 2

    Everyone *knows* that SUVs are horribly inefficient and expensive to run. Everyone knows that a fancy home theater set-up eats more power than a plain ol' TV. Everyone knows that all of the packaging in a McDonald's meal cannot be recycled (the wrappers, the plastic cup lids and straws, the Happy Meal toys, the wax-coated cups). Everyone knows that old computers and video cards end up in the landfill, but that doesn't stop Slashdotters from upgrading annuallly.

    So I don't know what the points of stories like this are. It's not like you're going to get people to do things that really matter if you can't even get them to stop doing the obviously bad things.

  352. Yeah... by Gorimek · · Score: 2

    Oh, that's what it's called in english! Yes, you're right.

  353. on the same sorta lines... by siphoncolder · · Score: 1

    i have to wonder about population growth in general. we all know that the larger things get, the harder they are to handle. for instance, roads. do we have enough roads? yes. are the roads tough to drive on in rush hour? yes. can roads handle MORE people? yes.

    would that be GOOD? .... no. it would suck.

    i don't see a big problem with the way the earth changes; i believe people think they have a larger effect on their environment than we really do. however, when it comes to how people affect other people and the society we make for ourselves, i see a large problem - too many people make SOCIETIES crummy to live in. that's something to wonder about.

    --
    i'm amazed that i survived - an airbag saved my life.
  354. Real motives by boatboy · · Score: 1

    Why is it that the suggested fix is always to bring down the 'haves' instead of finding ways to help the 'have nots' become 'haves'. The 'solution' is always to put an end to businesses and increase government interference. The ultimate result being communism.

    More proof this is a crackpot report: Man is much more likely to colonize the seas (you know, the remaining 75% of Earth) than the planets within 50 years. My guess is either NASA or the Communist Party USA sponsered this one....

  355. Do Your Homework by Baldrson · · Score: 2
    Read "The High Frontier" by Gerard O'Neill.

    Note his figures on depopulating Earth via space migration and the market for depopulation. If you don't have a market for depopulation you won't get it to happen short of massive die-offs.

    It is wrong to argue that Earth will continue to have sufficient resources for the population for the foreseeable future because people have been prematurely predicting resource crises for centuries.

    The correct argument is over proper measurement of the probability that critical resources will become unavailable within a given time period multiplied by the down-side of such a loss. This number tells us something about the degree of present investment that may be wise to make as an insurance policy on the chance that something does limit technological civilization's viability.

  356. Make a move about it... by azadrozny · · Score: 1
    Someone should make a movie about this... Oh wait, they did... The Lost in Space remake.

    I find it hard to believe that because African elephant numbers halfed over a 20 year period means that we are all doomed in another 50. Not to say we don't need to be concerned, I just don't think we need to put half the population of the planet on rockets just yet.

  357. Gold Hypothesis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I find the Gold hypothesis intriguing, whether or not it means we can find more oil and whether or not we can burn it because of the CO2 question.

    Biological nature of hydrocarbons -- the fossils in fossil fuel: oil has bio molecules but it seems too many for the Gold hypothesis but too few or the wrong kind for the fossil fuel hypothesis. Gold now thinks the biology is a "contaminant" of a pure mineral oil from the bacteria recently discovered to be living in the rocks.

    Geography of oil production: not only is oil found in the Middle East, it is in a narrow zone, starting up near Turkey, wending its way through Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi, and finally into the Gulf States. A similar zone is found in South Asia, and both zones parallel plate tectonic boundaries. With this strong correlation between oil zones and tectonic plates, Gold argues that the hydrocarbons come from really deep and that the large amount of oil in the Middle East means thats where it can bubble up.

    Depth correlation of hydrocarbons: in the Middle East, they drill through coal before finding oil, below which there is gas. Where hydrocarbons are found, they are often found at all layers through many ages of rocks. While hydrocarbons can migrate, these hydrocarbon layer cakes require a coincidence of the right kind of plant growth in many geologic ages occuring all in the same spot.

    Geographic correlation of hydrocarbons: the Middle East oil zone, while geographically connected and compact, spans rocks of different geologic ages. Gold argues that this and the above coincidences result from a source of hydrocarbons bubbling up from the mantle along a tectonic boundary.

    I don't think that Gold's ideas will magically solve the oil problem because the deep sources of hydrocarbons may be unrecoverable. But his ideas suggest different strategies of where to look for oil and offer hope that there may be an abundance of gas underlying current oil fields.

  358. Link to peer reviewed data which underlies report by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/142033699 v1

    Truly, if Slashdot's posters are typical of the average Westerner, the Earth is f*cked.

  359. As George Carlin so aptly put it by praedor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The earth isn't going to go anywhere (to die), WE are.

    The earth will not "expire", though many invaluable species will die, invaluable habit will be destroyed, and so forth. What WILL happen is the human population will crash in a very ugly way. The 3rd World would be less affected by a collapse as they are already close to rock bottom. It is the developed nations, with the US at the pinnacle, that are going to have a very nasty crash.

    It is unacceptable to waste/consume/waste resources at the rate we in the US do and it will lead to irreparable harm on the overall world ecosystem BUT the ultimate, and much deserved, outcome will be collapse of human "civilization". The human population will drop precipitously (maybe not by 2050 but it is absolute certainty that without substantially change in practices it WILL happen in the not distant future), below preindustrial levels, because the environmental damage and depletion will support much less and it will take a long time for earth to recover...perhaps longer than the human species lifetime because evolution will act to reproduce a new biodiversity without regards to what is best for us. Empty niches, depleted and descimated by human overconsumption and greed, will be filled - that is what evolution and life does, it fills available niches. It will take a long time and I believe that humans will not recover to anything remotely like today's tech levels before it all comes to a end (there are two articles out there - can't presently find the refs - dealing with the "useful" lifetime of earth. One gives life 1 billion more years before the oceans are fully subsumed into the earth's mantle based on the current rate of ocean water loss due to subduction. Complex life like horses and dogs and humans will be dead LONG before the last oceanic water is lost to the mantle. Another study gives the earth 2 billion years tops based on the changing sun - it gets hotter and hotter all the time and LONG before it goes Red Giant stage, the earth will be rendered dead).

    This may be why we detect no radio signals from advanced tech alien lifeforms in the galaxy. By the time they are approaching the means to be able to do this, they have totally screwed up their own nest (like us) and drive themselves into ignomie instead.

    --
    In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  360. from the Well Said department... by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

    well said.

  361. This reminds me of... by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

    an old game called Hamurabi that used to be installed on Prime [what used to be called mini-]computers. Any Slashdotters old enough to remember those boxen?.

  362. Re:Easy solution: but wrong by praedor · · Score: 2

    You forgot to mention the fact that "modern" farm practice does more harm than good. Heavy fertilizer utilization pollutes water. You also heavily deplete the soil you are using such that you have to use more and more fertilzer as time goes on. You also left out that pesticide means increased toxins for you to consume and for the environment to absorb. Then, there is the ever present evolution problem...insects and other "pests" DO develop resistance to the pesticides.

    So, poison the land and water with nitrogen from overused fertilizer. Poison the water and yourselves with pesticide (and "weed" killer chemicals). Good plan.

    Then there is the simple fact that it would be a miserable existence for people to be packed so tightly. No privacy, no quiet, no solitude, no peace. It would become a rapid breeding ground for mass murder and other violence.

    --
    In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  363. Solutions... by rirugrat · · Score: 1

    The solutions to overpopulation have been proposed in many ways:

    Steve Martin - "The death penalty for parking violations."
    Logan's Run - Kill everyone by their 30th birthday.
    Charlton Heston - "Soylent Green is made of PEOPLE!"
    Armageddon - "Houston, you have a problem."

    Chris

  364. Bah by Erwos · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't worry, if only because Africa will be mostly dead of AIDs in under 50 years (bonus: end of the expansion of the Sahara!). That's where most of the population growth is going to be projected to be. And the Chinese, G-d bless 'em, are being kind enough to totally destroy their demographics to keep their population down. Now, if we can kick some sense into the Arab and South Asian world, I bet all of those projections by the WWF will be so out of whack that we'll be able to laugh at them.

    -Erwos

    --
    Plausible conjecture should not be misrepresented as proof positive.
  365. Re:Easy solution: but wrong by Servo · · Score: 1

    Very true, and that was what I was eluding to.

    --
    A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
  366. The Solution to the Extinction of Environmentalist by flyneye · · Score: 1

    The solution to the problem when viewed as "THE BIG PICTURE" is to fence off California as an environmentalist preserve.then all the bunny huggers,forest faeries and prof.knowlittles can
    cavort with all the other liberal antiques and leftover hippies.they then can be preserved in a place where they can cause no harm to anyone but themselves and remain for generations of our children to taunt.

    --
    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  367. Fantastic! by MJovodji21 · · Score: 1

    Ahh, yes, please stop buying SUV's, if that makes you feel better. And stop using so much gasoline and electricity. Don't buy as many computer parts, and definitely stop buying up our precious coastline.
    That should lower the demand enough for me to be able to get a cheap SUV with cheap gas, a nice new computer, and beach home. So now we're all happy!

    2 + 2 = 5 (for sufficiently large values of 2)

  368. Other Global Killers Will Get Us Before This by RhettLivingston · · Score: 1

    Of all that faces us in the next 50 years, resouces is our least worry. As other posts have pointed out, economics will take care of that.

    What will hit us sooner? Blindness to the nature of man combined with continued technological advancement will get us.

    Things like the development of computers small enough to carry around and powerful enough to perform multimodal analyses on those we talk to in order to determine with a very high degree of fidelity whether or not they are lying. Our societal structure cannot survive without the ability to at least bend the truth. All of the basic research has been done for this device. 9/11 has tremendously accelerated actual development of many of the basic components. It should be widely available in no more than 20 years.

    Or, maybe the sheer number of people on the planet combined with modern travel will get us. In a early '90s issue of Omni, a mathematician was purported to have calculated the chances of a global killer virus (deadly + slow incubation + fast transmission) randomly developing and spreading through travel before lockdown of borders. The odds go up as the population (and thus the number of incubators) goes up. He showed us having a 50% chance per year by the year 2030. This calculation may be off now due to decreases in population growth, but I'd bet it still comes out to

    Another danger is the simple advancement in the ease with which people can help this process along. As technology continues to advance and spread beyond control and more and more people become capable of developing world killers, eventually the ability will reach a suicidal someone willing to use it. Mass destruction no longer requires government backing. The first few attempts will likely fail, but someone will eventually succeed on a wide scale. 9/11 was a very small hint at what's to come in the next 50 years.

  369. America &GW-bush and co by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Pollution:
    The United States places the greatest pressure on the environment, with its carbon dioxide emissions and over- consumption. It takes 12.2 hectares of land to support each American citizen and 6.29 for each Briton, while the figure for Burundi is just half a hectare."

    http://www.observer.co.uk/international/story/0, 69 03,750783,00.html

    the home of the "free" the home of the "brave"...

    http://www.markfiore.com/animation/preserve.html

  370. small correction.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nature (as in natural selection) is more of a 'deified' idea -- with all the blind faith that that entails ;)

  371. Skeptical of environmentalist "science" by tbuskey · · Score: 1

    I distrust the science of most environmental groups. Most of them are more committed to thier ideology then science.

    Here's an interesting investigation:
    http://www.sacbee.com/static/archi ve/news/projects /environment/index02.htmlhttp://www.sacbee.com/sta tic/archive/news/projects/environment/index02.html

    Also, there's the lynx fur planted in the wild to try to close acres of land:
    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/local news/13 4384915_lynx30m.html
    http://www.csmonitor.com/200 2/0110/p2s2-uspo.html
    http://www.ncpa.org/iss/env /2002/pd030702b.html

  372. resources vs. infrastructure by simpl3x · · Score: 1

    we consume fish but we piss in the bathtub, so to speak. resources have been able to sustain a growing population do to a combination of ingenuity and a willing infrastructure. how long we can continue to eliminate infrastructure through rape and a lack of management is anyones guess. our "material condition" is great, historical co2 levels are low compared to the distant past... but, we are living through a dust bowl, and massive droughts in this country at the moment, and i wish we weren't putting our childrens lives on the line.

  373. UNIX Time by sneakerfish · · Score: 1

    Doesn't UNIX time run out at about the same time?

    We REALLY need to change it to 64 bits now!

  374. Like in the movies? by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

    Can anyone say Soylent Green?

  375. Middle ground by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even the middle ground between Bush's position and the viewpoint expressed in the article leads to the conclusion that this is something we should take seriously. I don't get Bush. Even if he is a big oil drone, he's still a father (). You'd think he'd care something about the world he's leaving his kids and grandkids. The dynasty won't be worth a plugged nickel if the situation gets as bad as one might expect.

  376. July 4th 2050 Smackdown by WillWare · · Score: 2
    A yet-to-be-named member of the World Wrestling Federation, representing Western Industrial Civilization, will deliver the ultimate smackdown on Mother Nature at Madison Square Garden on July 4th, 2050. The WWF has chosen to conceal the identity of the Mystery Civilization Wrestler to deny Mother Nature the unfair advantage of studying his moves for the next 48 years. Or maybe "her" moves.

    The WWF retains the right to choose from any of the wrestlers it will have in 2050. Some may be horrific and terrifying results of human cloning and tissue engineering experiments. Others may be the wrestlers you enjoy today, cryogenically preserved in giant buckets of ice water to deliver their maximal smackdown power in the distant future.

