By Frosty Wooldridge
The United States gallops headlong into its greatest crisis early in the 21st century. At current growth rates, America expects to add 100 million people by 2035—a mere 26 years from now. Ironically, you hear nothing about it! Not one word from the main stream media! No alarm bells sounded by political leaders!
You might think that George Will, Jim Hoagland, Thomas Friedman, Ellen Goodman, Froma Harrop and the brilliant Kathleen Parker, all incredible national columnists would turn their mighty quills to THE greatest issue facing America and the world in the 21st century. You would expect Brian Williams, Katie Couric, Jim Lehrer and Charles Gibson to speak up. You would appreciate NPR’s Robert Siegel and Liane Hanson to ramp up the discussion. How about President Obama or any of our 50 governors? But instead, silence!
While mountains of evidence and symptoms of overpopulation erupt in TV news reports and newspapers, the general public continues its daily nonchalance with indolent disinterest. No matter how many water shortage reports, climate change indicators, mass species extinctions or air pollution stories you read about, America blissfully adds 3.2 million people annually. Another 77 million humans add themselves, net gain, to the planet annually and 1.0 billion add to the globe every 12 years.
The population issue accelerates at Warp 9, but it cannot be sustained. Religious and cultural interests push it ever faster. Capitalism drives it with gusto. Money begets power and power drives the money.
While I write many columns about our accelerating dilemma, hundreds of articulate and totally out of touch writers blast at anyone that might write a cogent piece on hyper-population growth. They write with passionate emotions that overpopulation is a New World Order myth or that the ‘Illuminati” expect to kill off half the human population or some other nonsense based on nonsense! As of today, Mother Nature kills 18 million humans from starvation and related diseases annually. She’s the ultimate population Nazi! Others scream racism, but again, Mother Nature takes the cake for being the supreme racist.
Environmental groups, like Sierra Club, try to save habitat and animals from extinction, but they won’t address the core cause of it all: overpopulation. Everyone has created a different dance to waltz or tango around the root cause.
You all know Paul and Anne Ehrlich who wrote, “The Population Bomb” and “Population Explosion”. Many say they were discounted by the Green Revolution. But the fact is, they hit the nail on the head. Ultimately, they prove the final reality facing America and the human race.
You cannot fool Mother Nature for long! Let’s take a look at Ehrlich’s work:
“WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE” by Paul R. Ehrlich and Anne H. Ehrlich, Department of Biology, Stanford University, November 6, 2008, said, “The monumental task before us is to solve the human predicament – the combined crises of overpopulation, wasteful consumption, deteriorating life-support systems, growing inequity, increasing hunger, toxification of the planet, declining resources, increasing resource wars (especially over oil and gas reserves and water), and a worsening epidemiological environment that increases the probability of unprecedented pandemics. The basic views of the scientific community on the predicament can be found at www.dominantanimal.org (click on “Further Information”). Here we just outline some of what needs to be done as a series of interrelated steps in which we hope you will exercise leadership:
One: put births on a par with deaths
“The United States has been way behind in the population area. First, as the most overpopulated nation on Earth (because of its combination of a giant population and high per-capita consumption), it still lacks a population policy. Furthermore, its population is projected to increase from 304 million to 439 million people by 2050. And, despite earlier pledges, the US in recent years has failed to help curb population growth in poor countries. Worse yet, the Reagan administration’s “Mexico City policy” for killing women worldwide by suppressing access to legal abortion had only a hiatus during the Clinton years and was reestablished by Bush II. That policy should be dropped immediately, along with ideological restrictions imposed on government websites dealing with reproductive health.
“Human beings have always fought against early death from accident, hunger, and sickness, and in the past century or so have employed improved sanitation and the use of pesticides and antibiotics to raise life expectancy. But given the frightening potential consequences of the explosion in human numbers that has followed reductions of the death rate, it is essential to pay equivalent attention to reducing high birthrates as well. Programs to educate and open job opportunities for women, and to make effective contraception universally available, must be an integral part of development policies in poor countries. Placing women in important cabinet posts in a new U.S. administration should have high priority and would send a strong signal in support of women’s empowerment (even in developed nations, prejudice against women is widespread).
