431 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
431 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
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Reaching for the Future with All Three Hands
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Address by Daniel Quinn, Kent State University, Earth Day, 1998
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A few days ago I was feeling depressed and said to my wife, Rennie, "I
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don't see why I should give THIS speech at Kent State University. Why
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can't I talk about something that will send everyone home with warm,
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fuzzy feelings and smiles on their faces?"
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"Well, why don't you then?" Rennie said. "Why did you decide to speak
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on this subject in the first place?"
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"Because it's the most important subject in the world right now," I told
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her.
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"But why do YOU have to tackle it?"
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"Because no one ELSE is tackling it, at least not for the general
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public."
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"Then I guess you're pretty well stuck, aren't you?" Rennie said.
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I thought I'd start with this little story, just to let you know what
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I'm doing here. The Phrygian sage Epictetus said: Everything has two
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handles, one by which it can be carried and a second by which it cannot.
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The sage who stands before you here today says: There's a third handle
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on the other side, but it can only be reached by people who realize
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they've got a third hand to reach with.
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I think the reason people invite me to speak at events like this is that
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they vaguely sense, from reading my books, that I have a third hand I
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use to grab at things that most people only use two hands on.
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They want to see what a three-handed man will make of whatever theme
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they're exploring--whether it's social investment, health care reform,
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or the future of business in the 21st century.
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Ours is an obsessively two-valued culture. For example, we have all
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sorts of two-sided games--chess, checkers, tennis, boxing, pool, and so
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on--all sorts of two-sided team games--bridge, football, baseball,
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soccer, basketball, and so on. And we have all sorts of any-sided games
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(poker, baccarat, track events, skiing events, and so on). But we have
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no three-sided games of any kind. You will never see three teams take
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any court or field anywhere.
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Our justice system is intrinsically two-valued. There must be
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prosecution and defense, plaintiff and respondent--one winner and one
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loser, always. Everyone HATES a hung jury.
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Everyone takes it for granted that there are exactly two sides to every
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argument. When it comes to abortion, for example, there's the
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pro-choice side and the pro-life side, and people who haven't chosen one
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of these two sides don't represent a third side, they just don't
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represent any side at all. The same is true of issues like animal
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rights, capital punishment, and drug legalization.
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The media play an important role in shaping reality into two-sided
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events. Very often two-sidedness isn't clearly evident in developing
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situations. The fundamental news-gathering process helps to clarify--or
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manufacture--that desired two-sidedness. If one expert says that X is
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wonderful, the reporter is expected to find another expert who will say
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that X is terrible--or that Y is much more wonderful than X. This is,
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to a large extent, what makes the story NEWS.
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When it comes to "the environment," it hasn't been so easy to polarize
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the community. Where do you send a reporter to get a quote AGAINST
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clean water? Or AGAINST clean air? Obviously EVERYBODY wants clean
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water and clean air. The issue had to be recast into one that doesn't
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put everyone on the same side--and so it was. After a lot of pushing
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and pulling, a lot of tweaking, a way was found to represent the
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interests of the environment as being opposed to the interests of
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PEOPLE. This is kind of mind-boggling but that's how it's shaken out.
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You can't be for people and for the environment--you've got to "choose
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sides." This is an interesting example of taking a thing that originally
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presented only one handle and rotating it so as to expose two
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handles--thereby putting the third handle completely out of sight.
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The arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union started
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when I was ten years old, so I watched the whole race from beginning to
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end. I'm sure you all know how it went. We made an atomic bomb, they
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made one. We made a hydrogen bomb, they made one. We made an
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intercontinental ballistic missile, they made one. We pointed twenty
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missiles at them, they pointed thirty at us. We pointed a hundred at
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them, they pointed two hundred at us, and so on. It was a race with no
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finish line (except catastrophe). Apparently it was a race no one could
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either win or quit.
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As you'd expect, the arms race presented two handles. You could take
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one of two positions. If you were a Hawk, you said Better dead than
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red, and if you were a Dove, you said Better red than dead, and every
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presidential candidate had to talk tough enough to placate the Hawks but
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also nice enough to placate the Doves.