    Who will deliver the smackdown is a mystery, and won't be revealed until July 4th 2050. What we do know is that Mother Nature is going down and she ain't coming back up. Triumph will be complete and eternal. Tickets available at Ticketron and local ticketing agencies. Mastercard, Visa and Discover accepted. All ticket sales are final and non-transferrable. Ensure your grandchildrens' participation in this historic event today!

    --
    WWJD for a Klondike Bar?
  377. Another Solution by loosenut · · Score: 2

    The Voluntary Human Extinction Movement. Yes, it is a ridiculous idea, but the site is entertaining and occasionally informative.

    On a different note, I noticed a few people taking about how things will settle down after there is a scramble for resources. Sure, billions might die, but in the end, homeostasis will be achieved, right? The problem with that line of reasoning is the assumption that there will be something left after we are done fighting. We aren't ants, folks. We use big scary bombs to fight for resources. And those bombs have the capability to destroy all of the resources.

    Just remember, radioactive wheat isn't so appetizing.

  378. Missing parts of the equation by bareman · · Score: 1

    What they're forgetting is that by 2050 there are going to be so many episodes of "Friends" that people will never have to leave their homes. They can stay glued to the tube 24/7 and by doing so will greatly lower their metabolism. This will help extend the food supply for an indefinite period.

    We should all thank the makers of "Friends" now for saving the people of Earth.

  379. New evidence that we're doing better.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    In the 70s they said we had 30 years left. In the 2000s they said we had 50 years left. The predicted lifetime of the earth is getting longer and longer! Just wait and see - come 2050 they'll be predicting that the world will end by 2150 if we don't change things. By 2150 they'll be putting the end around 2500!

    More seriously though, do they really advocate us trying to move to another planet? Launching a space ship is one of the most polluting things we do. Seriously, the indsutry required to build and launch enough space ships to colonize other planets would dramatically increase the pollution (and presumably hugely accelerate the death of the earth). It would seem that they really haven't thought through this at all, but are just using it as a scare tactic and give them something to do.

    They tend to do that a lot. If we were to listen to all the environmental groups, we'd quite cutting down trees and start making all our buildings out of metal and concrete, which require far more pollution and resources to produce than does timber. One of the former heads of green peace actually admitted that timber is our most renewable resource and perhaps the one we least have to worry about. But save the iron just doesn't have the same appeal as save the trees!

    1. Re:New evidence that we're doing better.... by belg4mit · · Score: 1

      Colonize is not the same as emmigrate.

      --
      Were that I say, pancakes?
  380. Re:Insightful? What a load of crap. by ErikZ · · Score: 2
    You can't use economic arguments. Why? Because our current economics don't take into account the cost of pollution (externalities) -- what makes you think that things will change in 50 years? Has current pollution made us change? Please.

    Um, yes? Two things, first, you CAN use economic arguments. Materials have been getting cheaper and cheaper. It's not like we just run a pipe from the river to our homes. That water already goes though a lot of processing.

    Second, we have far less pollution around than when I was a kid. So, by using the WWF logic, we'll have no pollution by 2050!

    --
    Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
  381. Unlikely to live long enough to be embarrassed by crmartin · · Score: 1
    Right. And basic commodities will run out by 1990. And the US will suffer millions of deaths from famine in the '80s. And single-family housing will be illegal by 1990.

    Don't bet any money on these predictions.

  382. Space Utility Vehicles by wytcld · · Score: 2

    Can you imagine the off-road possibilities of Mars?
    ___

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  383. Re:Easy solution: but wrong by ErikZ · · Score: 2

    Poisoned eh?

    Well, seeing how everything is growing really well on that "Poisoned" bit of land. Maybe your definition of poison isn't the same as the rest of the world.

    1 A substance that causes injury, illness, or death, especially by chemical means.

    2 Something destructive or fatal.

    Remember, English is the language of Slashdot.

    --
    Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
  384. Re:Agreed by Glanz · · Score: 1

    It really warms my heart to see those as cynical [intelligent] as I.

    --
    Rien n'est plus beau que le creux du 0.
  385. generational overlap by DABANSHEE · · Score: 2

    however increasing rates of generational overlap (people living longer) means that population keeps going up even with only 2 new offspring for every pair of adults in each generation.

    Really there should be no death control without birth control.

  386. gay?!? by DanThe1Man · · Score: 2

    I don't know if this has been mentioned since there are a 1,000,000 commments to look through, but does anyone find it interesting that the gay percentage is being rasied with the earth population? Could this be our way of evening things out, since gay people don't have offspring.

    1. Re:gay?!? by belg4mit · · Score: 1

      Do you have statistics to back this up? It seems more likely that on the whole we are more tolerant, and so individuals are more open and vocal.

      --
      Were that I say, pancakes?
    2. Re:gay?!? by DanThe1Man · · Score: 2

      No, though it would be interesting to find some. If you like, you can pay $4 and ask someone on "ASK GOOGLE" to find some.

      I am confident that it is true. If there was the percetage of (non-breading)homosexuals 300 years ago before the population boom, then I think there would be a lot more tolerance then also.

    3. Re:gay?!? by DanThe1Man · · Score: 1

      If there was the percetage of (non-breading)homosexuals 300 years ago before the population boom, then I think there would be a lot more tolerance then also.

      That was a poorly put together sentance, sorry about that.

      If there was the percetage of (non-breading)homosexuals 300 years ago, before the population boom, then I think there would be a lot more tolerance then also.

  387. Whoops... by shepd · · Score: 1

    >Oxfax either doesn't exist or they're not letting on.

    I meant Oxfam, of course.

    --
    If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
  388. Re:Easy solution: but wrong by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 1
    See, the problem with using "modern farming methods" is that they end up causing an upward cycle of utilization. It gets to a point that you end up spending more to produce than you are getting back.

    But modern farming methods include crop rotation and the practice of leaving land fallow for a cycle to allow it to regenerate.

    The problem with your statement is that you are assuming that the only way a modern farmer can increase crop yields is by increasing the levels of fertilizer. Simple practices like crop rotation and leaving land fallow have been show to 'recharge' the land. Google for details.
    It has also been show to reduce weeds.

  389. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by SparafucileMan · · Score: 1

    You're all ignoring something: systems with exponential growth always stop growing, and rather quickly. I figure we've been growing at such rate for roughly 20,000-10,000 years. Now, if you know your math, that means if we keep at it we'll be up and out across the entire universe in like another 1000. That ain't that long, folks. This nice little trip the human species has been on for a tiny bit is going to end real soon. By friggin definition, you science nerds, it has to. And once we stop growing, what do you think will happen? You think scientific progress can keep at this crazy rate of expansion when the population stops expanding and everyone has to spend 3/4 of their day just trying to find enough space to sleep for the night? Who will build the next biggest partical collider? Africa will be too busy trying to stay alive to mine your metals for your newest computer chip. Moore's stupid little 18 month law only occurs in the rich countries, and when we stop expanding, even that will slow down. Face it, we're stinking chimps, with the only difference is that we have exponential growth and they (our ancestors/brothers/etc) don't.

  390. We have a damn near infinite supply of oil... by SensitiveMale · · Score: 1

    Read this link. I read about Thomas Gold's theory a few years ago. Seems he is about to be proven correct again.. http://abcnews.go.com/onair/CloserLook/wnt_000316_ CL_oilheretic_feature.html

  391. a finite number explained by SethJohnson · · Score: 2


    When the parent poster used the phrase a maximum number of people he really meant that there is a finite number of humans the earth can sustain. Whether or not the specific number is known is unimportant to this concept. The same way that:

    1. I can stab you in the chest a finite number of times before you die.
    2. I can drive a finite number of miles before the tires on my motorcycle will burst.
    3. You can hold your breath a finite number of minutes before you pass out.

    As you can see from these examples, when the consequences are as unpleasant as these, you will probably want to take steps to avoid suffering them. Even if you were given the exact number, you probably would distrust the validity of that number and be careful not to come anywhere near passing the threshold. That's what the doomsayers are doing in this discussion.
    1. Re:a finite number explained by thetman · · Score: 1

      Yes, but he implied we are past that finite number, so he obviously knows roughly what it is.

      The reason he can't answer is that we are not past that finite number.

    2. Re:a finite number explained by SethJohnson · · Score: 2


      Perhaps my examples weren't as clever as I imagined. In terms of global climate change, much like most things in nature, the full impact may not be felt until a decade or more after a threshold has been reached. Take the pecan trees in my yard, for instance. We had a drought several years ago that severely damaged them. Only now are all the branches falling off them and it's looking like I'll have to pull them down so they don't fall on my house. Had I known they were suffering at the time, I might have watered them better.

      Another example: Scientists and doctors have concluded that cigarrettes cause cancer. A person doesn't currently have cancer. Should that person keep puffing away because the threshold hasn't been crossed yet? The number of cigarrettes it takes to get cancer may not seem finite because it's so difficult to measure. If we had an unlimited technological apptitude, we could factor all the elements in the equation (red blood cell resistance to cancer cells, genetic susceptibility, etc.) and get a precision that would allow us to say x number of cigarrettes will kill you. But it's unneccesary when we know the likely outcome and can try to avoid it by not smoking cigarrettes in the first place.
    3. Re:a finite number explained by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Should that person keep puffing away because the threshold hasn't been crossed yet?

      Check this out, smart guy. We're not. The birth rate in developed nations is falling. It's the third world that's breeding like rabbits.

    4. Re:a finite number explained by SethJohnson · · Score: 1


      Your fallacy is that you are discussing this topic in terms of 'us' and 'them'. Us being the western nations and them being the third world. On the subject of global climate change, it is only us as the world.

      I have no idea how you construed my comments to be pointed at the population growth of the US or western nations. But I suppose you could infer that I was speaking about our overconsumption of products/energy/resources relative to the third world.
  392. Asteroids, not planets by SEWilco · · Score: 2, Informative
    We don't all have to go there. They're saying that for everyone to use the largest number of acreage to support them, we need the surface area of two more planets to support them. So we just need those planets to be full of farms and industry, not people.

    Fortunately, smaller rocks have a lot more surface area than the same weight of large rocks. We can use a bunch of asteroids instead. Flatten them for more surface area (no, not Ringworld -- we don't have a material strong enough for that).

    1. Re:Asteroids, not planets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if we made a huge ring out of EBCs?

  393. Estate Taxes. by phriedom · · Score: 1

    You think The Rich are rich because they work harder and are smarter? May I present People's Exhibit A: The Hilton Twins. These are the poster children for what is wrong with no estate tax.

    --
    Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
    1. Re:Estate Taxes. by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

      What is wrong with passing the results of my hard work on to my children? Doesn't every parent want a better life for his/her children? Wouldn't you do the same?

      The estate tax is evil. It's a disincentive to work hard and achieve something in life. It abrogates your freedom to do with your property what you want. It ought to be scrapped. Bequeathing my property to my children hurts you not one iota, so why do I/they get penalized?

  394. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by jafac · · Score: 2

    meat may be pretty inefficient at delivering calories, but it's much more efficient at delivering protiens. The dirty little secret of Vegans is that there are some people who simply can't survive on veggies alone (for every example of a healthy, happy vegetarian, there's an example of a person who has tried, and was sick and miserable, and went back to eating meat) - surely, I'll buy the argument that we (Americans, in general) can survive, and even live happy, healthy, rewarding lives with far less meat than we consume today - I'll be willing to bet that if you took every man woman and child and put them on a strict vegan diet, 20% would simply die within a month.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  395. Rich are rich due to their own work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You think The Rich are rich because they work harder and are smarter? May I present People's Exhibit A: The Hilton Twins. These are the poster children for what is wrong with no estate tax."

    Most of the rich are rich due to their own work. A certain number, but still a minority, are rich through inheritance. Hilton twins? Is that hotel or something?

    No estate tax? Fine with me. Butt out of family affairs.

    1. Re:Rich are rich due to their own work by ClarkEvans · · Score: 2

      Most of the rich are rich due to their own work

      No. Most of the very very rich are due to laws which favor them (the incumbants) over newcomers.

      It works like this. We have a two part system, democracy and capitalism. Democracy is our social system it defines the rules for the economic system (capitalism). The basic tenant of Democracy is one person one vote. Why? So that the economic system is a level playing field. Thus, this requires equality in the social system, but not necessarly in the economic system.

      Now here is the problem. Those with lots of money in the economic system get more "political speech" than those who are doing poorly in the economic system. Thus, even though there is one person one vote; you only get to vote for whom has the money to advertise and put themselves on the ballot. Thus, the people being elected are skewed towards those who have money (half of representatives are worth over 10 million). And these people, in tern, have a vested interest in keeping their money (and the money of the people who put them there). Thus, they write laws that help those with money and hurt those without money? Doubt me? Check your history books.

      So, there are two possible outcomes. First, the people in the middle wake up and make the democracy more of a level playing field (which it should be). OR... the wealth keep getting wealtheier. In the latter case, eventually we will end up in an Economic Dictatorship which will transfer over to our social system.

      So, for all of those people who are defending the very rich beacuse they think the rich work harder and are smarter than average (perhaps due to their own arrogance that they think they can join the very very small circle) are in for a rude awakening as they get older and understand that the rules are stacked against them.

      So what are you going to do? Let the surge in wealth continue? Note: I'm not talking about people with a few million dollars. I know lots of hard working capitalists who bust their asses and deserve this. I'm talking about billionares here... ones that have one million times more net worth than average. A few thousand I can deal with... but a difference of a million means one thing to me -- a broken system.

      It has nothing to do with "hard work", it has everything to do with "might makes right" and courruption.