“Public support of prudent population policies needs to be encouraged everywhere. The United States must play a crucial role in supporting such policies, providing both moral and financial support. The goal must be to halt population increase as soon as humanely possible, and then reduce human numbers until births and deaths balance at a population size that can be maintained with desired lifestyles without irreparable damage to our natural life-support systems. And, of course, a global discussion over the next several decades will be required to reach a consensus on those lifestyles and thus on the appropriate maximum population size – which we already know must be smaller than the present 6.7 billion. Fortunately, the target can be tentative, since (if we’re lucky) it may well be a half century or more before a worldwide decline can begin, so there will be decades to consider and evaluate the best level at which to stabilize our numbers. This leads us to point two.
Two: emphasize conserving more than consuming
“At any given level of technology, there is a trade-off between the numbers of people in a society and the level of per capita physical affluence that can be sustainably supported. The more people there are, the smaller each one’s share of the pie must be. One way of dealing with this unavoidable trade-off would be a cultural shift away from creating ever more gadgets to creating more appreciation and better stewardship of Earth’s aesthetic assets. That step, if it were combined with a decline in population size, careful husbandry of manufactured and natural capital (our ecological assets), and a crash program to abandon the use of fossil fuels and transition to sustainable energy technologies, would eventually permit most people to live satisfactory lives. Of course, it would require abandoning the irrational idea that constant growth in consumption is automatically good and can continue forever. That malignant notion is still alive and well, as demonstrated by the 2008 rush to bail out the sleazy de-regulated financial industry in the United States, and even to further subsidize our nation’s staggering, incompetent automobile industry, in order to perpetuate economic growth among the rich.
“It is clear that most politicians and most citizens do not recognize that returning to “more of the same” is a recipe for promoting the first collapse of a global civilization. The required changes in energy technology, which would benefit not only the environment but also national security, public health, and the economy, would demand a World War II type mobilization — and even that might not prevent a global climate disaster. Without transitioning away from use of fossil fuels, humanity will move further into an era of resource wars (remember, Africom has been added to the Pentagon’s structure — and China has noticed), clearly with intent to protect US “interests” in petroleum reserves. The consequences of more resource wars, many likely triggered over water supplies stressed by climate disruption, are likely to include increased unrest in poor nations, a proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, widening inequity within and between nations, and in the worst (and not unlikely) case, a nuclear war ending civilization.
Three: judge technologies not just on what they do for people but also to people and their life-support systems
“A novel synthetic chemical added to the plastic in a sports bottle may increase its durability, but if it leaches into a baby bottle’s contents or into the environment and functions in tiny doses as an endocrine-disrupting agent, is the risk worth the benefit? In general, benefit-cost analyses are not done frequently or carefully enough before the introduction of new technologies. Freons (chlorofluorocarbons) looked extremely beneficial as refrigerants until it was discovered they could destroy the ozone layer and with it all life on land. Risk cannot be avoided completely. But a cultural change toward more careful analyses and deployment only of technologies that carry very clear benefits will help humanity keep the odds in its favor. It should not always rate consumption as trumping safety – especially when the evidence indicates that the toxics problem, especially the hormone mimics with non-linear dose-response curves, might be even more disastrous and less reversible than climate disruption.
Four: transform the consumption of education
“Education is what economists call a “non-rival good” – something that can be consumed without reducing the amount available to others – and as such it is an ideal consumption good for a sustainable society. It is widely recognized that literacy and civic education are keys to “development;” they could also be keys to sustainable development. Reform of education to help us solve the human predicament is thus crucial, with much emphasis on values such as satisficing for the many as opposed to optimizing for the few. In the future, both the need for sustainability and the multi-dimensional environmental, social, political, and economic requirements to achieve it must be central elements of education around the world. Many more people, especially politicians, should be familiar with the I=PAT equation, should know how agricultural systems work, and grasp the relationship between population size and epidemic disease. Unless a much larger fraction of the human population becomes aware of the predicament we all face and the science of that predicament’s basic elements and possible solutions, sustainability is unlikely to be reached.