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Then in the mid-sixties there appeared a generation of children who
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didn't value either of these two values. They were sick of the arms
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race, and they began groping for a third handle on this whole thing. In
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fact, they began to look like regular three-handed monsters. During the
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1968 Democratic National Convention, Chicago police waged war on them,
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and the mayor gave out orders to "Shoot to Kill." A couple years later,
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as I'm sure you all know, more of the three-handed monsters staged a
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protest against the invasion of Cambodia right here at Kent State
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University. After National Guardsmen killed four of them, people began
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to understand just how dangerous these monsters were. It was time to
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start shooting on sight when you saw people exhibiting signs of
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three-handedness.
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But the youngsters of that generation ultimately failed to find the
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third handle they were seeking. It was found--and it probably had to be
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found--by a Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, who said to us, "I'm going
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to do something really nasty to you. I'm going to deprive you of an
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enemy." He ended the arms race the only way such a race CAN be ended--by
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pulling out of it.
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Everyone in the world knew the arms race was dangerous--globally
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dangerous, mortally dangerous--to the entire human race and to the
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planet itself. I'm here to talk to you today about another race, no
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less globally dangerous, no less mortally dangerous--to the entire human
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race and to the planet itself. In some ways it's even more dangerous
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than the arms race--first because almost no one is aware of it, and
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second because almost no one wants it to stop.
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I'm talking about the food race--the race to produce enough food to feed
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our growing population.
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There are people in the world--calm, intelligent, reasoning people--who
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believe that we've already gone over the limit, that even our present
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population of six billion can't be fed sustainably on this planet. I
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have no evidence that they're right--and I certainly hope they're wrong.
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But the six billion is not nearly as alarming as the twelve billion that
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we will be in your lifetime if we go on growing at this rate.
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Now--of course!--there are two handles to this thing. I recently read
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an Associated Press story that reported that food scientists are
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confident that they can WIN the food race. By the time there are twelve
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billion of us, they'll be able to FEED twelve billion. That constitutes
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a win. SO: Not to worry, folks. The scientists are confident that food
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will ultimately triumph over population. That's one handle.
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The other handle is the one the Union of Concerned Scientists has
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grabbed. In their "Warning to Humanity," they say: "We must stabilize
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population," which is of course unarguable. But then they go on to say,
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"This will be possible only if all nations recognize that it requires
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improved social and economic conditions, and the adoption of effective,
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voluntary family planning." I'm afraid that grabbing this handle is an
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act of faith that has virtually nothing to do with science, but it's
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easy to do, because it means that, really, nobody has to do anything but
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pray that someday, through some magical, unknown process all nations of
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the world will improve social and economic conditions and adopt
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effective, voluntary family planning.
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It has been my misfortune to saddle myself with the really thankless
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task of bringing into view the third handle on this issue. This is a
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simple and well-known biological fact--well known at least to biologists
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and ecologists--that a food race like the one I've just described can no
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more be won than the arms race could be won--and for the same reason.
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Because neither race has a finish line--except catastrophe. You can't
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win an arms race with your enemy, because every advance you make in your
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weaponry will be answered by an advance in your enemy's weaponry, which
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of course must be answered by an advance in YOUR weaponry, which
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stimulates an advance in THEIR weaponry, and so on in a never-ending
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escalation.
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And in the same way, food cannot win any race with population, because
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every advance in food production is answered by an advance in
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population. This isn't a statement that is happily or readily accepted
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by most members of the public, because, I'm afraid, most members of the
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public don't really understand the connection between food and
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populations. I'm therefore going to take a minute to explain that
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connection.
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If you fence off a shopping mall parking lot, put a bull and a cow
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inside, along with a bale of hay every day, you will soon have three or
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four cows. But no matter how long you wait, you will NOT have thirty or
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forty cows--not on one bale of hay a day. If you want to have thirty or
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forty cows, then you're going to have throw ten bales of hay over the
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fence. Of course they also need water and air--but all the water and
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air in the world will not turn three or four cows into thirty or forty
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cows in the absence of those ten bales of hay. You can't make cows out
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of sunshine or rainbows or moonbeams. It takes hay.