  396. Left wing vs right wing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The far left wing favors government oppression because the government is democratic and represents the will of the people. No one should be trusted to run their own affairs: the government knows best.

    The far right wing favors the same thing, but it doesn't go quoting Marx along the way.

  397. Superfund is not being cut !!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "And with recent *huge* cuts in SuperFund."

    Bush has proposed no cuts in Superfund. Not even a huge cut. In fact, he has proposed a spending increase over the spending from the preceding year.

    While compared to an imaginary much higher spending amount some people want this is a "cut", but compared to real spending, it is an increase

    in actuality spending more real dollars than before

    1. Re:Superfund is not being cut !!!! by ClarkEvans · · Score: 1

      Bush has proposed no cuts in Superfund

      Perhaps. I'm talking about the rolling-back of Polluter Pays a few years back (under Clinton actually and then with continued support of Bush).
      http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1 08 78-2002Jul1.html

  398. Other false advantages by phriedom · · Score: 1

    One of the big reasons many people buy SUVs is their perceived safety. As you have already pointed out, SUVs really are NOT safe, because they handle and stop so poorly. They also are more likely to roll over. Nevertheless, people confronted with the facts will cling unwaiveringly to the belief that SUVs are safer. They like the "command view seating" and the advantage of larger mass in a 2 vehicle collision. Sadly, these "advantages" disappear when most everyone else has an SUV too. and make things much less safe for the cars left on the road.

    --
    Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
  399. And In Another Study... by Petersko · · Score: 2

    ...it was found that every being in the galaxy has 2.4 legs and owns a hyena.


    D.Adams will be sorely missed.

  400. Most of the rich ARE rich due to their own work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "No. Most of the very very rich are due to laws which favor them (the incumbants) over newcomers."

    This is only true for the minority who inherit. Most of the rich did not start out rich, and got rich due to hard work.

    "Thus, they write laws that help those with money and hurt those without money? Doubt me? Check your history books."

    I doubt you because of the demographic facts. Tax laws are written so that the rich pay a much higher percentage (and of course a much higher real amount) and the poor pay little or nothing (a much smaller percentage, of course). This shows how the laws hurt those with more money and leave those with no money alone.

    "OR... the wealth keep getting wealtheier. In the latter case, eventually we will end up in an Economic Dictatorship which will transfer over to our social system"

    No, it doesn't. It means that the rich are earning more. They do not "dictate" anything but their own personal estates, which they earned and built.

    "So, for all of those people who are defending the very rich beacuse they think the rich work harder and are smarter than average"

    Defend the rich? Actually, I defend everyone from the depradations of those who rule over us.

    "So what are you going to do? Let the surge in wealth continue?"

    Absolutely. Let it continue! I for one am not obsessed with what is in someone else's wallet. Why are you? Jealousy and greed?

    " I'm talking about billionares here... ones that have one million times more net worth than average."

    So? Who cares? I certainly don't.

    "A few thousand I can deal with... but a difference of a million means one thing to me -- a broken system."

    No. It means a system that works great.

    "It has nothing to do with "hard work""

    It has everything to do with the hard work of those who are rich.

  401. Your teacher was a cocksucking whore... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That could be the only explanation for her bullshit attitude towards you.

    You should have done far better than that.

  402. Taking over the arable land by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "But what about arable land?"

    What the arabs do with their land is nobody's business but the arabs. We've got plenty of desert of our own without taking over theirs.

  403. SUVs are much safer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Sadly, these "advantages" disappear when most everyone else has an SUV too. and make things much less safe for the cars left on the road. "

    So you get a bigger SUV, like a Ford Excursion.

    "As you have already pointed out, SUVs really are NOT safe, because they handle and stop so poorly"

    This is not a problem if you are a good driver.

    1. Re:SUVs are much safer by phriedom · · Score: 1

      Well, there is just no argueing with that kind of logic. Well done. And thank you for illustrating my point about people who "cling unwaiveringly."

      --
      Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
  404. right (correct) makes right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "(a) I've got the money and therefore I am right. If I wern't right, I wouldn't have the money, now would I?"

    You mean "I worked hard, and now I have the money"

    "ethics (c) I can do what ever I want with the world beacuse its mine, if you think that I'm hurting it, prove it; it's not my responsibility to prove that I'm not going bad (d)""

    A better summary of the attitude is: We can do what we want since there is absolutely no evidence of any negative consequences". Gee, ever hear of the idea that if you make a wild assertion you need to back it up ????

    "I got all of the statistics and research to back what I say, never mind that the scientists making the reports were paid very well for their opinion "

    That is a pretty apt summary of the "global warming" theorists.

  405. Bad math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Anyone with half a brain figured that I typoed and meant 1.414"

    There is a lot of bad math around here, haven't you noticed?

    The global warming theories are based on it. And you have an excellent example of this "new math" in the claims that Bush is cutting Superfund by spending more on it next year.

    So much of the bad math is intentional.

    1. Re:Bad math by wheany · · Score: 1

      Anyone who knows what square root is, knows that no way in hell is sqrt(2) 1414.

      There is a difference in claiming that humans breed exponentially while supplies increase linearly, and claiming square root of 2 is 1414. The latter is just so retarded that no-one can make that mistake.

  406. The curse of the invasive, nosy consumer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You might start by asking why you want a SUV"

    Why not first ask yourself why you even care? Whatever your answer is, butt out. I'm paying my license fees, paying all the extra money for the gas guzzling... it is my business not yours.

    1. Re:The curse of the invasive, nosy consumer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe it is called philanthropy.

  407. Now or Never? by phriedom · · Score: 1

    You seem to give us only those 2 choices, now or never. But it won't operate this way. For example, some day there will be giant wind power arrays down both sides of the Columbia gorge, where the wind blows often and hard. Right now there are test plants of limited size, but energy is too cheap to make these a good bargain right now. As soon as the price of energy justifies the expense of the wind farms, more will be built. Meanwhile, technology advances and so there is an advantage to waiting until the need arises before we build these. I agree with you that the "market solution" is often short sighted and will not yield the best thing for long term. There is ample evidence in California's power crisis, which seems to have been caused by a lack of planning, and a "market solution" that left the people who should be building power plants with an incentive to NOT build them, and then profit off the scarcity. OTOH, I don't think it is time to go build a giant orbital solar power collector for fear that we will run out of power.

    --
    Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
  408. Growth is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "And the best thing is that WE can get rich selling them green technology that allows growth without hurting the ecosystem. That is of course unless the hippies pass a bunch of laws that screw this up."

    To a certain sector of the environmentalist movement, growth and prosperity is at least as bad as ecological harm.

    That is why you have the Green Party, with so much of its platform devoted to getting rid of economic and political freedom and damaging the economy; platform items formulated with an intent that has nothing to do with being "green".

  409. Q: Will Earth Expire By 2050? by npsimons · · Score: 2

    A: No. Humans might, but the Earth will be around for a long time to come. Next question.

  410. Prince Charles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "We breed without thought to the fact that we may breed substantially less sturdy humans than we have had in the past."

    It used to be that only people like the British royals had the luxury of breeding less sturdy heirs. (look at Prince Charles and his son that is going bald). Them and the American hillbillies.

    What are things coming to?

  411. My SUV by mestreBimba · · Score: 1

    gets 24 mpg
    has 210 bhp
    accelerates like at bat out of hell (will beat a lot of sport sedans in a 1/4 mile).
    Stops real quick 4 wheel disc brakes and abs.

    Do you know what you are talking about?

    --
    Fly Fish? Participate in our forum
  412. We can quit the game by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "We keep changing the rules, but ultimately we can't quit the game."

    We can quit the earth game. That is what Mars is there for.

  413. Re:The Solution to the Extinction of Environmental by blitziod · · Score: 1

    well we all know when the world will REALLY end. It will end on July 5th, 2003. X-Day. And remember, if he hasn't seen your $30.00, your still "Pink" to "Bob"!

    --
    The only way to bust a doper--is when you yourself become a smoker!
  414. Re:Easy solution: but wrong by praedor · · Score: 2

    You are blinding yourself. It matters not a whit if the wheat on the plot is growing well, what matters is the runnoff from all that fertilizer and pesticide is entering the water table and poisoning the water. The water is choking on nitrogen and other toxins such that there more algae blooms (toxic to humans and fish alike), less oxygen in the water (toxic to fish, crawfish, etc)...poison by any other word is poison.

    Have you never heard of the problems involved in hormone mimetics? That's right, many of the pesticides used mimic hormones like estrogen and testosterone which affects human and non-humans that ingest it (via water or eating the treated foodstuffs). It leads, to among other things, extra limbs and other deformities in frogs, screwed up sex ratios in alligators and turtles, probable increase in breast and testicular cancer in humans (male and female), more rapid sexual maturation in girls (not a good thing for them physically/biologically). Problems from pesticides are legion and take longer than a few months to show in many cases. Humans being idiots and basically selfish, don't care if they aren't being obviously hurt RIGHT NOW. "F*ck future generations. F*ck my kids. F*ck ya'll because at least I'm getting fat off food NOW - I'll worry when it's too late and I have cancer or my kids (or their kids) have developmental abnormalities". This is the attitude which is the problem. It needs to change.

    You don't solve a problem by throwing ever more tonnages of chemicals at it. You solve it by having less children, using less, expecting less. You can easily be comfortable without consuming everything in site. Leave a little for others (human and non-human).

    --
    In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  415. Dude, don't you know that salt is bad for you? by ahde · · Score: 2

    Sodium Cloride is one of the most toxic, corrosive chemicals in existence, next to Carbon Dioxide. If you don't believe me, pour saltwater on a plant -- it will die. Plus, if you drink lots of salt water, you will throw up. If that isn't proof enough, look at people who eat meat (a majority of Republicans admit it eating meat) -- guess what the primary ingredient used to season meat is? You got it. Sodium Cloride. It's close chemical relative, monosodium glutemate, has been proven to cause cancer in lab rats. Or at least to make them hungry for Chinese food again only a half hour after eating. I forget which.

  416. He's got Al Gore rhythm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever see him try to dance?

    "Domo arigtao, mister roboto. Domo"

  417. More tripe from the hate-America-firsters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This looks like garbage science being foisted on the masses, yet *again*.

    First of all, why is that we are almost never told by the mass media that an order of power MORE scientists have signed a document saying that there IS NO CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE THAT THERE IS GLOBAL WARMING, than ones who claim that there is?

    http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/2020/2020/sto ss el_tamperingwnature020614.html

    Why is it that folks rarely talk about why Earth Day was started, and THAT WAS GLOBAL COOLING? The thing is, the environmentalist movement needs a disaster, real or imagined, to play on the fears of the public. This is no way to make public policy, however.

    The WWF and others of their ilk are just using environmentalist dogma to try to defuse America's capitalism because they hate America and/or capitalism, and our economy is a behemoth that cannot be stopped without using tactics like these. I forget his name right now, but one of the founders of Greenpeace, no longer with them has gone on record as saying that Greenpeace has been hijacked by socialists. These are people who probably still think Communism could have worked if it wasn't for America trying to destroy it.

    Also, this looks like just another lame attempt by a bunch of whiners who didn't have their way when they wanted to cripple the United States with their stupid Kyoto Treaty. Just a new tactic. I notice that the article DID specifically mention carbon dioxide.

    Lastly, when the hell has anyone bought jack squat from an African country? This article specifically mentions the U.S. as being so bad, but does it take into account our OUTPUT? We feed a great deal of the world, thank you very much.

    This whole "news release" seems to have been designed to try to shove an agenda down the throat of Americans. Hey, WWF, (Greenpeace, UN, Euro-weenies, enemies within, etc.) we don't give a flying fig what kind of garbage you spew, the thinking among us are not buying it, and you are not going to ruin our economy.

  418. Socialists show no care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Many socialists are well to do people that merely show care about their fellow human beings"

    No, they are hypocrites who "passionately support progressive causes", but when it comes time to pony up, they hold tight to their wallets. Instead, they have the government force others to fund their dubious pet projects.

  419. space pen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  420. What do you mean 'we', white man? by grokk · · Score: 1

    I don't buy into the WWF's doomsday warning, but I do think that we shouldn't just ignore all environmentalist reasoning. We ARE causing damage to the earth. Can we stop the impact? Not unless we cease to exist. But if we can do our best to highten the quality of life for every living thing on earth, why not? It pisses me off that people have to be one extreme or another.. neither helps us in the long run.

    I didn't read most of the replies on this, but I don't have to, really: /. readers are a pretty predictable demografik...

    The problem with the article is not with its alarmism; it's with its too-typical assumption that capitalism -- the total 'collective' culprit here -- is somehow with us forever. It is not. It is a passing historical phase of human relations which may have initially provided us with the industrial means to rise above sleepy peasant feudalism -- but which has now entirely overstayed its welcome, like some doped-up crazy who started out as the life of the party...

    This crisis is part of the very death rattle of this system of hyper-exploitation.

    1. Re:What do you mean 'we', white man? by Servo · · Score: 1

      There is a fine line between capitalism and raping thy neighbor. I think we are to the point that greed has totally taken over and we have crossed that line. I am not "against" capitalism, but I wouldn't say that capitalism is the best and only way to do things. Socialism IS NOT the way, but I fear that that too is the way we are going. The people in the middle class that work hard for their earnings are the ones being screwed to feed the poor. If a rich person wants to help out the poor, fine, donate some money / time / whatever, but don't think for a minute that I want to work my ass off so I can support somebody elses starving kids. I don't care if they are my neighbors or not, they aren't my responsilbity. In the same light though, I often help out my friends and family, because they have earned some my respect, and my help.

