Jebus wrote:My position is that X is a problem because we don't know if Y will change and even if it does there will still be problems with X.
I'm saying if Y changes, X isn't a problem at all. And Y has to change because X will force it to change. If not X, then Y may never change, and that's an even bigger problem. And I don't necessarily think we can do very much about X (we can only most effectively control our own actions, and our children are part of the solution, not part of the problem).
If we effectively control our broader population, or reduce it, humanity may be able to continue factory farming and harming animals indefinitely, and will never be forced to advanced beyond that point.
Keeping the poor in poverty doesn't seem like a solution either, it seems like perpetuating a problem to avoid a short term struggle.
Better we have a short term problem, and then for the next couple billion years a larger happier world.
Jebus wrote:
I disagree with this for two reasons. First of all, the more crowded the place the easier it gets to kill and injure lots of people in one go.
Sure, but my point is that we already have enough crowded places to go around for all of the crazy people. Currently, not all crowded places are being exploited by madmen. The lack of mass violence is not for lack of crowded places, but for lack of the
competent evil people to exploit them.
Adding more crowded places doesn't mean exponentially more violence -- I would only expect it to grow linearly with the population, or even less. It would be a better argument if currently all very crowded places were being exploited and there was a real demand for more among nut jobs.
Jebus wrote:
Also, the progression of weapons throughout history have made mass murder on the hands of one person easier and I expect this to continue. Pakistan claims to have tennis ball sized nukes although this has not been proven. It is however not technologically impossible.
I don't believe that Pakistan has tennis ball sized nukes, or that such devices are possible with current technology.
Those rumors are probably referring to the pit, which is not the weapon itself but merely the fissile material and its immediate containment:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pit_(nuclear_weapon)
Nuclear weapons require too much conventional explosive to detonate to miniaturize that much: energy density is an issue.
There are physical limits, and those imposed by the basic laws of physics, that define how small a weapon of a certain magnitude of destruction can be.
Yes, growing technology may make it easier for crazy people to harm more people (biotechnology is actually much more of a threat than nuclear), but it also gives more tools to law enforcement: I don't agree that it does more harm than good, or necessarily makes the world more dangerous. More geniuses are benevolent than evil, so I think technology is overall on the side of good.
If that were the case, though, it would be an issue with technology, not with population itself. As I said above, not all high density areas are taken advantage now: I don't think there's a shortage of targets. Devastation from technology would grow either way (and has plenty of room to grow as is).
Also, I don't see nut jobs like Islamists are serious threats, because they're ignorant and mostly technologically incompetent (good luck finding one who believes in evolution, much less one who can use evolution to create a bio-weapon).
The O.O.S. crowd is a different matter.
Jebus wrote:
One should be careful not to presume that the climate affecting habits of the underdeveloped world will remain as present.
They likely won't, but won't that just force us all to change faster if they do?
Jebus wrote:
It should have been impossible to deny years ago. The problem is that people are religious and they will most likely continue to be religious. Hence, it's all in God's hands so no behavioural change is needed.
We may need to wait for more of those people to die off.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/won ... te-change/
Jebus wrote:I disagree here too. Perhaps you are in a better position to promote veganism than Merkel and Obama (since we are vegan) but others may be better off promoting having fewer children.
If somebody is not vegan, that person should go vegan of course, and promote that. Meat reduction may even be a more effective message in practice, and people may receive it better from those who eat meat too (since they'll be more open to the message).
But if that person is delusional and won't go vegan or reduce meat consumption and incorrectly sees no value in it, is it better that he or she promote population control in the developing world? Maybe. That, of course, is not us.
Jebus wrote:I don't think the opportunity cost principle applies here as how I will spend my time depends largely on which situation I am in. Let's say I'm in a room with a friend who is thinking about having kids and who has already heard me promote a plant-based diet many times. Would it be better if I spend the next five minutes talking about population control or veganism?
I think it would still be more effective to promote veganism; try another angle. Keep planting that seed and encouraging change.
Focus on the children and the next generation, and how we need to save the Earth for them, and provide a good example.
Jebus wrote:
I agree although I think you dodged the question.
All other things being equal -- but I don't think all other things will be equal, or that it's useful to evaluate population control in those terms because it forces certain other structural changes.
It's like saying, all other things being equal, tripling the population would mean maximum occupancy would be exceeded for apartments, which would be a fire safety hazard, and subways would be over-full and nobody would be able to get to work, and 2/3 of the population would have no work to do. Sure, but infrastructure would expand with population, including employment, transit, and apartments. As disease risk increases, the CDC and other organizations will also expand non-linearly in influence (because that's what's needed), and we'll see more advanced screening for travelers, and more widespread vaccination programs. Instead of being prodded by the TSA, you'll be prodded by the CDC, and we'll see biological swabs and rapid blood screening (technology will enable this; it's already possible, we just need the demand to make it widespread, and nothing stokes demand like necessity).
Jebus wrote:
I'd like to draw your attention to the fact that the population is growing in the Western developed world as well and this would be true even if there were no immigration. How is this not a problem? Each additional person gives an estimated 97% increased chance (probably more as vegans have fewer kids) of causing animal suffering using up an unfair share of the world's resources. I understand your position that population growth may ultimately lead to more sustainable habits but I think it will be too late by the time we make that realization.
Well, vegans need to have more kids, and otherwise exercise more influence too. As it becomes easier to be vegan, I think we'll reach a critical mass.
We also need to not be lax in our outreach to other parts of the world. For example, maybe we should be reaching out to China more, and helping Chinese vegans spread that message there. And even Africa and India.
It may be "too late" for the couple billion who will die as a consequence, but after that we should be able to get it right and the next few billion years (which will make up the vast majority of our life as a species) could be much better after those growing pains.
If we focus on reducing population instead of sustainability and compassionate lifestyle, I think we're focusing on the wrong thing in the long run, and the consequences to that could ultimately be a lot worse (even if we succeed, which I don't think we will since I think population control is pretty futile, but vegan outreach is not).