Five: rapidly expand our empathy
“We’re a small-group animal, trying to live in large groups. Although we no longer can associate exclusively with a clan of, say, 125 relatives, most of us have a group of “pseudokin” – friends and close associates of about the same number. In both cases, people tend to develop a sort of “we versus them” culture, with the “themness” increasing with physical and cultural distance. Thanks in part to global communications, people are gradually gaining more empathy toward others distant from us in skin color, gender, religion, class, culture or physical space, but our ability to inflict harm on them has also increased. Cultural evolution is not reducing this discounting by distance (caring less about situations the further away they are) fast enough. The same can be said about discounting by time – not caring enough about the world we will leave to our descendants in the more distant future. Can affluent people in the West learn to empathize enough with a child in Darfur so as to take real action to save her? Can they learn to care about the world her grandchildren will live in, and act to move that society towards peaceful sustainability? If the global community takes step five, the answers to both questions will be “yes,” and we’ll be on the kind of road that could lead to a level of global cooperation that might allow a billion or two, perhaps three billion, small-group animals to live together sustainably in relative peace, in the next century.
Six: decide what kind of world we all want
“What are the ultimate goals of our lives? Most development literature simply assumes that “modernization” in the style of today’s rich countries should be the goal of all nations – and perhaps that is what people want. Still, are Americans really happier traveling to work an hour or more each day wrapped in a ton or two of steel and breathing smog that threatens their lives? While the U.S. GDP has multiplied almost five times since 1958, satisfaction, as shown by surveys, has not increased at all. The situation in other rich countries is similar. Must all nations then strive to emulate the American super-consuming, petroleum-based life style? The situation looked bleak enough in 1972 when political scientist Dennis Pirages and Paul first asked (in an NYT op-ed) what the world would be like if the then half a billion Chinese got automobiles? Now 1.3 billion Chinese apparently have that goal.
“Or should such goals be discouraged and all of humanity strive together to seek a more equitable global society, which could replace today’s bipolar super-rich – desperately poor population in which the split widens as growth continues? We could initiate a Millennium Assessment of Human Behavior (MAHB) to begin a discussion of what economic, social, and political systems will best fulfill human desires as we struggle to live in gigantic, culturally diverse groups. How, for example, do we take advantage of the enormous benefits that market mechanisms provide to societies while constraining their propensity to do enormous damage when unregulated? Starting and maintaining a global cultural-ethical discussion is a step that would help determine the kinds of lifestyles and relationships people really want. As we’ve already indicated, armed with that knowledge, we could try to establish as accurately as possible the conditions of population size, consumption patterns, economic arrangements, and technologies required to make such lifestyles and relationships sustainable. All of this, of course, would go against the often-recognized “stickiness” (inertia) of culture. But as many cases show, that stickiness can be overcome. It may be that even the Weberian work-to-grow-forever culture that long has had development experts in its death grip can be altered in ways that could lead to a sustainable global culture. The United States, for example, could adopt some ideas from other cultures – like more vacation time from European cultures or a tradition of siestas from Mexico, or a more contemplative view of life from various aspects of Buddhism. The USA could meet developing cultures halfway by focusing less on “standard of living” and more on “quality of life,” and it could bring the experts along with it.
Seven: determine the institutions and arrangements best suited to govern a planetary
society with a maximum of freedom within the constraints of sustainability
“This is closely related to step six. In the ~200,000 year history of modern Homo sapiens, nation-states are a recent invention, existing for only a tiny fraction of our existence. In their modern form, they are little more than 200 years old. We need to look closely at possible alternatives that could combine greater awareness of the problems of living at a global scale while retaining small-group psychological comfort. More cooperation at a global level is clearly necessary for civilization’s long-term survival. Problems such as climate disruption, global toxification, resource wars, decimation of the planet’s biodiversity and thus of the crucial services that flow from humanity’s natural capital, and escalating chances of global epidemics cannot be solved one nation state at a time.