      --
      A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
    2. Re:What do you mean 'we', white man? by grokk · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry -- but you SO TOTALLY don't understand. What a narrow view of humanity!

    3. Re:What do you mean 'we', white man? by Servo · · Score: 1

      It is not my view which is narrow, it is my responslibity.. If you feel you are responsible for everyone else, YOU go ahead and do what needs to be done. But leave me out of it.

      --
      A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
  421. Will It Matter? (12/21/2012) by Snover · · Score: 1

    According to the Mayans, who had an *extremely* accurate calendar (up to the point where they could determine astrological charts thousands of years in the future), the world is going to end on December 21st, 2012AD. If this is true, it won't really matter if Earth will expire by 2050, since it'll be gone, or everyone will have died, or both.

    Read more about 12/21/2012 here, here, or any of these places.

    The fact that their calendars and astrological charts were so correct gives a certain authenticity to this over, say, "THE WORLD IS GOING TO END IN 2000! OH MY GOD!@#$!@#$" and other more conspiratorial claims.

    --

    [insert witty comment here]
  422. David South vs. Julian Simon by rolofft · · Score: 1

    The bet you're refering to was canceled. South and Simon had agreed to nullify the bet if government price controls on timber were imposed.

    When logging regulation and timber import restrictions from Canada artificially inflated the cost of timber, the particular issue that they were betting on became moot.

    When government regulation increases the price of a commodity, it isn't the same issue as whether Earth's resources are being depleted. Sugar prices are much higher in the US than they need to be because of regulation, but that doesn't mean Earth is being depleted of sugar canes.

    --

    "Give a man a fish and he will ask for tartar sauce and French fries!"

    1. Re:David South vs. Julian Simon by cp99 · · Score: 1

      No, the bet was not cancelled. If it had have been Simon would be $1000 richer. Instead he read a paper by Roger Sedjo, realised that Alabama wasn't completely isolated from the rest of the world, and forfeited on the bet.

      A more cynical person would also note that at the time he pulled out, he was losing very badly.

      If Simon's had an ironic sense of humor, he would have also noted that the price of the timber started to drop shortly after he got cold feet.

      --
      Warning: Some ideologies on the Net are smaller than they appear.
  423. Re:Past predictions were all wrong, why believe th by Greedy · · Score: 1

    But why was it wrong? All the statements you quoted say "if this continues like it is now then we will be in problems". It did not continue like that BECAUSE there are people who say it!

    Again this prediction hopefully will have as effect that people start to think and try to avoid it! If other people start to think like you then the next prediction might become true and the world might end.

    Better change it soon.

  424. England is consuming much more than the USA by BrokenM2001 · · Score: 0

    Using the figures for population and land mass estimates from the CIA World Fact Book, the average person per square km in the USA is 30.35, while the United Kingdom is 246.89. Comparing this with the amount of hectares that are needed for the consumption rate, one can easily deduce that while the US requires roughly 6 hectares per person, England requires 2. Therefore England consumes less than one third the USA per person, however the available land mass to support England is far less, so while the US consumes more, we have more land to support ourselves than every Western European country. While consumption should be reduced overall, just keep in mind that the US consumes more, but also has more resources to support that consumption.

  425. WWF becoming extremists? by wessman · · Score: 1

    Is this simply the WWF's way of drumming up fear in the public since GW Bush is not one of their biggest supporters. Yes, we need to muffle pollution better, and we need to increase recycling efforts and start using alternative fuels, but we'll die from new war before we'll all die of pollution and resource exhaustion.

  426. Long Bets by trikyguy · · Score: 0
    Wired ran an article about public figures making bets about the future. It talks about how putting your money where your mouth increases accountability of people who discuss the future.

    In that spirit, I offer 10 to 1 odds on 10,000 that by 2050, we will not have more than 1,000 people living on two planets other than earth. Someone else puts up $1000, I put up $10,000. If we have two planets colonised by the definition above, they win, if we don't, I win.

    The first paragraph exposes the falacy of this article.

    1. Earth's population will be forced to colonise two planets within 50 years
    2. if natural resources continue to be exploited at the current rate, according to a report out this week.

    Anyone with an elementary understanding of economics knows about scarcity. Rare, desireable resources increase in price. It is preposterous to expect that the price of oil will not go up, if we are going to run out of it in a year. Second, as resources are depleted, the industries that harvest them won't be able to produce as much per year, increasing the price again. Higher prices mean less consumption.

    Environmentalists have been predicting imminent doom for over 50 years. The Skeptical Environmentalist

    --

    Discussion Never Hurt Anyone.
    Libertarians
    1. Re:Long Bets by xutopia · · Score: 1

      HAHA :) i'll bet 1000EUR right away!! :) get my contact information on my web site.

  427. what could change by Polo · · Score: 2


    fusion power generation could change all this.

  428. No infrastructure for oil to homes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Oil Companies have the infrastructure to deliver a fuel to automobles and homes"

    They have it for cars, but not homes. What about natural gas houses? Electric heat? Propane tanks?

    1. Re:No infrastructure for oil to homes by thales · · Score: 2

      There are a lot of homes that use fuel oil for heat, it's just not all homes. Find a cheap sub for Fuel oil and the Oil Companies will expand the service.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
  429. Its the opposite reason by Convergence · · Score: 2

    The reason small farms are in trouble is that farmings become TOO efficient and too good at producing foodstuffs. The price of foodstuffs has been falling, in real dollars, for decades.

    When the product you sell is a commodity and goes down in price by multiplicative factors.. That hurts.

    This is especially evident for example, in milk subsidies. The US Gov't has millions of TONS of dried milk powder in storage, because they have subsidies to prevent the price of milk dropping below a certain level.

    Obviously, the correct solution is to remove perpetual farm subsidies, and let the least productive land go fallow. Yes, its true, farmland has been decreasing for YEARS since 1900.

    Of course, this'll hurt the 'small independent farmer' who doesn't have economies of scale.

    FYI: Repeat after me; matter can neither be created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction. With nuclear power supplying sufficient energy for millions of years... with todays technology.. How much soil could we manufacture a year if we had to?

  430. Are we not improving? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isnt it true that Earth's forests have been increasing in size and density since the 60's? Isnt Greenland or Iceland attempting to totally abandon fossil fuels? If you ask me, these are pretty good foward steps....

    Damned if i'm living on mars with all those creepy crying wooden aliens who kidnap Tom Siezmore.

  431. World Wrestling Federation? by Vulture_ · · Score: 1

    Slashdot is taking lessons from the World Wrestling Federation on when the Earth will expire? The end must truly be near...

    --

    The only way the typical /.er can pick up a chick is with a forklift. -- AC

  432. Re:The risk of ... - Part __ by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    I hope you find this discussion as interesting as I do because I really took some time to write a reply.

    Perhaps to the Chinese a reduction in freedom is a small price to pay. They don't have a very large tradition of "freedom." Overpopulation also isn't a problem in most of the developed world, so imposing those kinds of reductions in freedoms would be unnecessesary.

    I think this particular reduction of freedom is not yet necessesary in most countries, but it "solves" the problems for China. Most countries don't have a huge population like China, with all the problems coming with it. But these kind of situations (hunger, overpopulation, desease) also have effect on the rest of the world. Just like the economy in the US has effect on the economy in the EU. I'll come back this subject later on.

    I'm sorry, my freedoms are not negotiable. As the saying goes, "Those that give up freedom to ensure security deserve neither."

    Can you specify 'freedom' for me. To me absolute freedom doesn't exist. I have the freedom to drive a car, but not to speed. In a very direct way that is a limitation of my freedom to use a car the way I could want, but we all agreed to accept that limitation. To me responsability is a duty that comes with freedom. We can apply that to nature too. We have the freedom to do with it whatever we want, but we have to do it in a responsable way.

    The concept of freedom and responsability is interesting. I'd say freedom a universal right. Or is freedom a privilege for the ones who can afford it? And what gives one the right to take advantage from another person or country? We already spoke earlyer about investing in poor countries. Do we have the right to force poor farmers to buy our seeds for a high price by refusing to buy their regular product if they don't? Is it right to cut rainforests in other countries because they hardly have any other resources? Even if it supports OUR economy?
    No. Those countries can't do anything about it. They're with their backs against the wall. They have no other options that to do what we want them to do. That is no freedom for them. They're working for us. In the case of sweatshops even in circumstances that we wouldn't accept here. Compared to what their work is worth we pay hardly them. That is slavery. The only difference is that it's not happening in our oun countries, but far far away so that we don't have to think about it. (This is no attack on America's history. The Dutch also have a slave history.)

    If environmentalists ever present a convincing case based on science and logic...

    Isn't it safe to assume that something that has bad effects locally, also has bad effects globally??

    ... rather than politics and fear, I think you will see that a vast majority of Americans will take action without someone forcing it on us.

    The problem with these things is that it is so damn hard to proove. And worse, scientific proof is based on measurements and facts, but in this case it's impossible to conduct a scientific experiment. Firstly because it would require two testsets to compare with eachother and we only have one earth. And secondly because to proove beyond any doubt that the way we live and use the earth will cause a disaster is TO CAUSE that desaster. If you're using a mathematical model there will ALWAYS be someone saying that the model is flawed.

    Example. The Marlboro man. All the tabacco companies for years denied smoking is bad for your health. How many people have died of cancer before FINALLY they admit it is bad? You see, if companies don't have any short term interest in ecological measures, they'll deny the facts, but sadly, we don't have thousands of worlds to proove the way we live is wrong. We have assumptions and theories.

    On the other hand, there are enough signs that indicate that the way we use the earth isn't the right way. For example cutting down trees to make skiing possible. In the Swiss Alps there's a lot of skiing going on. Lot's of trees are cut down to make place for the ski pistes. As a result the rain washes the soil away because there is no vegetation left to keep the soil in place. Without the soil an inportant buffer for the rain is gone and the rain will flow directly in the Rhine.
    Down the Rhine in Germany the same thing is happening. The result is that with heavy rain and in the spring (melting snow) the amount of water in the Rhine has increased and causes floods in Germany like in Kohln (Colonge) and the Netherlands.
    [Background info on the Rhine is found here]

    Now what's the point of this water story? There are three points. 1. Just cutting down some trees CAN have big (unforseen) ecological effects. 2. Assume Swiss has the right / freedom to cut down their trees. Does this give them the right to cause floodings and damage in Germany and the Netherlands? 3. The economical profit the Swiss makes with tourism is good for them, but has a counterside in enormous (economical) damage in other countries. Do they have the right / freedom to cause (economical) damage in other countries?

    I don't know about the cause of the floods in Texas, but the economical damage is enormous and I'm not even talking about personal tragedy. The way we treath the earth IS backfiering on us.
    I tried to point out that small actions (cutting down trees) can have big unforseen effects many miles away. This is a PROOVEN fact, and there are big discussions going on about CO2 and NO.
    Is it a good idea to dispute the assumptions until they ARE prooven, and take the risk in the mean time that we do irreversable damage to the environment (quitting smiking can be too late to and cancer still is hard to cure), destroying human life and therefore destroying economy? Or is it better to play it safe and take measures?

    Ofcourse it's about how efficient we pollute--or, more clearly put, it's about how efficiently we can generate wealth with the least amount of pollution.

    Actually there is a very big difference between the two statements. The first statement implies polution is a goal, but it isn't. In the end it's a TOTAL amount of polution that will kill a man or damage the environent.
    Something like "If you have to pollute, make sure to maximize profit, but if you have to make profit, make sure to minimize pollution."

    Thinking about your and my arguments, I see that it contradicts what I said earlier about pollution/habitant (new insights are always nice). What it comes down to is the TOTAL global amount of polution that counts. Not the amount of pollution relative to something.
    That left me with the question why pollution/habitant is used. What does it measure? It measures how polluting one's lifestyle is, I guess.

    You can do some good for society without polluting, but for you to be able to do those things you--and the economy around you--have to be in sufficiently good shape to support those activities. If you don't have food, medicine, shelter, etc. you won't be spending much time helping society, I can assure you. And for you to have your food, medicine, and shelter certain activities much take place--and those activities create pollution.

    Completely true, and I wouldn't want to do without those activities, but there are many ways to reduce the amount of pollution in the proces of conducting those activities. There are ways for example to produce energy with less pollution like wind- and solarenergy. But it takes research, investments, money to make things like solar panels profitable. It CAN be done, but one has to want it.

    So what we can do is try to increase the efficiency of inefficient countries. We can try to increase our own efficiency as long as doing so provides a net gain in efficiency. If, by implementing a given policy, our GDP/pollution efficiency is reduced we've actually moved in the wrong direction.

    Increasing the efficiency suggests an inproovement, but it also implies that if you find a very very profitable way to make a product which produces more pollution than a profitable way to make a product the GDP/pollution is increasing, but also the total amount of pollution is increasing. Again, what's the use of a very high GDP/pollution if the high amount of pollution will kill you. In the end it is about enjoying a good life in an economy and not about a good economy and no life at all.

    "Investing" (spending) on these products needs to reduce the amount of pollution per dollar. The problem is, many times the policies actually would INCREASE the amount of pollution per dollar--although overall pollution may be reduced.

