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New entries will be posted within one week. Zot Lynn Szurgot Estados Unidos -- Posted 05 Oct 2008 02:39:05 PM Thank you ever so much for compiling and presenting this data so well. The perspective introduced is vital yet apparently difficult to arrive at, if its rarity is any indication. The presentation here should be very helpful to English-speakers who are open to arriving at understanding. i hope they are many, and that they make use of such a valuable resource as you have so freely offered. Certainly it can help others overcome difficulties. Gratitude! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If i may be so bold as to make use of this Guestbook to refer to other Guestbook entries, i feel the comments of David Lovelace are salient and bear investigation. Like him, i feel we can add traction to our efforts by pushing toward increasing the economic and social choices of women worldwide. In that, i wish him and others the best, even as i join their push. Unlike Mr. Lovelace, i do not feel any driver is more primary than the basic ecological equations common to all life, including resource availability as a magnet pulling population levels toward K, more fundamental than any social arrangements. While social disempowerments can accelerate the speed at which a population responds to this magnetic pull, changing the speed will only help a little as long as this electromagnet of irrationally-increasing-K remains turned on. Again, i hope to help with this little, but it is at least as important to help reverse the primary engine, which is excess resource availability from converting healthy ecosystems into human food. Humans will overpopulate to approach an artificially-raised K whether women are with or without choices, yet stabilizing K will lead to population stability among both empowered-women populations and disempowered-women populations, so we must stabilize K no matter what else we do. i prefer the route through empowering women, but that is a worthwhile boon that nevertheless does not reach to the bottom of the population dilemma, so let us not fail to acknowledge the primacy of resource availability in determining their lives and the future of all of us. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The embarrassing truth, so well presented here, is that humans (at the level of whole populations) do in fact behave like fruit flies as regards the basics of population dynamics, and any resistance to acknowledging this is obstructive to sustainability. Understanding our situation can lead to better-integrated solutions, and also to a deeply satisfying biophilia as we relearn to belong among our sister species. Tackling the serious problems of population growth can certainly be helped by gender equality, and we must also understand that stabilizing food supplies is an absolute requirement. If we are wise, we will do both. One hooray to anyone who moves to empower women, and three cheers to anyone who helps destroy the myths behind food overproduction!
Mark A. Adsett Sweden -- Posted 17 Aug 2008 12:01:45 PM Very informative - good work. Will check back soon.
Kristal L. Rosebrook USA -- Posted 27 Jul 2008 07:02:11 PM Great website
Tjerk Bakker Netherlands -- Posted 15 Jul 2008 02:32:26 PM Thanks for your wonderful website and information Its so useful. The big issue is overpopulation, you made me clear how it functions in relation to food supply. Your website is linked on my Dutch website for sometime already. www.opwarming.info
Ruben Nelson Canada -- Posted 23 Jul 2008 10:01:58 AM Thank you.
John USA -- Posted 20 Jun 2008 01:22:32 PM this is very interesting. THank you.
Randy Crohn Israel -- Posted 08 Jun 2008 04:44:31 AM Dude!
sheila chambers usa -- Posted 27 Apr 2008 03:13:47 PM Since I'm still stuck with a slow dial up I can't watch your videos but I have known we're overpopulated since the 1960's. Because of that observation, I chose not to have children, unfortunately, too many other people continue to have too many children. Now I hear the call for another "green revolution" to feed the now starving hordes. No, no more, with the decline of oil, mass starvation will happen no matter what we now do. The green revolution was to buy us time to stop population growth and stabilize it and we instead chose to just keep feeding the new mouths that were added each year, to prevent the dissemination of birth control, deny abortions and keep people ignorant about sex education. Now we will all pay the cost of our stupid actions as will billions of innocent children who should have never been born.