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Now when you have your forty cows, you don't have to start throwing
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eleven bales of hay over the fence. If you just want forty, then ten
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bales is plenty. There isn't going to be a famine among these cows just
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because you stop at ten bales--there just isn't going to be any
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population growth. On those ten bales a day, those forty cows are NEVER
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going to turn into four hundred. But if you WANT four hundred cows,
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then you've got to provide more hay, and you're going to end up buying a
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hundred bales a day to feed those four hundred cows.
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Now the exact same thing is true of humans. Fence off the parking lot,
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toss in a man and a woman and a couple bags of groceries every day, and
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before long you'll have a family of four. But those four will NEVER
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turn into forty if all you're throwing over the fence is a couple bags
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of groceries a day. Can't happen. Because people are just like
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cows--you can't make them out of sunshine or rainbows or moonbeams. It
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takes corn flakes and bananas and hot dogs and split pea soup and raisin
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bread and broccoli.
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If you want these four to turn into forty, then you're going to have
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throw twenty bags of groceries over the fence instead of two. And when
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you get those forty people, if you decide that's ALL you want living in
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this parking lot, all you have to do is keep throwing twenty bags of
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groceries over the fence. There's not going to be a famine. Twenty
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bags of groceries fed these forty people yesterday and they'll feed them
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today. On these twenty bags of groceries, the population is going to be
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stable at around forty people. But if you change your mind and decide
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you want 400 people living in this parking lot, then all you have to do
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is start throwing a couple hundred bags of groceries over the fence
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instead of twenty--and by golly, eventually there WILL be 400 people
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living in that parking lot.
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There WILL be, but our cultural mythology says there doesn't HAVE to be.
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According to our cultural mythology, forty people COULD make up their
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minds to remain forty. It could of course happen. It's imaginable.
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But on this big parking lot we call the earth it never HAS happened.
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It didn't happen last year, obviously. Last year we increased food
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production, gave ourselves two percent more groceries, and our
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population grew by two percent. The year before that we increased food
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production by two percent, and our population grew by two percent.
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The year before that we increased food production by two percent, and
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our population grew by two percent. The year before that we increased
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food production by two percent, and our population grew by two percent.
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The year before that we increased food production by two percent, and
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our population grew by two percent. I could stand here all day
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repeating that sentence 10,000 times--because that's how long we've been
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increasing food production, starting back there in the Fertile Crescent.
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Last year we increased food production by two percent, and our
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population grew by two percent. THIS year we'll increase food
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production by two percent, and our population will grow by two
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percent--there's no doubt at all that this will happen. NEXT year we'll
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increase food production by two percent, and our population will grow by
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two percent--and there's no doubt at all that this will happen. And the
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year after that we'll increase food production by two percent, and our
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population will grow by two percent--and there's no doubt at all that
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this will happen. But ONE OF THESE YEARS we'll increase food production
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by two percent--and our population will NOT grow. That's what our
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cultural mythology says.
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For ten thousand years we've been increasing food production to feed an
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increasing population--and for ten thousand years our population has
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grown. Every single "win" in food production has been answered by a
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"win" in population growth. Every single one. But, according to our
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cultural mythology, this doesn't have to happen--and one of these years,
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magically, it will not happen. The magic will presumably be that all
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nations will achieve improved social and economic conditions and adopt
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effective, voluntary family planning, just like the Union of Concerned
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Scientists recommends. This magic didn't happen last year or the year
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before that or the year before that or the year before that or the year
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before that--but one of these years, by God, every guy on earth will put
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on a condom and super-glue it in place and it WILL work. One way or
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another, there will come a year when we increase food production--and
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miraculously there won't be an answering increase in population to
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consume it.
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Our cultural mythology explains why it was vitally important for us to
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increase food production last year. We HAD to, in order to feed the
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starving millions. Everyone knows that. But, oddly enough, we
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increased food production to feed the starving millions, and guess what?