    Again, the "per dollar" is not the issue. Pollution per dollar is only interesting to point out (in)efficient industries. The GDP/pollution of the US probably is higher then the GDP/pollution of Russia. This only says there is room for improovement in the Russian industry. It says nothing about the total amount of pollution produced.
    Investing money in anti-pollution measures will indeed reduce the profit, but I think that is a small price to pay. In fact there are many ways of MAKING money with those investments. Underground heat storage will decrease the amount of gas used for heating and cooling a building. So therefore will safe money. At the moment such an investment already pays back in 4 to 5 years. Also solarpanels is getting more efficient by the year.

    What that means is that, yes, you may have less pollution but you've also created less wealth in the world. Those that look at ONLY the environmental side of the equation without looking at the economic side are as shortsighted and out-of-touch with reality as those businesses that dump their toxic waste into rivers.

    But what's the use wealth if that would cause floodings, desease and hunger? As I see it, all your agruments are ONLY based at wealth, money and economy. There are many ways that you still can make a profit, of course it's smaller profit WITH environmental investments. But take a look at your own life. Is it that bad that you need to get (much) more wealthy?

    It's about both. But if we can improve our efficiency, the total amount of pollution will tend to decrease for a given amount of "social good" (wealth).

    I'll stop repeating that it's a TOTAL amount that will kill you, not a relative amount. Pff. Okay, one more really silly example. What would you prefere. To die from getting wealth in 5 years, to die from getting wealthy in 10 years or get wealthy and stay alive? The second ratio is way better than the first one, but I prefere the third one. Ok, it is a silly example, but I hope you understand what I mean.

    People don't like seeing the word "wealth" or "money." But these people simply don't understand that in the real world there is a very real relation between "wealth/money" and "standard of living" and "societal good." Sure, we can clean up our environment 100%--and all live like Ethiopians. But despite the fact that we'll have a cleaner environment, few would argue we've served the good of society.

    Hmm. Yes and no. I think nobody with a piece of common sense will argue that money and wealth are bad. Au contraire. I would say everybody should have enough money and wealth, not too much. A big difference in wealth and money is a problem. Especially is one has way less than a certain minimum. In fact above a cartain amount of money the amount isn't imporant anymore. What does Bill Gates do with his money? Buying an even bigger villa perhaps, but I don't think he would be very unhappy about having 30,000,000 less than he does now. He'd probably even wouldn't notice it. would you miss, say $100.= a year? Same thing for a company. Many companies can perfectly function with a smaller profit and invest that in exhaust filters or other measures. Cleaning the environment for 100% is unrealistic, but refusing to do anything is rediculous.

    Those few that WOULD suggest we live like Ethiopians, if that's what it takes to clean the environment, are just as extremists and without merit as those businesses that think that dumping toxic waste in rivers is ok. Neither extreme is acceptable.

    I totally agree. Fortunately we're not talking about a total reduction of exhaust, but the whole concept of CO2 reduction seems out of the question. And the general reaction on /. is total denyal of the article we were reacting to. I've seen reactions like "We have a damn near infinite supply of oil..." (this person forgot the 70's oil crisis) and others talking about "treehugging extremists", not even willing to think about the possibility and the implications if even part of the story turns out to be true. The question that interests me is why the US is completely refusing to participate in Kyoto. Perhaps you can help me out?

    What you and many forget is that our health AND our quality live are very tightly linked to "hard bucks." I know it's an unpopular view, but it's the truth.

    They are linked, but having $10,000 or $100,000 doesn't make me 10 times healthier, while at the same time there are many who have to do with less than $1.00 a day. We ARE wealthy, we even have time to worry or discuss the environment while others have to worry about food. No, making just a little less profit shouldn't make us unwealthe and poor. Most of us (1st world) can do with a little less.

    Without the hard bucks, we will not have the money to support medical research to produce new medicines that save millions of lives per year. Or reduce the pain and suffering of those that are sick. Or distribute food to those that are starving.

    I could have said the same :) But why are big industrials asking $60.= for an AIDS medicine in Africa. The people there can't afford it, while prople here can. There it is. Health. Only for the ones who can afford it. I would say something like health is a right, not a privilegde. Remember the Bayer(?) medicine against Anthrax? Suddenly the government ordered that the price should be, I can't remember how much, but much lower than the official price. But if in Africa they BEG for cheaper medicine suddenly the same medicin companies are protected and not forced do reduce the prices. Health. From the ones that can spare it.

    These are ALL aspects of health and quality of life that cannot be addressed without a thriving economy ("hard bucks") to support it. If certain policies that "save our environment" but destroy our economy are implemented, any potential gains in quality of life and health due to a cleaner environment very easily will be overshadowed by the decreases in our ability to address other issues of quality of life.

    Without hard bucks, we're nowhere, but I seriously doubt that environmental friendly policies will destroy the economy. Without a doubt here will be less profit, but healthy companies are resourcefull and a bad company will go bankrupt one way or another. In Europe the environment gets quite some attention, but is our economy destroyed by it? Economy ALWAYS will find it's way. That's economy.

    So it's ok to let developing countries pollute the world for money, but developed countries cannot? I don't see the consistency in that argument based on the rest of your post that seems to imply that the environment is more important than "hard bucks."

    Good point. First of all, I would say that you're almost right about the base of my argument. They're both important. But I would say in the end "hard bucks" are less important than a healthy environment. I want to be healthy, wealthy, have food and have a roof over my head. I have those. I don't want more food, more wealth and a bigger roof over my head if that is for account of the smell of a forest after a summers rainfall. A strong economy results in more wealth, but wealth is more than a strong economy. A healthy environment also contributes to more wealth.

    But the argument goes like this. Stimulating economy will pay back. I think you'll agree. Stimulating the economy in the developint countries will eventually benefit us. Just think about Taiwan. The last time I saw a 'made in Taiwan' watch is long time ago. Now they produce high tech products. It takes 20, 30 years, but it will pay off. Therefore I say we have to invest in the developing countries. They need to grow to a point where they can compete with our industry. Helping eachother getting to higher standards will in long term benefit us all. Look at Taiwan.
    Our economies won't be destroyed by implementing cleaner techniques and filters. We have the money for it. In the developing countries they don't. Then need to grow, with our help, first. We were the ones buiding the factories in Taiwan, we will build factories in the developing countries. But with our possibilities we can build cleaner factories there. We can spare more money on environmental measures than they can so that's why we should start implementing those techniques first.

    Pledge of Allegiance: One nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all...

    I think I get the idea. But maybe you can tell me a little more about it. About the history of it and the deeper meaning for America.

    Let me try to make a globalized version of it: One world, respecting race, religion and each other, because we're all in it together, striving for equality and equal opportunities for all in a healthy world.

    Which brings me to an other subject: Anti-globalisation. The short short version. The movement got the international interest with the riots in Seattle and other riots gave them a really bad name, but their intentions are clouded by the term 'anti-globalists' which doesn't cover their ideas the right way. Mainly they're against THE WAY the globalisation process takes place.

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  433. a better predicion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    here is a better prediction.

  434. Re:The risk of ... - Part __ by letxa2000 · · Score: 2
    I hope you find this discussion as interesting as I do because I really took some time to write a reply.

    I do. I had been checking for your reply periodically over the last two days. :)

    To me responsability is a duty that comes with freedom. We can apply that to nature too. We have the freedom to do with it whatever we want, but we have to do it in a responsable way.

    I agree with you 100%.

    I'd say freedom a universal right.

    I again agree with you 100%.

    Do we have the right to force poor farmers to buy our seeds for a high price by refusing to buy their regular product if they don't?

    I'd say we have the right to set terms for our business deals just as they have the right to take their business elsewhere. There are few products that can only be obtained from a single country.

    Whether the above is ethical or even good long-term for the rich country is another story. I'm personally in favor of 0% tarrifs on everything worldwide. "Customs" should exist only to make sure nothing illegal or dangerous is coming in, not to levy taxes.

    Is it right to cut rainforests in other countries because they hardly have any other resources?

    It's not our RIGHT to cut rainforests, but it is our right to look around the world for the resources we want. It is the right of the country that owns the rainforest to decide whether they want to satisfy existing demand.

    Those countries can't do anything about it. They're with their backs against the wall. They have no other options that to do what we want them to do. That is no freedom for them.

    I agree they are in a hard place. I'm sure it is very tempting for them to go ahead and chop down rainforests to earn a few bucks. But to say they have no choice isn't correct. As you said, everyone has rights and corresponding responsibilities. That applies to everyone, not just the rich.

    In the case of sweatshops even in circumstances that we wouldn't accept here. Compared to what their work is worth we pay hardly them. That is slavery. The only difference is that it's not happening in our oun countries, but far far away so that we don't have to think about it.

    Believe me, I'm not in favor of sweatshops nor exploiting child labor. That's bad and regardless of what company I happened to own I would never do it--that's a question of ethics.

    But those practices are all tacitly "approved" by their local government. The local government should look out for their own--in fact, that is there RESPONSIBILITY. If they lived up to their responsibility, the problem of child exploitation and sweatshops would go away. Sure, the company might leave for another country--until that country also lived up to its responsibility to its citizens.

    Again, I think it is unethical for companies of rich countries to knowingly support child/sweatshop labor. But at the same time I can't help but thinking if Japan were to start a sweatshop in Los Angeles and Americans willingly went to work there--even if those Americans were penniless homeless people--should the world complain about Japan looking for the best deal or about the U.S. that isn't enforcing labor laws within its territory?

    Isn't it safe to assume that something that has bad effects locally, also has bad effects globally??

    I'd say that depends on the issue. Something bad locally may or may not have bad effects regionally or globally.

    If you're using a mathematical model there will ALWAYS be someone saying that the model is flawed.

    In the case of the environment, the model can be applied to a past scenario to see if it is able to reproduce the current scenario. If it does, you're half-way there. Then, if it continues to get it right for a reasonable period of time (perhaps 5 or 10 years? Depends on what you're modeling I guess) then you can consider it proved.

    At the same time, I don't think a model has to be 100% right. I would be willing to accept a model that was 90% right 90% of the time. But so far we have don't have anything remotely close to that--and therein lies the problem. We don't have a second earth to do experiments, and the models haven't been able to successfully reproduce todays environment based on past scenarios. That puts the environmentalists in a tough place selling their case to the public.

    For example cutting down trees to make skiing possible... The result is that with heavy rain and in the spring (melting snow) the amount of water in the Rhine has increased and causes floods in Germany like in Kohln (Colonge)

    Wow, do they completely remove every tree from the mountainside? I'm an avid skier (Ski Colorado!) but we have "ski runs." It's kind of like a narrow road through the forest, and that ski run has grass on it so that when the snow melts it doesn't take the topsoil with it.

    Assume Swiss has the right / freedom to cut down their trees. Does this give them the right to cause floodings and damage in Germany and the Netherlands?

    That's a tough one. I admit I haven't read about the Swiss Tree/German flood scenario but unless they are downing an ungodly number of trees I would truly have to think that the floods are caused by varying precipitation levels--not solely by the lack of trees. That is, I can accept that the trees are an aggravating factor, but I find it hard to believe that the downed trees are the only cause of the floods.

    I don't know about the cause of the floods in Texas, but the economical damage is enormous [usatoday.com]

    I currently live in Monterrey Mexico, about 5 hours south of San Antonio which is where the major flooding occurred. In fact, we were hit by the same storm. The flooding was due to an unusual storm that just camped over Texas and rained. Floods happen.

    Something like "If you have to pollute, make sure to maximize profit, but if you have to make profit, make sure to minimize pollution."

    I'd say both of the above are true. What it really comes down to "Make as much wealth as possible with as little pollution as possible."

    Pollution per dollar is only interesting to point out (in)efficient industries.

    And I'm 99% sure (I'm participating in multiple threads) that that's what I said at the beginning. The pollution per dollar analysis is useful in determining what countries need to have their efficiency improved.

    Many companies can perfectly function with a smaller profit and invest that in exhaust filters or other measures.

    If that's all it was, I'd agree with you. Unfortunately, the demands of many environmentalists are so extreme that we're not talking about installing filters--we're talking about building entirely new plants, or perhaps terminating production completely.

    That's the question. I'm not against taking logical steps to reduce dangerous pollution. Dumping chemicals into rivers is not acceptable. Throwing nuclear waste into a garbage dump isn't either. I don't, however, believe that CO2 production is "dangerous pollution." That's far from proved. Regardless of how much we pump into the air, it won't kill us. The worst possible scenario is the indirect effects from global warming--but that hasn't been proved beyond a reasonable doubt yet. See paragraph above concerning how to test models and how much accuracy is needed to make the case to the public.

    And the general reaction on /. is total denyal of the article we were reacting to.

    Most everyone discounts the report because its absurd. But believe me, my Karma has taken a hit for my "I don't believe the whole environmental crisis story." /. might not agree with the report (because it IS absurd) but believe me, the majority would side with you, not with me.

    "We have a damn near infinite supply of oil..." (this person forgot the 70's oil crisis)

    That was due to purely human/political reasons, not because of any real lack of oil.

    The question that interests me is why the US is completely refusing to participate in Kyoto. Perhaps you can help me out?

    First, it assumes that we have concluded that not only is global warming happening but that humans are the major cause of it. That is far from proven.

    Second, it assumes that even if there is global warming that it must be bad. That is also far from proven. In fact, I read an article yesterday that stated that a slightly warmer winter last year saved the U.S. economy over $21 billion and saved lives from severe winter storms (sorry, I'm not going to hunt it down right now--feel free to google it).

    Third--and I think this is the biggest--it makes no sense to apply Kyoto restrictions/reductions to the developed world and not apply them to developing countries--especially when two of the exempted countries (India and China) account for nearly 50% of the world population and one of them is even less efficient than the U.S. on a GDP/Pollution basis.

