S
Sufjon
Guest
Well, if growth has been 100% or 55% (as you say), that is a significant and alarming increase for 40 years. As for the website you posted. One of the main academic proponents of their message was Paul Ehrlich, who had long maintained that growing population and affluence will continue to put unsustainable pressure on the global environment. He now says that a book that he wrote on population growth was one of the most dangerous books ever written. He has publicly stated that he has in his lifetime issued one of the most dangerous opinions ever published. The question is whether his opinions then were dangerous, or his opinions now are dangerous. The dangers of unchecked population growth have been cited by many credible sources, and I think are intuitively apparent.Hardly – an increase of about 55%.
What we do need is to face reality.
See: demographicwinter.com
Europe’s Demographic Winter threatening the U.S.A.
Having Children: Anatomy of a Cultural Strategy
“…for the first time, the birth rate in the United States has fallen below the replacement level. All of this is finally generating a buzz. If you’re a young Catholic looking for an effective long-term strategy to reclaim Western culture, having a large family should be on your short list.”
“Demographic winter” denotes the worldwide decline in birthrates, also referred to as a “birth-dearth,” and what it portends.
Demographer Philip Longman (author of The Empty Cradle: How Falling Birthrates Threaten World Prosperity) observes: "The ongoing global decline in human birthrates is the single most powerful force affecting the fate of nations and the future of society in the 21st century." Worldwide, birthrates have been halved in the past 50 years. There are now 59 nations, with 44% of the world’s population, with below-replacement fertility.
“Sometime in this century, the world’s population will begin to decline. At a certain point, the decline will become rapid. We may even reach population free-fall in our lifetimes. For some countries, population decline is already a reality. Russia is losing three-quarters-of-a-million people a year. Its population (currently 145 million) is expected to fall by one-third by 2050.”
Oh, and here is an excellent expose on the organization that you posted the website to:
bastardlogic.wordpress.com/2008/02/17/the-demographic-winter/
Your friend
Sufjon