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The starving millions went on starving. The population went up--but the
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starving millions didn't get fed. And of course we know why it's
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vitally important to increase food production THIS year. We've got to
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do that in order to feed the starving millions. We WILL increase food
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production this year--there's no doubt of that--but is there anyone in
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this room who believes that the starving millions will be fed, this
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year, for the first time in living memory? I guarantee you, my friends,
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that by year's end this year, the starving millions will still be
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starving--and I guarantee that our population will have grown by two
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percent.
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But of course our cultural mythology tells us it doesn't HAVE to be this
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way. It was this way last year and the year before that and the year
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before that and the year before that and the year before that--and it
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will be this way this year and next year and the year after that and the
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year after that. But one of these years, according to our cultural
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mythology, we'll increase food production and by God those starving
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millions will get fed and our population won't grow a bit.
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Let me explain why those starving millions are not getting fed. Every
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year here on this parking lot we call earth, the human population grows
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by about two percent--all segments of it grow by two percent. This
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means that there are more blue-eyed people here this year than last
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year--and more brown-eyed people. It means there are more red-haired
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people here this year than last year--and more brown-haired people. It
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means there are more people here growing up well fed--and more people
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here growing up hungry. The starving population goes up just like all
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other populations, and producing more food can do NOTHING BUT produce
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more starving millions. We're not making hunger go away by increasing
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food production, we're just creating more and more people to go hungry.
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Increasing food production actually INCREASES the number of hungry
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people, the same way it increases the number of rich people, poor
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people, tall people, short people, smart people, and dumb people.
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The most horrific element of cultural mythology that has to be dealt
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with on this topic is the notion that if we DIDN'T continue to increase
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food production--year after year after year--we would face mass
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starvation. I think at the base of this notion is the strange idea that
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our population explosion would continue to run on--even if there was no
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food to fuel it. This is rather like thinking that the engine in your
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car might continue to run even if the gas tank was empty or like
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thinking that the lights in this room might keep on burning even if the
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electricity was turned off.
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But though I say this, I know from experience that very few of you
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believe it. Let me give you an example that I hope will convince you.
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There are about 50 people in the Quinn clan, counting myself and my
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wife, all my siblings and all my wife's siblings, all their children and
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grandchildren, and all my children and grandchildren. Last year the
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Quinn clan consumed a certain amount of food, and let's say that they're
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going to have to subsist on the same amount of food this year--and next
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year and all the years after that, forever.
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Just as in any representative sample of the population, quite a few of
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the clan are past the age where they can or want to have more children
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and quite a few haven't yet reached the age where they can or want to
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have children. But of course there are a few who are of an age to want
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to have children. This doesn't mean they're all pregnant at once, of
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course. In any given year, what you'd expect is that about two percent
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of the clan would be pregnant--in this case, that means one woman. But
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let's not make it too easy for me. Let's say she has twins. Now we
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have to feed fifty assorted people and two infants on the same amount of
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food that last year we fed fifty assorted people. Of course the same
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odds that apply to birth apply to death, but again I don't want to make
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it too easy for me. I'm going to say that two are born to the Quinn
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clan but none die. Of course these infants don't need the same amount
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of calories per day as a longshoreman. Let's say, just to keep the
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numbers round, that the fifty of us have to come up with about 2000
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calories for the two infants every day. That means each of us is going
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to be short about forty calories a day--three ounces of orange juice.
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Now, this is what I want to know. Does this sound like mass starvation
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to anyone here? Are there people here who feel they'd be starving if
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they missed a couple of swallows of orange juice a day? I know I
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certainly don't.
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But what about next year? Let's say that the same damn thing happens.
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A new pair of twins, no deaths. Wow, we're really in trouble now. With
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last year's twins to support and this year's twins to support, each of
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us is going to be giving up a whole glass of orange juice a day! Now,
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once again, does this sound like mass starvation to anyone here? Are
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there people here who feel they'd be starving if they missed a glass of
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orange juice a day? I know I certainly don't.
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But of course I can't go on weighting the statistics against me forever.
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Birth isn't the only fact of life. The population of the Quinn clan
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isn't going to go on growing forever. There are going to be deaths as
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well as births.
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But the point I want to make is that in two years of even abnormally
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high births, offset by no deaths, there has been no onset of famine.