    First, it doesn't take an economics degree to understand that if labor is cheaper in India and China *AND* they aren't facing Kyoto restrictions, that polluting companies will simply moved to those countries. That will cause more employment in India and China but it will also cause more pollution there AND cost jobs in the developed countries.

    Second, it doesn't take a climate science degree to understand that since the above is true you really haven't reduced pollution on a global scale--you've just moved the pollution to developing countries where we can't see it.

    My conclusions (and I speak for myself, not the U.S. as a whole or the U.S. Senate, etc.) are that Kyoto will NOT reduce global pollution, period. What it will do is 1) redistribute wealth to developing countries by moving jobs there at the expense of developed countries. 2) redistribute pollution so that we can feel squeaky clean in the developed world while the developing world becomes even dirtier.

    A better question is: Why does anyone think that Kyoto will actually help the environment?

    But why are big industrials asking $60.= for an AIDS medicine in Africa.

    I would like to think because they spent 40 billion dollars (made up number) on research and only by selling the drugs at these prices can they recoup their investment to (hopefully) research and deploy even better drugs in the future.

    That said, I personally think there should be some limits to what companies can charge for medical goods. They definitely need to recoup their investment, they definitely need to make a reasonable return on their investment... but milking the market once they've recouped their investment is unethical.

    It's a tough question. You don't want to put so many restrictions on profits from medicine that no-one researches it. At the same time, I have a hard time swallowing (literally) my asthma-control medication that costs $1 per pill. At some point they've recouped their investment and the price ought to come down.

    Stimulating the economy in the developint countries will eventually benefit us.

    I agree. I'd like to see every world be a 1st world country. Remember, I currently live in Mexico (a 3rd world country).

    Therefore I say we have to invest in the developing countries.

    We do. Unfortunately, it is often painted as "exploiting third world countries" but the fact remains that we do invest in developing countries paying the local prevailinng labor rates.

    They need to grow to a point where they can compete with our industry.

    I agree. Hopefully some day my asthma medication will cost $0.02 per pill instead of a dollar.

    Helping eachother getting to higher standards will in long term benefit us all.

    That's capitalism. With zero tarrifs, companies will go in and exploit (i.e. invest) other countries. Over time, developing countries will develop and their wealth should become on par with the "rich countries."

    That will happen all by itself without us making an "effort" to invest in developing countries. It requires no action on behalf of governments. The problem is that all governments that I know of currently impose tarrifs and THAT is what causes developing countries to not advance.

    We were the ones buiding the factories in Taiwan, we will build factories in the developing countries. But with our possibilities we can build cleaner factories there.

    Exactly. Which is why Kyoto should apply to everyone, not just the developed countries.

    Back in the 90's, the U.S. Senate voted 99-0 that they would not sign on to any Kyoto treaty that applied to us but not to developing countries. That's reasonable. And that's the main (official) reason the U.S. would not participate in Kyoto.

    Mainly they're against THE WAY the globalisation process takes place.

    Whatever. I think they are hoodlums myself. The way globalization should take place is like this: Today we have tarrifs, tomorrow we don't. Done.

  435. Re:The risk of ... - Part __ by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    Sorry that it takes so long. work, friends etc. and a bit of RSI :(
    But a new reply will come soon.

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
  436. There it is... by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    I'd say we have the right to set terms for our business deals just as they have the right to take their business elsewhere. There are few products that can only be obtained from a single country.

    Often it's a take it or leave it deal. Allow this product on your market or we stop all trade with your country. And being a poor country, this hardly leaves an alternative.

    Whether the above is ethical or even good long-term for the rich country is another story. I'm personally in favor of 0% tarrifs on everything worldwide. "Customs" should exist only to make sure nothing illegal or dangerous is coming in, not to levy taxes.

    Again this is a measure that will benefit our economy, but hardly benefits theirs. We require them to open up their markets for our products, while we still have all kinds of measures to protect our market and effectively keep it closed for their products. An other effect by opening their markets for our products is that their money will flow to the 1st world while it should be invested in their own countries. Effectively this makes them poorer.

    It's not our RIGHT to cut rainforests, but it is our right to look around the world for the resources we want. It is the right of the country that owns the rainforest to decide whether they want to satisfy existing demand.

    I agree they are in a hard place. I'm sure it is very tempting for them to go ahead and chop down rainforests to earn a few bucks. But to say they have no choice isn't correct. As you said, everyone has rights and corresponding responsibilities. That applies to everyone, not just the rich.


    Personally for wood I would prefere a model where the wood prodecers spend a part of their income to plant new trees. The 'no alternatives' argument applies to the trees too. Do those countries really have an alternative or is it a theoretical one? Knowing they hardly have an alternative it would be extortion to 'ask' them for their trees.
    We HAVE the freedom to ask them for their wood, but knowing they have no alternatives, that makes us the responsible ones. Planting new trees would be our responsability.

    Believe me, I'm not in favor of sweatshops nor exploiting child labor. That's bad and regardless of what company I happened to own I would never do it--that's a question of ethics.

    A poor country is just as defenseless against our economy as a child in a sweatshop.

    But those practices are all tacitly "approved" by their local government. The local government should look out for their own--in fact, that is there RESPONSIBILITY. If they lived up to their responsibility, the problem of child exploitation and sweatshops would go away. Sure, the company might leave for another country--until that country also lived up to its responsibility to its citizens.

    OTHO our companies could tahe their responsability and refuse to buy the products if child labour is involved. Luckily this is happening more and more.
    An other thing that companies can do is invest in their welfare. Build schools and educate their children to give them opportunities in the future. A higher level of education will also pay back.

    But at the same time I can't help but thinking if Japan were to start a sweatshop in Los Angeles and Americans willingly went to work there--even if those Americans were penniless homeless people--should the world complain about Japan looking for the best deal or about the U.S. that isn't enforcing labor laws within its territory?

    The effect of last option is to say to your poor people "sorry, we know you desperately need the money, but you can't work in that Japanese sweatshop". I'd rather see that the foreign company in this example would see it as a moral duty to offer a working environment that stands up to their own standards with working and safety conditions in which they would let their own employees work too.

    I'd say that depends on the issue. Something bad locally may or may not have bad effects regionally or globally.

    But how about a continuous production of exhaust? Remember the effects on health of the population during the beginning of the industrial revolution.

    At the same time, I don't think a model has to be 100% right. I would be willing to accept a model that was 90% right 90% of the time. But so far we have don't have anything remotely close to that--and therein lies the problem. We don't have a second earth to do experiments, and the models haven't been able to successfully reproduce todays environment based on past scenarios. That puts the environmentalists in a tough place selling their case to the public.

    A few weeks ago I read an article in a newspaper regarding the growth of the world population. They discussed four different models on energy consumption. A model by one group or fesearchers was based on continuation of the present situation. An other group made a model assuming energy reducing measures would be used. The outcome of the four models were quite different and it's likely that neither of the models would fit the future outcome of energy use for 90% in 90% of the time, but they all agreed on an increase of energy use (roughtly between 2.5 and 3.5 the amount we use now if I remember well).
    We don't know exactly how much more energy there will be used. There are just too many scenarios. Tha same applies to pollution. The amount of pollution and the effects that they will have are uncertain, but my impression is that we generally agree that pollution WILL have a bad effect in the long term.

    That's a tough one. I admit I haven't read about the Swiss Tree/German flood scenario but unless they are downing an ungodly number of trees I would truly have to think that the floods are caused by varying precipitation levels--not solely by the lack of trees. That is, I can accept that the trees are an aggravating factor, but I find it hard to believe that the downed trees are the only cause of the floods.

    You're right. It's is very likely that there are more factors involved. But it's hard to say cuttimg down trees contributes for xx% of the flooding problem and global warming for yy% etc.

    And I'm 99% sure (I'm participating in multiple threads) that that's what I said at the beginning. The pollution per dollar analysis is useful in determining what countries need to have their efficiency improved.

    How would you improve that efficiency? If you decrease the pollution your ratio ALSO goes up. That ratio doesn't say anything about the total amount of pollution. If the total amount of pollution is high, you need to reduce THAT and thereby, as a mathematical result, your ratio will go up.

    If that's all it was, I'd agree with you. Unfortunately, the demands of many environmentalists are so extreme that we're not talking about installing filters--we're talking about building entirely new plants, or perhaps terminating production completely.

    In many cases plants don't have an eternal life and improvements have to be made anyway. In certain cases a new production method prooves to be cheaper (more efficient, but says nothing about the amount of pollution ;) and the plant is improved. Those are perfect moments to think about less polluting methods and measures, but a company must be willing to do so or nothing happens.
    In other cases, Tjernobyl, it is quite clear that plants are not safe enough or pollute too much. Safety if a reason to shut doen a plant. Let pollution be an other one.

    ... I don't, however, believe that CO2 production is "dangerous pollution." That's far from proved. Regardless of how much we pump into the air, it won't kill us. The worst possible scenario is the indirect effects from global warming--but that hasn't been proved beyond a reasonable doubt yet. ...

    Well, what can I say. I'm happy that there are many counties think that there are enough clues pointing to the effects of CO2 that they willing to address the CO2 production, even if the effect isn't 90% prooved.
    Having with 'only' 250.000.000 inhabitants and being that influencial also carries responsabilities to listen to others. I just don't like to see the U.S. to go their own way in this matter.

    Most everyone discounts the report because its absurd. But believe me, my Karma has taken a hit for my "I don't believe the whole environmental crisis story." /. might not agree with the report (because it IS absurd) but believe me, the majority would side with you, not with me.

    Haha. Ane of my posts' score yoyo-ed with interesting and flaimbait mods ;)

    I've been tought that there are always more sides to a story and to ask questions. I the 'crisis story' will a piece of truth in it. The figures are dramatic. I actually can't tell if they are really true, but to put the story aside saying it's bullshit is ignorant.

    The story reminded me on a simulation of a population of foxes and rabbits I had on my ZX-Spectrum, 15 years ago. But this time the simulation is called 'humans and resources'...

    First, it assumes that we have concluded that not only is global warming happening but that humans are the major cause of it. That is far from proven.

    Ok.

    Second, it assumes that even if there is global warming that it must be bad. That is also far from proven. In fact, I read an article yesterday that stated that a slightly warmer winter last year saved the U.S. economy over $21 billion and saved lives from severe winter storms (sorry, I'm not going to hunt it down right now--feel free to google it).

    Interesting (+1)

    Third--and I think this is the biggest--it makes no sense to apply Kyoto restrictions/reductions to the developed world and not apply them to developing countries--especially when two of the exempted countries (India and China) account for nearly 50% of the world population and one of them is even less efficient than the U.S. on a GDP/Pollution basis.

    AAARGH! ;) Quoting http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ us.html: "Environment - current issues: air pollution resulting in acid rain in both the US and Canada; the US is the largest single emitter of carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels; ..."

    Ok. You're not sure about CO2. Enough others are. But please tell me why it so important to look at other countries instead of looking at our own? I believe we agreed that developing the economy of a 3rd world country is important for them to achieve wealth and money and in the ling term for us for trade. Imposing all kings of regulations on their industry will withhold them more than it will us. Sure eventually they have to live to the restrictions, but they need to develop first and with our help they can do that in a 'good' way. In the mean time we need to look at ourselves and do what we can. At least that's what I think.

    First, it doesn't take an economics degree to understand that if labor is cheaper in India and China *AND* they aren't facing Kyoto restrictions, that polluting companies will simply moved to those countries. That will cause more employment in India and China but it will also cause more pollution there AND cost jobs in the developed countries.

    The same thing as my sweatshop example. Responsible behaviour from the companies would restrict that from happening.

    Second, it doesn't take a climate science degree to understand that since the above is true you really haven't reduced pollution on a global scale--you've just moved the pollution to developing countries where we can't see it.

    More responsible behaviour...

    My conclusions (and I speak for myself, not the U.S. as a whole or the U.S. Senate, etc.) are that Kyoto will NOT reduce global pollution, period. What it will do is 1) redistribute wealth to developing countries by moving jobs there at the expense of developed countries. 2) redistribute pollution so that we can feel squeaky clean in the developed world while the developing world becomes even dirtier. (and with that in the end the whole world...)

    Well, the 1) isn't bad. It will pay off. The 2) is a problem that requires a lot of attention.

    Let me ask you an other question. With freedom came responsability. But would you agree that responsability also comes with power and wealth?

    A better question is: Why does anyone think that Kyoto will actually help the environment?

    I think CO2 IS accepted as problem by many countries, and it's assumed (to play it safe) a reduction of CO2 WOULD help the environment.
    The influence of european governments on the market and companies is bigger than America's government. Blackmail by companies is occuring here, but there is a climate here that consumers demand more and more responsability from companies. Consumer behavior and governmental regulations have effects on companies. My impression is that the US government is run/bought by industry or lobby groups. Therefore they are very influencial on the american politics. Perhaps in Europe it's easyer to enforce Kyoto and force responsable behaviour on companies.


    I would like to think because they spent 40 billion dollars (made up number) on research and only by selling the drugs at these prices can they recoup their investment to (hopefully) research and deploy even better drugs in the future.

    It's very safe to assume that. But how much money would they make in a poor country where prople have less that $1,00? They will make their biggest income in the 1st world. It would suit them right to make it possible for the 3rd world to procude cheap medicine. BUT the 1st world's market would have to be protected against the cheap 3rd world medicine.

