• ameancow@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    until our numbers are back in check with our environment.

    I don’t even know how to approach this without dropping a massive essay nobody will read, but this isn’t going to happen. Not the way we want it at least.

    Our numbers aren’t the problem here, and if they drop too low our society will literally collapse and we will fall too far backwards into basically dark-ages for a large number of people. The lowering birthrates are not a good thing, so don’t get confused when people like Elon Musk scream about it being a crisis. It actually IS a problem, he’s just trying to leverage this very clear and present danger to society as a race issue because he’s a giant nazi. A lot of the shittiest people will continue to co-opt this real problem to further their own goals.

    We have to find balance, yes, but if we just chop off a limb, the body may die. If we lose too many productive, young people, vital institutions and logistical networks will collapse. Millions could starve or go without medical care and so on.

    • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.ca
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      6 hours ago

      Is it impossible for you to just imagine smaller? No one is talking about knocking down key foundations and toppling systems, just building a smaller civilization with a circular economy that preserves the living systems on earth, while maximizing well being. The movement is called Degrowth. It’s goal is sustainability.

      Chopping off limbs? No. Degrowth is just the opposite of growth, a gradual ethical reduction of people and consumption until we fit on our planet. I say ethical because the principle mechanism is just having less kids. No one killed, just fewer born. Those people not born don’t consume and we are closer to our goal. Sustainability is much much easier when you aren’t blowing past limits.

      • ameancow@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        gradual

        What’s happening right now isn’t “gradual,” and unless it levels off it’s going to be rough at some point. I don’t think we really even have the data to predict when that worrying trend starts turning into closed businesses and empty homes, but it’s hitting some countries worse than others and with our interconnected economies and supply chains, everyone will feel it as soon as one area feels it.

        Sustainability is also easier when you don’t have a modern society and everyone is struggling to grab the last antibiotics because the pharmacies closed down, but I don’t know if anti-natalists really know what they want.

        • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.ca
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          5 hours ago

          I don’t think you understand sustainability. Fewer people need fewer antibiotics. Fewer mines, less waste, less infrastructure etc…

          We are not anywhere near sustainable right now. We have grossly exceeded our planetary boundaries.. Having exceeded our planetary boundaries puts us in a state of ecological overshoot.. The concept is not well understood outside of ecology circles, but it means a clock is ticking. Every day that we aren’t in equilibrium with our environment is a day that the environment degrades. Our bodies are full of microplastics and PFAS while the climate is rapidly changing and biodiversity is dropping rapidly. It’s hapening now, but in slow motion compared to human perceptions.

          Human civilization is in an existential crisis. Any potential window for managing this crisis is rapidly closing. I have yet to hear any other credible means to address this crisis that is not a thinly veiled attempt of the rich and powerful to hold onto the system that made them rich and powerful.

          The scientists used to scream for change. Now they cry because money buys billionaires an outsized voice compared to the quality of their arguments.

          Edit: Anti-natalist is also likely a disingenuous mischaracterization. Degrowth is about fewer births, not no births, just until we fit our environment then stabilize. Detractors who can’t engage honestly to the discussion love to use misleading terms. I hope this isn’t you.

          • ameancow@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            I just think you’re raising un unrealistic argument that whatever is happening will lead to good results. It will lead to BAD results because a lot of people are going to struggle or worse, and that leads to things we don’t like, like authoritarianism and deaths. Sure it might eventually balance out, but the interim will be fucking bad for a lot of people. I highly encourage people with this attitude to PLEASE learn a little about supply chain and economics and sociology, it’s so much more complicated than “fewer people = good.”

            I can’t say it more simply. I am dropping the “anti-natalist” trigger word because there are a lot of people out there who fit that moniker who secretly LIKE the idea of millions or billions of people suffering if it means we get some delusional fantasy solarpunk world after. I hope this isn’t you.

            • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.ca
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              5 hours ago

              Unsustainability is condeming countless numbers and future generations to death, and possibly extinction.

              If you have any better plan for sustainability let’s hear it.

              • ameancow@lemmy.world
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                4 hours ago

                I’m all for sustainability by lowered populations in some areas but those kinds of solutions require a far more gradual change to population levels or you have crashes. If you think crashes are good we have nothing else to talk about, I don’t like suffering and death even if things “get better” after. It’s no different than any apocalypse fetish or death cult.

                Meanwhile, we can handle our population load and a lot more, we have more than enough land and space and production capacity, the bottleneck in almost every region is always the stranglehold on capital and worker production and the defensive lack of willingness to cooperate with neighbors and create policies that directly address sustainability and better outcomes for large populations. We can change that, albeit slowly, with more community involvement and better elected officials as long as we have democratic processes. (Again, something that goes away when systems crash.)

                Our infrastructure and logistics is a very slow-turning boat, adjustments you make now can take a century to have full impact, so rapid population collapse crashes entire economies that vast numbers of people depend on for basic needs like food and medicine because the damn boat doesn’t turn fast enough to adjust.

                I am just here warning against “abandoned cities” as a solution. It won’t make things better for people. Don’t advocate for less people or drift into anti-natalism. If you’re standing in a nuclear reactor about to push a red button that says “restart” and engineers tell you “it’s not that simple, please don’t push it, it will be a disaster” you don’t respond with “Oh yeah, what button DO I push then?” Just understand that the reactor has a lot more going on than it looks like and maybe learn both sides.

                • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.ca
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                  3 hours ago

                  Meanwhile, we can handle our population load and a lot more, we have more than enough land and space and production capacity.

                  No we don’t. Most of earth’s wildlife has been converted to human biomass or our food in the 6th great mass extinction. There are virtually no wild places left. Your body is full of microplastics, PFAS and and an ungodly cocktail of other bullshit. This shit is in the rain, from pole to pole. The whole thing has an insatiable apetite for finite resources and is powered by non-renewables. We have pushed past 7 of 9 planetary boundaries. This is the scientific way of saying we’re fucked unless we can figure out how to live within our means fast. Scientists are saying we are deep in crisis and you casually blather than we can hold everyone and more. We can’t. We can’t hold what we have now. Sure we could rebalance wealth to end excesses of the rich and poverty, but unless you get consumption and waste way, way down, its still cataclysmic destruction of the biosphere.

                  Deserted cities are indeed a long term consequence of degrowth. Land will be reserved for wildlife to flourish unmolested again and instead of continually mining virgin lands for resources we can mine our former abandoned cities while we work out the details of a recyclable, circular economy.

                  • ameancow@lemmy.world
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                    3 hours ago

                    I think you have overindulged in apocalypse porn, there are ways forward without mass deaths and I am tired of being read passages from other doomer posts about the climate that I know by heart already. I am pretty much done here, I repeat that I encourage you to read other angles of the problem and our situation and stop praying for calamity to make life better, it’s nihilistic and kind of dumb.