Pollyannaish conclusion
“We hope you are willing to attempt to dramatically change how the U.S. and the world work. We hope you will not employ conventional economists who will try to restore the same old growth machine that is destroying the world. Equally important, we urge you not to allow a (reasonable) fear of being accused of being “soft” on terrorism or on China, Iran, or North Korea to prevent you from starting the difficult task of cutting back our overgrown military structure and commitments. Similarly, we hope you will take steps to transform our energy economy so the otherwise nearly inevitable eventual war with China over fossil fuels can be avoided. Then there is the awesome issue of curbing rich-world consumption. The U.S. with 4.5% of the global population cannot continue to consume roughly a quarter of Earth’s resources; similar statements apply to the other rich nations. McCain in his concession speech showed some sign of his old self – and you could certainly use the help of a maverick who has shown the ability to move away from some aspects of Neocon nonsense. Maybe the Senate could get back to a situation, like that when Tim Wirth (D) and Jack Heinz (R) were working together to try to solve environmental problems.
“These are no tiny tasks, salted with unanswerable questions (e.g., is there any hope that a temporary increase in U.S. troops in Afghanistan can accomplish anything? Is it likely that if we move toward sustainability, China and India will follow?). You surely cannot do it all – we’ll all need to help you as much as possible. If you can’t get a good start toward real solutions, then global collapse in the not-so-distant future seems nearly inevitable.” Paul R. Ehrlich, Bing Professor of Population Studies http://www.stanford.edu/group/CCB/Staff/Ehrlich.html , Anne H. Ehrlich, Senior Research Scientist, Policy Coordinator, Center for Conservation Biology, Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-5020
http://www.stanford.edu/group/CCB/Staff/Ehrlich.html
While these two brilliant educators spell it out, I have seen the devastation around the globe on my world bicycle travels. I encourage anyone and everyone to drive this issue to the top of the U.S. agenda. We desperately need a “US Sustainable Population Policy” and we must lead the world toward a sustainable future. I cannot think of anything more important for the future of our children and this civilization.
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Take Action: www.numbersusa.com ; www.thesocialcontract.com

You’re ridicules. You keep stating that we’re overpopulated and keep quoting other people who say that we are overpopulated, but you have not once shown proof or signs of the world that’s overpopulated. Even China and India are not over populated. Just because we don’t take care of our planet doesn’t mean that their’s too many of us. The problem is how we act, not how many of us live.
Note to Nathan of New Castle:
“Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.”–Aldous Huxley
What facts?
Nathan, You don’t think the world is already overpopulated at 6.8 billion people? What number would represent overpopulation to you?
There’ve been many studies done on what happens when a species overpopulates.
Fact: In species that overbreed, starvation and disease are nature’s way of controlling overpopulation.
Fact: When one species move into an area in great numbers, other species are stressed and die out.
Fact: Migration is directly related to populations using up the resources in their area and going in search of food, water, and land.
Fact: Aggressive competition for resources and territory is a result of overpopulation. Note: Communities in the Western U.S. are in a fierce legal battle for water rights, as needs increase due to urban populations spreading throughout desert areas.
Fact: Earth contains a finite amount of arable land, water, and other natural resources necessary for life.
The world’s human population is projected to reach over 9 billion by 2050. That is…barring the breakdown of our agricultural industry which is entirely dependent on a stable climate, and barring a deadly pandemic, nuclear holocaust, meteor strike, or other unforeseen event that tips the balance of our fragile existence. In which case, we don’t need to worry about controlling our own population. Nature will eventually do that for us.
For more facts, see the chart and read section: “Does anyone think population growth is still sustainable?”
http://www.optimumpopulation.org/opt.earth.html
That’s great, but let me give you some real facts and of course some opinions.
The law of conservation of energy states that the total amount of energy in an isolated system remains constant. A consequence of this law is that energy cannot be created or destroyed. The only thing that can happen with energy in an isolated system is that it can change form, for instance kinetic energy can become thermal energy.
What does this mean? We are not using resources(energy which all matter is made of), but instead simply changing its form. It is theorized that the Sun is constantly adding more energy to the earth then the earth is radiating. Therefore we are adding energy to our planet not burning it or using it.