    That said, I personally think there should be some limits to what companies can charge for medical goods. They definitely need to recoup their investment, they definitely need to make a reasonable return on their investment... but milking the market once they've recouped their investment is unethical.

    If you milk a society that can afford it I'd say that's economy. But with medicine it's a little more complicated. I think people deserve to be healthy. Health souldn't be a priviledge for the rich.

    It's a tough question. You don't want to put so many restrictions on profits from medicine that no-one researches it. At the same time, I have a hard time swallowing (literally) my asthma-control medication that costs $1 per pill. At some point they've recouped their investment and the price ought to come down.

    Or they develop a new medicine which can be sold at a higher price and take the old one off the market...

    Therefore I say we have to invest in the developing countries.

    We do. Unfortunately, it is often painted as "exploiting third world countries" but the fact remains that we do invest in developing countries paying the local prevailinng labor rates.


    There are things we can do to prevent exploitation. It's a very bad idea to pay people a salary that would be very much higher (but probably still nothing compared to our salaries) than the average salary. The difference in wealth would instabilize the country. I'd rather see a fair salary, and invest in things like education, healthcare, infrastructure. That too will benefit the economy, will help to build up the country and increase wealth. While on the other hand, it can't be accumulated (like money) by just a few.

    I agree. Hopefully some day my asthma medication will cost $0.02 per pill instead of a dollar.

    Would be nice. Also it would do me pleasure if others also have the chanse to live in wealth.

    Helping eachother getting to higher standards will in long term benefit us all.

    That's capitalism. With zero tarrifs, companies will go in and exploit (i.e. invest) other countries. Over time, developing countries will develop and their wealth should become on par with the "rich countries."

    That will happen all by itself without us making an "effort" to invest in developing countries. It requires no action on behalf of governments. The problem is that all governments that I know of currently impose tarrifs and THAT is what causes developing countries to not advance.


    I thought it was socialism ;) But it's true what you say. I would even go as far as saying that the 1st world should be opened for the 3rd worlds' products. You should have _some_ protection for your local products, but it would be good if there was some (more) money to flow to the 3rd world and not the other way around. This also means the 3rd world has to be protected from our products. At least until the 3rd world has become more like the 1st world and they truely can play their past in the global trade game.

    We were the ones buiding the factories in Taiwan, we will build factories in the developing countries. But with our possibilities we can build cleaner factories there.

    Exactly. Which is why Kyoto should apply to everyone, not just the developed countries.


    The thing is that WE can afford the live up to Kyoto. Developing countries, at the moment, hardly can.

    Back in the 90's, the U.S. Senate voted 99-0 that they would not sign on to any Kyoto treaty that applied to us but not to developing countries. That's reasonable. And that's the main (official) reason the U.S. would not participate in Kyoto.

    Do what you can. That's responsible.

    Whatever. I think they are hoodlums myself. The way globalization should take place is like this: Today we have tarrifs, tomorrow we don't. Done.

    But then the poor countries would be overrun by our companies?

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
    1. Re:There it is... by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Often it's a take it or leave it deal. Allow this product on your market or we stop all trade with your country. And being a poor country, this hardly leaves an alternative.

      Not knowing one way or the other, can you cite any examples of this? I know of the standard trade wars--and I can see "accept this or we will levy 50% importation on your $PRODUCT". But completely stopping trade with a country based on a trade dispute?

      That said, I've already mentioned that I'm 100% in favor of 0% tarrifs on everything between every country, period. So whether or not the above is true, I'd be opposed to it and the practice would be moot if there were no tarrifs anywhere.

      Again this is a measure that will benefit our economy, but hardly benefits theirs.

      You missed my point. You said that rich countries can force certain policies/tarrifs on poor countries. I said something along the lines of "Whether or not this is in the rich country's long-term interest is questionable." I stand by that. I think, in the long term, the above would be bad for both the rich and poor country.

      Do those countries really have an alternative or is it a theoretical one? Knowing they hardly have an alternative it would be extortion to 'ask' them for their trees. We HAVE the freedom to ask them for their wood, but knowing they have no alternatives, that makes us the responsible ones.

      I disagree with that completely and stand by my original comment. Being poor does not absolve one of responsibility or give them the right to "pass the buck." I will concede that perhaps responsibility is harder for those with fewer options, but that doesn't make them any less responsible.

      The effect of last option is to say to your poor people "sorry, we know you desperately need the money, but you can't work in that Japanese sweatshop".

      I'd rather see them say to the rich company, "Hey, you want to exploit our labor? Fine. Here are the minimum labor standards and pay."

      I'd rather see that the foreign company in this example would see it as a moral duty to offer a working environment that stands up to their own standards with working and safety conditions in which they would let their own employees work too.

      I would do that myself if I had a company. Others may not. Others may look at it at outsourcing. The ethics of any given businessman (or any given person) is a wildcard. The local government should protect their own so that wildcard businessmen / companies / countries don't abuse them.

      Personally, I'd love to see both--ethical businesses and local governments overseeing that. But since we don't live in a perfect world and not everyone is 100% ethical what we CAN expect is local governments protecting working conditions.

      You're right. It's is very likely that there are more factors involved. But it's hard to say cuttimg down trees contributes for xx% of the flooding problem and global warming for yy% etc.

      I plan to read the links you provided previously regarding trees and floods... But, as is the case with global warming, I'm sure that 99% of the cause is natural and, maybe, 1% is man-made. In other words, I think that even if they hadn't cut the trees down there still would have been a flood in Germany. Perhaps the flood would have been 2.95 meters instead of 3.00, but would that have been any less destructive?

      In many cases plants don't have an eternal life and improvements have to be made anyway... Those are perfect moments to think about less polluting methods and measures, but a company must be willing to do so or nothing happens.

      I agree. New plants should be built with the latest, lower-pollution technologies available at the time.

      But what if a certain technology reduces the pollution but to implement it would bankrupt the company or make the product no longer viable? How much CO2 is permissible to avoid X number of people being thrown out of work?

      Again, I must stress that I'm talking mostly about CO2 since that's mostly what environmentalists seem concerned about these days. I don't dispute that toxic waste shouldn't be thrown in rivers, nuclear waste shouldn't be thrown in trash dumps, and that cancer-causing contaminants should be extremely well-filtered.

      Having with 'only' 250.000.000 inhabitants and being that influencial also carries responsabilities to listen to others. I just don't like to see the U.S. to go their own way in this matter.

      No-one has a responsibility to listen to a babbling idiot. I'm not suggesting that you are one, but I am suggesting that if the United States, in its own informed opinion, thinks that what everyone else is saying is hogwash we have absolutely NO responsibility to listen to them just because they outnumber us. In fact, our government has a responsibility to its citizens to protect us from such nonsense by not going along with the crowd.

      I actually can't tell if they are really true, but to put the story aside saying it's bullshit is ignorant.

      No. Ignorant is when you frame your argument around the possibility of having to find two additional planets to support the population in 2050. As someone else said in this thread, they framed two options 1) Reduce our consumption now. 2) Find two more planets. Since the second one is impossible, the conclusion is that we must reduce consumption now.

      . That's an inaccurate conclusion, certainly not scientific. It doesn't contemplate the possible--dare I say PROBABLE--improvements in technology in the next 50 years that will reduce pollution without reducing consumption. THAT'S the third choice and it's not one they significantly addressed.

      The reason they didn't talk to the third option is because they aren't making a real effort to present the possible options to the public. They are trying to scare the public into accepting their politics. That's why their story was written off by most as bullshit...

      I believe we agreed that developing the economy of a 3rd world country is important for them to achieve wealth and money and in the ling term for us for trade. Imposing all kings of regulations on their industry will withhold them more than it will us. Sure eventually they have to live to the restrictions, but they need to develop first and with our help they can do that in a 'good' way.

      The fact is, in most cases 3rd world countries end up developing because richer nations invest in them. If RICH nations are investing in them anyway they should be required to use the latest in pollution-controlling technology, should they not?

      Me: First, it doesn't take an economics degree to understand that if labor is cheaper in India and China *AND* they aren't facing Kyoto restrictions, that polluting companies will simply moved to those countries.
      You: The same thing as my sweatshop example. Responsible behaviour from the companies would restrict that from happening.

      You seem to have a lot of faith in companies' "responsible behavior." History shows that your faith is misplaced. If you set up the scenario described by Kyoto (expensive labor and environmental restrictions in 1st world, cheap labor and no environmental restrictions in 3rd world) then I can assure you that the companies WILL move there, they WILL pollute there, and they WILL take their jobs there.

      You can talk about corporate responsibiltiy all you want. I'm talking about reality. And that's why the U.S. didn't sign on to Kyoto. I invite you review the U.S. stand. Unfortunately, the U.S. didn't even dispute the goals and reductions required by Kyoto--the U.S. disputed it being implemented in some countries and not in others.

      Me: Second, it doesn't take a climate science degree to understand that since the above is true you really haven't reduced pollution on a global scale--you've just moved the pollution to developing countries where we can't see it.
      You: More responsible behaviour...

      In what theoretical utopia do you live in? Again, I'm talking about reality.

      Me: 1) redistribute wealth to developing countries by moving jobs there at the expense of developed countries. 2) redistribute pollution so that we can feel squeaky clean in the developed world while the developing world becomes even dirtier.
      You: Well, the 1) isn't bad. It will pay off. The 2) is a problem that requires a lot of attention.

      And therein lies the real problem. You've agreed that Kyoto will do little more than redistribute pollution and requires "a lot of attention" but also agree that "it isn't bad, it will pay off" that we redistribute wealth from the 1st world to the 3rd world.

      I don't want to enter the whole socialism debate, but this is my exact point: If you want to redistribute world wealth then propose it. See if the world accepts it. DON'T camaflouge it as environmental regulations that don't help the environment but do achieve worldwide socialism/wealth distribution.

      Me: A better question is: Why does anyone think that Kyoto will actually help the environment?
      You: I think CO2 IS accepted as problem by many countries, and it's assumed (to play it safe) a reduction of CO2 WOULD help the environment. The influence of european governments on the market and companies is bigger than America's government. Blackmail by companies is occuring here, but there is a climate here that consumers demand more and more responsability from companies. Consumer behavior and governmental regulations have effects on companies. My impression is that the US government is run/bought by industry or lobby groups. Therefore they are very influencial on the american politics. Perhaps in Europe it's easyer to enforce Kyoto and force responsable behaviour on companies.

      Well, I disagree that CO2 is harmful pollution. But even if it is, let me re-ask the question you didn't answer: Why does anyone think that Kyoto will actually help the environment? As you essentially conceded above, pollution will be redistributed to exempt countries, not eliminated. So why does anyone think Kyoto will help the environment? Unless you refer to the environment of developed countries at the expense of the environment of developing countries?

      If you milk a society that can afford it I'd say that's economy. But with medicine it's a little more complicated. I think people deserve to be healthy. Health souldn't be a priviledge for the rich.

      As I tried to say in my last post, I basically agree. Some controls needs to be placed on health care in terms of how much profit is acceptable.

      Health care is a tough political issue and is also not what we're talking about here. We're talking about the environment.

      I would even go as far as saying that the 1st world should be opened for the 3rd worlds' products. You should have _some_ protection for your local products, but it would be good if there was some (more) money to flow to the 3rd world and not the other way around. This also means the 3rd world has to be protected from our products. At least until the 3rd world has become more like the 1st world and they truely can play their past in the global trade game.

      I believe there should be 0% tarrifs tomorrow, period. Rich, poor, developing, developed. 0% tarrifs. No-one should be protected in the U.S., and no-one should be protected in Malaysia.

      I believe the above would in the short-term help the developing countries and hurt the developed countries, but in the long-term (10+ years) it would help everybody.

      But, unlike Kyoto, it has to be UNIVERSAL. No exceptions. Not for me, not for you, not for Bill Gates, and not for poor Ethiopians.

      Me: Exactly. Which is why Kyoto should apply to everyone, not just the developed countries.
      You: The thing is that WE can afford the live up to Kyoto. Developing countries, at the moment, hardly can.

      Let me summarize:

      1. Most development in the 3rd world happens because the 1st world invests in it. Since the 1st world has the money, it should invest in doing it cleanly.
      2. If it doesn't apply to everyone, including developing countries, pollution will just be relocated, not eliminated.
      3. The end-result of Kyoto is not pollution reduction but wealth and pollution redistribution. Kyoto should be debated as a wealth redistribution treaty, not an environmental one.
      Do what you can. That's responsible.

      So it would be responsible for the U.S. to institute environmental restrictions on CO2 gas, which does not carry any negative health effects, to the point that it is not possible to perform many industries in the U.S., while agree to make it permissible to do those same things in China, give our American companies a financial incentive to move out of the country, and leave countless millions of our citizens out of work? And for what gain? To pollute China instead of the U.S.?

      I'm sorry, if the futileness of the Kyoto treaty--except for wealth redistribution--isn't clear to you by now I'm not sure that re-explaining it to you again will help.

      Me: Today we have tarrifs, tomorrow we don't. Done.
      You: But then the poor countries would be overrun by our companies?

      Yes, that's probably true. Our companies would overrun them to take advantage of cheap labor. That would happen at the cost of laborers in the rich countries. But, within 10-20 years, the poor countries would increase in wealth and those incentives would disappear. Eventually, there'd be no reason for the U.S. to be any richer than Afghanistan. But, in the long run, the U.S. wouldn't LOSE--we'd gain because there'd now be 6 BILLION potential consumers with disposable income rather than, what, about 1.5 billion or so now?