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Not even a hint of starvation anywhere. But let's continue to weigh
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things against the Quinn clan and see what happens. Five years pass,
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twins every year, no deaths at all. Now, instead of 50 mouths to feed
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there are 60. Let's say that when we started out at 50, each of us was
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receiving, on the average, 2500 calories a day. At a population of 60
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we're now down to about 2100 calories a day. That piece of double fudge
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chocolate cake is out of our lives as a daily treat--but of course we're
|
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still nowhere near starvation. Even so, it may be time to have a clan
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conference where we go over the basics of family planning. I'm missing
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that piece of double fudge chocolate cake and don't want to have to
|
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|
follow it up next year by giving up a spoonful of jam every day.
|
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|
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|
What I'm trying to point out here is that capping the Quinn clan food
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supply does not produce instant famine. It doesn't produce famine at
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|
all, and its instant effect is negligible. We have plenty of time to
|
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|
begin talking about family planning. We're not--simply NOT--plunged
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|
into a food crisis.
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|
|
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|
There are just no grounds for thinking that a failure to increase food
|
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|
production would result in global mass starvation. But people who are
|
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|
deeply invested in the food race will continue to make this claim, just
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|
the way that people who were deeply invested in the arms race were
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|
forever claiming that the commies would surely overrun the world if we
|
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|
relaxed our militancy for even one minute.
|
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|
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|
We're in the midst of a food race that is as deadly to us and to the
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|
world around us as the arms race was. In some ways it's even more
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|
deadly, because, after all, we and the Soviets never actually unleashed
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|
all the weapons we created. The catastrophe didn't come to pass.
|
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|
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|
And as far as I know, not a single species became extinct as a result of
|
||
|
the arms race. It's quite different with the food race. It's estimated
|
||
|
that upwards of two hundred species a day are being forced into
|
||
|
extinction by the inexorable expansion of our population.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Right now--and I want to leave you with this clear picture--our food
|
||
|
race is converting our planet's biomass into HUMAN mass. This is what
|
||
|
happens when we clear a piece of land of wildlife and replant it with
|
||
|
human crops. This land was supporting a biomass comprising hundreds of
|
||
|
thousands of species and tens of millions of individuals. Now all the
|
||
|
productivity of that land is being turned into human mass, literally
|
||
|
into human flesh. Every day all over the world diversity is
|
||
|
disappearing as more and more of our planet's biomass is being turned
|
||
|
into human mass. This is what the food race is about. This is EXACTLY
|
||
|
what the food race is about: Every year turning more of our planet's
|
||
|
biomass into human mass.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The arms race could only be ended in two ways. It could be ended by a
|
||
|
catastrophe, a nuclear holocaust. Or the participants could walk away
|
||
|
from it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Luckily, that's what happened: The Soviets called it quits--and there
|
||
|
was no catastrophe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The race between food and population is the same. It can be ended by
|
||
|
catastrophe, when simply too much of our planet's biomass is tied up in
|
||
|
humans, and fundamental ecological systems collapse. And if we refuse
|
||
|
to abandon the race, it will end that way--probably not in my lifetime,
|
||
|
but very probably in the lifetime of many of you. But the race doesn't
|
||
|
have to end that way. It can end the way the arms race ended, by people
|
||
|
simply walking away from it. We can say, "We understand now that there
|
||
|
can be no final triumph of food over population. This is because every
|
||
|
single win made on the side of food is answered by a win on the side of
|
||
|
population. It has to be that way, it always HAS been that way, and we
|
||
|
can see that it's never going to STOP being that way."
|
||
|
|
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|
The strange thing is that many people HATE hearing all this--yet I'm
|
||
|
clearly pointing out a path of possibility and hope. I'm not a doom
|
||
|
merchant, my compass is set firmly on success. Our population explosion
|
||
|
is a problem we CAN get a handle on, provided we all start reaching for
|
||
|
it with that third hand.
|
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|
|
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|
If you want more info: join ishmael-boston@onelist.com
|
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
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|
The Church of Euthanasia churchofeuthanasia.org
|
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|
P.O.Box 261 ftp.etext.org /pub/Zines/Snuffit
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Somerville, MA 02143 coe@netcom.com
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