Resources? You believe that we are destroying resources. If you believe that, then look at a landfill and tell that resources have been destroyed. If they are destroyed then you won’t see anything. That fact that we have not destroyed anything, just changed its forms, should tell you that we still have plenty of resources. We have the energy and means to use these resources, but not will
Water? Are you joking? It’s time to get out a world map. Oh, you mean we have trillions of dollars to spend blowing up each other, but find it ridicules to put any money into desalinating water. Again, we have the energy and means, just not the will.
Land? So here it is the total land mass compared to total land mass it takes to feed the world: 36,803,875,446-(1/6 of an acre per person* 7,000,000,000total world population) = 35,637,208,779 Looks to me a lot of room to grow. Oh my bad, I forgot to minus the amount of land it take for us to live on. New York City has 305 square miles (10% of that are parks) with over 8.2 million people in it. But lets say instead we reduced that number by over 8 times to 1 million in 300 square miles (192,000 acres), which would equal 1,344,000,000 acres of land total used to live on. Leaving us well over 34,000,000,000 of the 36,803,875,446 acres to grow and to let the earth do its thing on. You can skew the numbers however you would like, but I just got back from Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico. I wish I could take you there and you could try and tell me we don’t have enough land.
We, as humans, have spread out and chased out mother nature around the world, but the problem isn’t our size, it is our action. We can exists and grow while maintaining a healthy earth if we will. The problem is our will.
Neanderthal of New Castle wrote:
“The fact that we have not destroyed anything, just changed its form, should tell you that we still have plenty of resources.”
Hey, Neanderthal, chew on this. I just ate Tofuburger. Tomorrow, once it if fully digested and eliminated, changing its form, I will send it to you, along with a pickle, chips and tomato. I look forward to your review in Gourmet Magazine extolling the virtues of this yummy form-changed “resource.”
Meanwhile, before you again travel to Arizona, Utah and Arizona, bring yourself up to speed on the concept and limits of Carrying Capacity—for gaud’s sake.
“Continuous population growth is unsustainable.”—Albert Bartlett, professor emeritus of Physics, University of Colorado.
Nathan,
Utah, Arizona and New Mexico might have a lot of empty space, but it’s empty for a reason. If you can’t grow food, or need inordinate amounts of water to do so, then it’s not sustainable. You can’t grow food on mountaintops, swamps, deserts and many other inhospitable places, so subtract that land from your equation.
“Wackernagel and Rees calculate that there are 7.4 billion hectares (3 billion acres) of capacity available for humans in the world. With a world population of six billion at the beginning of 2000, the implication is that today, on average, there is an inadequate and grimly unsustainable 1.23ha (or 1/2 an acre) available per person. If the world had two billion human inhabitants the result would be a sustainable 3.7ha (1.5 acres) per person. Dr. Pimentel concludes that 1.5 acres is the minimum amount of land to sustainably provide for one person.”
http://www.mnforsustain.org/erickson_d_determining_sustainable_population_levels.htm
I agree that we could put more money to use on finding technilogical solutions to sustainability, but why not just work on reducing population growth? Do you have some religious objection to birth control? And again, what number would represent overpopulation to you? Or is there absolutely no such thing?
Mike, you’re so cute. I want to give you a nice brown kiss for such a thoughtful gift.
Sue,
7.4 billion hectares = 18.2854 billion acres not 3 billion. A hectare is larger then an acre, not smaller. Leaving you with almost three acres per person (using all your numbers). Which mean we can double in size according to your numbers. My number that represents a population before we are over populated is a calculated one. Right now using your numbers, no matter how skewed they are, it would be around 12 billion. But this number will go up with new technology.
All the land considered unlivable by Wackernagel and Rees is currently lived on. And yes, food does grown in these “inhospitable” places and can be harnessed a lot more. Farms can be stacked and fed both nutrients and light efficiently. Again, look at world map. Do you see water? We can pipe large quantities of oil over long distances, why can’t we pipe water? Beside you live in the west where water in an issue, but have you ever talked to a farmer from back east? The farmer/ rancher I talked too told me no one ever had water rights because they didn’t need them. Water is not a problem when looking at the world as a whole.
