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View Full Version : Special kind of a horror movie


Skybird
11-24-16, 10:42 AM
LINK (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUwmA3Q0_OE&feature=youtu.be)

The end is very nasty.

As I say since years: we are too many. 7 billion now, climbing, is in my estimation 5.5-6 billion too much as if it even would make sense to start speaking of sustainable ecological management.

Oberon
11-24-16, 11:17 AM
We can take it, but not with the way our current economic systems are set up. There's no real reward for producing extra supply, and there's no real efficient global delivery network. Human populations are all clustered in set places, and in those set places we're spread out with urban sprawl rather than building upward, and those houses themselves are often so expensive that it creates slum areas where only the poor can move to.
We have the emerging technology to improve and increase food output, to decrease our carbon footprint, and to improve our habitation, but no-one wants to because it's too expensive and there's not enough financial reward for it. :damn:

Platapus
11-24-16, 12:52 PM
Nature is doing its best to fix this. New drug resistant diseases are constantly being developed.

The big question is whether nature can develop diseases faster than humans can develop counter measures.

As our population grows and our pollution continues to increase, I think that time is on nature's side.

Humans are doing their part by either choosing not to inoculate children or simply not supplying inoculations to children. This combined with a general reluctance to spend money improving even the most basic health environments helps nature a lot.

I admit that it was looking bad with the advent of stronger antibiotics, but human nature of abusing antibiotics just gives nature the leg up on evolving more and more drug resistant diseases.

The key is to keep humans on this planet. Otherwise another planet's nature will have to take on the task.

Oberon
11-24-16, 01:43 PM
I think it might balance out at some point, the population growth is starting to level off, and it might even go into decline at some point if other nations following the westernisation trend. Of course that means an elderly population with not enough people to look after them, which is going to be a problem in the future, in fact it's a problem right now but it's only going to get worse.
Wars and pandemics will definitely help reduce the poorer sections of the population though, likewise famines and such.

Jimbuna
11-25-16, 07:14 AM
Nature will win in the end, unless mankind does her work for her.

Personally speaking, I'm glad I won't be around to witness it.

Rockstar
11-25-16, 10:29 AM
Some of the reasons I suppose for the push for a global economy and better health care for poorer citizens. Reduces the need to produce more children 'to work the farm' so to speak. Having better health care for poorer citizens also reduces the family's need to produce more children to offset mortality rates.