F
flyingfish
Guest
That’s really one of my main points. Yes, we can have more people on the planet, but at the cost of a reduction in quality of life.Also while I do think that we may continue to develop new techologies. I think it is foolish to think that there will always be a new techology that will bail us out so to speak and allow us to keep increasing our population. Not to mention I think quality of life is important to look at too. Sure maybe the earth could support 20 billion people if we all lived in horrible conditions. But if most of the people on the planet right now lived a lifestyle similar to that of lets say your average middle class American we would probably be in deep trouble real fast. And I donlt think thinking this way is pessimism I think it is realism.
I find it interesting how people keep saying that other people’s horrid living conditions are a problem in distribution of resources rather than the total number of resources. How would you redistribute them? How many people today enjoy a first world lifestyle? 400 million in North America, another 600 in Europe, maybe another 500 million Asians are living as well as Westerners? (Guessing here, not looking these up). There are nearly 7 billion people on the earth, how are we supposed to “redistribute” to provide a first world lifestyle for the other, say 5 billion people? Do they say we should take from the gluttonous Americans and redistribute it to the poor Africans? Really? How much would you need to take from the ~2 billion who live well to give to the 5 billion who don’t? Where are the magical extra resources to provide everyone with a first world lifestyle?