Do you want me to send both of you thousands of quotes, books, websites? I get it, a lot of people say that we are over populated. If you think for yourself then you won’t get caught up in propaganda. Do the math and look at the world.
Birth control? That’s the answer. You’ll state that people are dying of starvation and dehydration, but you’ll give them birth control. I hope, I have gotten you wrong and you’re not referring to the pills. Educating is always an answer, so if you mean educating people about sustainability you got my vote.
Birth control includes all manner of things, from pills to the rythm method. The point is; control. If we could achieve zero population growth, there will be lots less starvation, dehydration, disease, war, and misery.
Yes, education is the answer, but why not, for the benefit of all of us, future generations, and the rest of the living and nonliving beings on the planet, educate for both environmental sustainability and population control? Technology has come along way since the Pill too ya know and can be used to effectively curb exponential population growth.
Or again, do you have a religious objection to population control? Are you one of those Biblical “go forth and multiply” adherants? If so, then science doesn’t really enter into it at all does it?
“Birth Control includes all manner of things” Should we be sending coat hanger with instruction instead of aid?
The things you listed that you contribute to the world overpopulation are starvation, dehydration, war, and disease. So shouldn’t it take care of itself, if the side affect of too many people is death?
“Go forth and multiply” I don’t know who or what you’re quoting. I think it might be the bible, but it says “Be fruitful, and multiply” The difference being the fruitful part. And yes, I am a Jew, a Christian, a Muslim, a believer. I believe in the Torah in which I quoted, but I also know the purpose of it. The Torah laws were given to govern. It was written to develop a productive society. And it worked and is still working today. Look at the United States laws and where they came form. But as Jesus pointed out laws are for law breakers. People who believe, follow a higher set of standards, their hearts. I believe what make sense. I will never believe in something just because it is in a book. How could I tell you not to follow propaganda, yet follow religious propaganda myself. I believe in the Bible because it makes sense.
You brought up religion, not me. I showed you numbers, yet you continue to give me opinions. All I’m saying is show me the proof. I don’t care about the mass amount of people who believe the world is overpopulated. I care about the truth.
Part of the problem is the acceptance of converting wealth and quality of life into currency. Currency as a form of IOU, has led to profligate overconsumption and attendant waste, by the West and indutrialized as well as post industrial nations — especially the United States. It is easier to turn a redwood tree into toothpicks and then dollars, than the other way around.
Everywhere I see lawn grass, I can envision dandelions for salad and other non or low maintenance edible landscapes. Even though all can be fed if a little common sense were used, that doesn’t mean population shouldn’t be reduced via lower birth rates.
Perhaps looking at this from the perspective that there are too many overconsuming wasteful undereducated people makes sense — what are you doing to create wealth and enhance quality of life? How expensive are you to the planet?
Ed, I agree with everything you said. We are not fruitful when multiplying. The population is not the problem, the way we live is. But of course if all we are going to do is harm, then it would be better to have less of us harming. The less of us treating the earth poorly is better whether that comes from living better or having less of us. My solution is educating and trying to live humbly, the other solution is getting rid humans. You pick.
Nathan wrote, “The things you listed that you contribute to the world overpopulation are starvation, dehydration, war, and disease. So shouldn’t it take care of itself, if the side affect of too many people is death?”
Yes, that’s pretty much my point. If we don’t limit our own population to sustainable numbers, nature will do it for us. The ONLY reason there are so many of us now is technology. Without technological advances in medicine, agriculture, water purification and delivery systems, electricity, engines, etc. the world can only support so many humans. Thus, if there is any disruption to our technological infrastructure due to natural or manmade causes, there will be a mass die off.
I happen to believe that day is right around the corner; http://www.aspenpost.net/2007/04/26/doomsday-looms-the-imminent-extinction-of-hydrocarbon-man-and-woman/ (written under my former pseudonym)
Just my opinion of course.