David Lovelace UK -- Posted 09 Mar 2008 01:36:23 AM Your analysis underestimates a key driver of population growth: women’s the lack of reproductive choice. Religion and culture are stronger drivers than resource availability in many human populations and mutually reinforce each other to deny 100’s of millions of women the right to control their own fertility. In many countries especially throughout Sub-Saharan Africa and Asian women have little or no control over when or whom they marry, when they start having children or how many they have. This has nothing to do with food imports or the degree of poverty and everything to do with the low status of women and girls in the prevailing religion and culture. A recent report by Actionaid “Hit or Miss - Women’s Rights and the Millennium Development Goals” (www.actionaid.org.uk March 2008) gives the details. Human populations do not behave like fruit flies or as rational beings so your equations are simplistic and naïve. Tackling the serious problems of population growth requires gender equality rather than food restrictions. David Lovelace (Herefordshire UK)
Hillary Anderson US -- Posted 15 Jan 2008 12:16:15 PM
Chris Koch USA -- Posted 04 Jan 2008 02:05:32 PM Having been introduced to the Population Explosion / Food Production correlation by way of Daniel Quinn's books, I am devoted to "preaching" this message in any way I can, when and wherever I can. As it can be difficult to express the issue from as many angles as it seems to require, it is great to have such a detailed and in-depth tool. I confess that in this election year, when the issues being brought up by the campaign are undeniably real, it is difficult to maintain interest when nobody -- nobody anywhere -- seems to be talking about the problem of population, and it is so obviously the foundation of so many other grievous issues. And of course, if it IS being discussed anywhere, no one is discussing it from the perspective of its scientifically indisputable cause. I can only hope that the slide down the other side of the petroleum bell-curve is as devastating as it promises to be, and that the end of the petroleum party will finally result in a stabilization of food production and a subsequent levelling and/or lowering of population increase. Because sadly, we seem incapable of realizing this proactively. Again thanks for providing this, and do let me know if any support is needed in your efforts.
Michael Bedar U.S.A. -- Posted 23 Dec 2007 10:08:33 AM Learning more about Pan Earth, I feel basically I share a vision - that it is ecological and sustainable farming, with tendencies towards organic farming and also vegan eating, that will bring human nourishment and the living planet in balance. A belief about receiving in order to share, rather than to dominate. The food gardening we teaching in the Spiritual Veganic Farming Apprenticeship at our center, the Tree of Life Rejuvenation Center, in Patagonia, AZ. Thanks for showing the world this. I'd be interested in including you as s reference in our book, by Gabriel Cousens, M.D., "Creating Peace by Being Peace." Will you get back to me to talk about these ideas? Thank you very much.
.Ramalingam India -- Posted 22 Dec 2007 08:10:38 AM very interesting !
Geoff Dickinson Australia -- Posted 06 Dec 2007 11:01:25 PM Top stuff. Limits to Growth in a new form
Hendrick Europe -- Posted 26 Oct 2007 12:00:31 PM Your web site will add to the awareness of human beings that we should change on how we look at the earth and behave before we kill the life diversity on the planet, including ourselves. I read about those communities that could lead those changes, however, we are trapped (for 50% of the population) in cities as corporate slaves and mortgage slaves. How do we get out of this system? Should we collapse first, before we can change the system? If I listen to people around me, everyone seems ok with this by saying "let me have a nice life, I have to go on, what can I really do, etc...". So far I do not see that a few communities can really change the mass.
kerry morris USA -- Posted 25 Oct 2007 07:27:59 PM This web site provided a lot of helpful information
Steven Earl Salmony USA -- Posted 17 Oct 2007 08:22:57 AM Thanks for such rare and much-needed contributions to the science of human population dynamics. This research indicates to me that we can now see the primary problem, the proverbial "mother" of all global challenges, which is presented to humanity in the early years of Century XXI. The problem is a huge one. This problem is posed by the human population to humanity and takes its shape from the anticipated convergence of unwelcome, fulminating ecological conditions, ones that arise as a consequence of the skyrocketing and unbridled growth of absolute global human population numbers, I suppose.
Steven Earl Salmony USA -- Posted 26 Sep 2007 10:58:14 AM This presentation is surely one of most significant contributions to scientific knowledge that I have ever seen. Thanks for such outstanding research. |
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