      Since our conversation has gone all over the board, from environment to socialism to health care to corporate responsibility, let me try to summarize my viewpoint:

      1. Kyoto is about worldwide wealth redistribution, not the environment. As written and with the exemptions that it has, Kyoto will not reduce worldwide pollution. What it WILL do is redistribute jobs and wealth. It should be debated as a jobs and wealth redistribution treaty, not an environmental one.
      2. The original article doesn't contemplate technological advances that will allow us to reduce pollution without reducing consumption. They gave us the choice of finding two more planets or reducing consumption. Those aren't the only two options and that's why the article was dismissed as alarmist bullshit.
      3. The buck stops locally which means that blaming the developed world for all of the problems in the developing world is just about as reasonable as blaming the nuclear arms race on the first multi-cell organism that inhabited the earth.
      4. Responsibility doesn't decrease with wealth. As poor as I may be and as tempting as it may be to kill someone for a million bucks, I can't ignore my responsibility to reject that offer. The same goes for Brasil cutting down its trees or whatever. I'm sure the situation for Brasil is as desperate as the poor man considering killing someone to make a buck...
    2. Re:There it is... by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      Not knowing one way or the other, can you cite any examples of this?

      This is a long story. It started more or less with the worldbank. Countries could get funding, but there was always a 'but'. One thing lead to the other, resulting in huge debts. This again often leaves with a worse situation than before. Argentina is a nice result of this politics. I would say a country is a crisis like that hardly has a way nor the means to recover from a crisis without external help. That is why they can't refuse to cut their forests. Knowing this i'd say it's quite unethical to ask that from them (without for example replanting trees).

      I know of the standard trade wars--and I can see "accept this or we will levy 50% importation on your $PRODUCT". But completely stopping trade with a country based on a trade dispute?

      trade / financial support. It's not like the tradewars (steel?) the US and the EU have.

      That said, I've already mentioned that I'm 100% in favor of 0% tarrifs on everything between every country, period. So whether or not the above is true, I'd be opposed to it and the practice would be moot if there were no tarrifs anywhere.

      ... You missed my point [SNIP]

      I think we agree ;) But it's important or wome countries to wait for the right moment.
      Equal competition. Sounds good. Together with the 0% tarrifs the government should stop to subsidize goods. This could result in lower taxes too.
      IN THE END this should apply for the poorer countries too, but I can wait 20 - 30 years (You wrote 10 - 20 years, I think, looking at Taiwan, it takes a little longer.) Probably not all the countries will develop as quick as Taiwan, but eventually they will and THEN the tarrifs should go to 0% for them too. I think. I don't know that much about the long term effects of 0% tarrifs. I guess you want to have SOME protection and regulation of your own economy.

      I disagree with that completely and stand by my original comment. Being poor does not absolve one of responsibility or give them the right to "pass the buck." I will concede that perhaps responsibility is harder for those with fewer options, but that doesn't make them any less responsible.

      Well, knowing the consequences, I'd say it's rather unethical to 'ask' them for their resources.

      I'd rather see them say to the rich company, "Hey, you want to exploit our labor? Fine. Here are the minimum labor standards and pay."

      Sorry, for some countries being able to say 'no' or demand standards is just as realistis as the ideal economy without employment.

      But what if a certain technology reduces the pollution but to implement it would bankrupt the company or make the product no longer viable? How much CO2 is permissible to avoid X number of people being thrown out of work?

      To start with the last: research in making better filters, solar panels and stuff and producing the things is work too, so there is also an increase in employment here. And is the implementation is certain measures would bankrupt a company I seriously have doubts about the viability of that company.

      No-one has a responsibility to listen to a babbling idiot. I'm not suggesting that you are one, but I am suggesting that if the United States, in its own informed opinion, thinks that what everyone else is saying is hogwash we have absolutely NO responsibility to listen to them just because they outnumber us. In fact, our government has a responsibility to its citizens to protect us from such nonsense by not going along with the crowd.

      I see it as a bigger picture. Economy, environment, politics, peace, 'everything' has ist's effects on a global scale. Cooperation plays a very important role in this. The more countries play by the same rules the stronger the effect is.

      No. Ignorant is when you frame your argument around the possibility of having to find two additional planets to support the population in 2050. As someone else said in this thread, they framed two options 1) Reduce our consumption now. 2) Find two more planets. Since the second one is impossible, the conclusion is that we must reduce consumption now.

      Indeed. I don't think the point of the argument was to find those two planets, but to make insightful that our consumption is rising very rapidly and that we should at least realise THAT. But that is something different than saying the story is ****.

      That's an inaccurate conclusion, certainly not scientific. It doesn't contemplate the possible--dare I say PROBABLE--improvements in technology in the next 50 years that will reduce pollution without reducing consumption. THAT'S the third choice and it's not one they significantly addressed.
      The reason they didn't talk to the third option is because they aren't making a real effort to present the possible options to the public. They are trying to scare the public into accepting their politics. That's why their story was written off by most as bullshit...


      I have to agree that the story doesn't address all the solutions. The goal of the story is not to find a solution, I think, but mainly to make a point about the upcoming problem. Either address the need for more and moreresources or accept that we'll eventually (50, 100, 200 jears. whatever) run out of wood, fuel, food etcetera.

      The fact is, in most cases 3rd world countries end up developing because richer nations invest in them. If RICH nations are investing in them anyway they should be required to use the latest in pollution-controlling technology, should they not?

      I'd love to see that, yes. That would be responsible behaviour to me.

      You seem to have a lot of faith in companies' "responsible behavior." History shows that your faith is misplaced. If you set up the scenario described by Kyoto (expensive labor and environmental restrictions in 1st world, cheap labor and no environmental restrictions in 3rd world) then I can assure you that the companies WILL move there, they WILL pollute there, and they WILL take their jobs there.

      A public awareness of the problemshould help. Is it turns out a company uses childlabour it's quite bad for public relations. It's is very likely that companies will have to deal with such a public opinion. You see the same thing with oilcompanies making cleaner fuels or like eco-products which are more expensive, but people are willing to pay for it.
      Ofcourse the effect would be stronger if a government would demand "responsible behavior". (see previous comment on global economy: governments working together can demand such a thing)

      [...] And that's why the U.S. didn't sign on to Kyoto. I invite you review the U.S. stand. Unfortunately, the U.S. didn't even dispute the goals and reductions required by Kyoto--the U.S. disputed it being implemented in some countries and not in others.

      I read Time to Rethink Kyoto and I agree they make a point, but that is still no reason to do nothing. It should be a stilumus to get on one line. Somebody told me there are limits for the 3rd world countries, but they'll are not applied until their economy has grown to a certain vciable level.

      Me: Second, it doesn't take a climate science degree to understand that since the above is true you really haven't reduced pollution on a global scale--you've just moved the pollution to developing countries where we can't see it.

      [SNIP] As you said before. Companies will have to build factories in those countries and they'll use newer less polluting techniques, so it will decrease pollution for the production, which is a certain step in the right direction.

      You: 1) redistribute wealth to developing countries by moving jobs there at the expense of developed countries. 2) redistribute pollution so that we can feel squeaky clean in the developed world while the developing world becomes even dirtier.
      Me: Well, the 1) isn't bad. It will pay off. The 2) is a problem that requires a lot of attention.
      You: And therein lies the real problem. You've agreed that Kyoto will do little more than redistribute pollution and requires "a lot of attention" but also agree that "it isn't bad, it will pay off" that we redistribute wealth from the 1st world to the 3rd world.

      I don't want to enter the whole socialism debate, but this is my exact point: If you want to redistribute world wealth then propose it. See if the world accepts it. DON'T camaflouge it as environmental regulations that don't help the environment but do achieve worldwide socialism/wealth distribution.

      Well, I disagree that CO2 is harmful pollution. But even if it is, let me re-ask the question you didn't answer: Why does anyone think that Kyoto will actually help the environment? As you essentially conceded above, pollution will be redistributed to exempt countries, not eliminated. So why does anyone think Kyoto will help the environment? Unless you refer to the environment of developed countries at the expense of the environment of developing countries?

      Let me turn the question around. What will happen is nothing is done? Don't forget that eventually Kyoto also will apply to the developing countries. Applying Kyoto to them now will have very negative effects on their weak economies. we'll have to 'live' with that.
      Kyoto isn't the alpha and omega for the environment. It's a step in the right direction. Take that step and work on the imperfections (enforcements etcetera). All the steps together will help.

      I believe the above [0% tarifs] would in the short-term help the developing countries and hurt the developed countries, but in the long-term (10+ years) it would help everybody.

      In the end, when the developing economy has developed to a strong economy maybe, but since we're more efficient and our products are cheaper, it will push local less efficiently made products out off their local markets, and thereby increase unemployment, and import in those countries and destroy their economy. It takes years of carefull development to mature an economy (and society!) so it function on the global market. Look at the former USSR. The worldbank tried / telped them to reform their economy it to a marketsystem. The results are known.

      But, unlike Kyoto, it has to be UNIVERSAL. No exceptions. Not for me, not for you, not for Bill Gates, and not for poor Ethiopians.

      Only when the situations are the same, you can apply the same rules and regulations.

      Let me summarize:
      1. Most development in the 3rd world happens because the 1st world invests in it. Since the 1st world has the money, it should invest in doing it cleanly.
      2. If it doesn't apply to everyone, including developing countries, pollution will just be relocated, not eliminated.
      3. The end-result of Kyoto is not pollution reduction but wealth and pollution redistribution. Kyoto should be debated as a wealth redistribution treaty, not an environmental one.


      Nice, but:
      1. Kyoto will reduce pollution in the first world.
      2. Some companies will go to the 3rd world countries with less strict regulations. They will build factories there which are mose likely more efficient and cleaner than the ones there at the moment.
      3. This will stimulate the local economy there so they have more possibilities to invest in cleaner technologies too.

      Probably the truth lies somewhere in the middle.


      I'm sorry, if the futileness of the Kyoto treaty--except for wealth redistribution--isn't clear to you by now I'm not sure that re-explaining it to you again will help.


      You've made your point. I admitted it is a problem that requires a lot of attention. I'm not saying the answer is easy, but doing nothing is just like ignoring the problem. Search for solutions against against pollution redistribution. Subsidize cleaner technologies in our own countries to avoid companies to move to other countries, build new clean factories in other countries. And again, in Europe there are stronger pollution reductions standards, but I haven't seen a massive exodus of the industry.

      Kyoto redistributes some pollution to other countries, which in the longer run also will have to comply with Kyoto, as side effect, but it will also reduce pollution in our countries. It's not only wealth redistribution. Kyoto is a step in the direction of pollution reduction.

      Yes, that's probably true. Our companies would overrun them to take advantage of cheap labor. That would happen at the cost of laborers in the rich countries. But, within 10-20 years, the poor countries would increase in wealth and those incentives would disappear. Eventually, there'd be no reason for the U.S. to be any richer than Afghanistan. But, in the long run, the U.S. wouldn't LOSE--we'd gain because there'd now be 6 BILLION potential consumers with disposable income rather than, what, about 1.5 billion or so now?

      1.5 billion? That much?
      I'd say it will probably take longer. There are some 'religious', ideological and political barriers that have to be overcome, but I think in the end there can be a healthy global marketsystem with a better wealth distribution than the one there is now.

      Since our conversation has gone all over the board, from environment to socialism to health care to corporate responsibility, let me try to summarize my viewpoint:
      1. Kyoto is about worldwide wealth redistribution, not the environment. As written and with the exemptions that it has, Kyoto will not reduce worldwide pollution. What it WILL do is redistribute jobs and wealth. It should be debated as a jobs and wealth redistribution treaty, not an environmental one.
      2. The original article doesn't contemplate technological advances that will allow us to reduce pollution without reducing consumption. They gave us the choice of finding two more planets or reducing consumption. Those aren't the only two options and that's why the article was dismissed as alarmist bullshit.
      3. The buck stops locally which means that blaming the developed world for all of the problems in the developing world is just about as reasonable as blaming the nuclear arms race on the first multi-cell organism that inhabited the earth.
      4. Responsibility doesn't decrease with wealth. As poor as I may be and as tempting as it may be to kill someone for a million bucks, I can't ignore my responsibility to reject that offer. The same goes for Brasil cutting down its trees or whatever. I'm sure the situation for Brasil is as desperate as the poor man considering killing someone to make a buck...


      I don't mind the broad discussion. I like new points of view.
      Basicly my point of view are these:

      1. I do see your point on the short term imperfections in the Kyoto treaty. I just don't agree it's a reason to completely ignore the treaty. Developing countries eventually also have to comply with Kyoto. There are ways of making Kyoto work. Doing nothing in the mean time, using any excuse, as I see it is only a way to make the American companies happy and preventing them to do investments which reduces profit. Nothing is black and white. Wealth redistribution probably will happen, but pollution will reduce too.
      2. The original article makes a point, but in a very extreme way. Judging the dismissing reactions it was the wring way. That doesn't take away the fact that our consumption is rising very fast and we might run into trouble. It's very easy to make fun about the story and completely put the point of the story aside.
      3. I think the discussion never came to that point. I don't get it.
      4. True, but on the other hand, offering a bad deal, knowing a person / country can't refuse is highly objectionable and compairable to exploitation. I'd say the 1st world has grown past the point and 'need' for exploitation and slavery.
      5. We came to a point where our standard of life is that high that we're in a position to think about the consequenses of our way of living and let morale, ethics and responsability play a bigger role in our lifes.

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.