Stop doing this shit where you talk about one thing as if it were another. You're talking about self-sufficiency in food then flip to oil like it's the same thing and it isn't.energiewende wrote:Ability to buy food is precisely what matters, unless you are some racist who thinks it is wrong to import goods from abroad. No country is fully self-sufficient, even North Korea. The US for instance has a well known dependence on oil imports. That does not mean that there is no oil available in the US!
In order for one country to import something another must produce that thing in excess, otherwise no amount of money will be sufficient. Hong Kong can afford to not be self-sufficient in food production because some other nation, like the US, produces an excess. The US can afford to not be self-sufficient in oil because some other nation, like Saudi Arabia, has an excess.
Where your argument about population breaks down is that at some point the planet can no longer produce sufficient food for all the people in it, at which point everyone is fucked because once you reach that point there isn't some other planet to import food from.
This is rather disturbingly like the followers of Saint Reagan who believe the poor “choose” to be poor. Are you a Tea Party Republican?energiewende wrote:I blame them for having 15x less growth than Japan.
The Chinese have NOT been committing infanticide and to describe what is properly referred to as China's family planning policy as “infanticide” is a dishonest distortion at best. In China contraceptives, including hormonal fertility control, is widely available over the counter, it's not like abortion is the sole alternative to celibacy there. But hey, it's not like you display any understanding of nuance anyhow.energiewende wrote:Quite, I'm a "libertard" who assumes that just because every country with a free market economy stopped having famines and doesn't need a state policy mass infaniticide to regulate the food supply, it may be more sensible to try having a free market economy before moving on to the mass infanticide.
Your statement that “infanticide” is somehow being used to regulate the food supply is simply yet another stupid-ass statement you make conflating two different subjects. The one-child policy is to regulate people supply, not food supply.
There's a long history in the Pacific Islands of cultures controlling population by controlling births – but why am I not surprised you are completely ignorant of them? Granted, quite a few of them did practice infanticide, but since they had no access to things like hormonal birth control – it hadn't been invented yet – their choices were sharply limited. Limiting births has worked to control population where food resources are strictly limited, like on island archipelagos. Some of these island cultures still practice population control, sometimes to a strict and specific number, and these days they avail themselves of things like condoms, oral contraceptives, and exporting their surplus populace to other places (much easier now that long-distance travel is considerably safer than in the past). I offer the example of Tikopia, which has long maintained a population of about 1,000 people through a combination of celibacy, encouragement of exploration, warfare, forced deportation, and yes, sometimes infanticide. The population is still held at around 1,200 people. With emigration being easier these days the more extreme population control measures are no longer needed but they most certainly do control their population, as they have for centuries.energiewende wrote:It would be much more sensible to ignore all experience and instead assume that a grossly immoral policy that has neither been tried nor worked anywhere else is the most sensible solution.
So your assertion that this hasn't been tried elsewhere is demonstrably false, and your assertion that it isn't effective is likewise false.
What a bizarre interpretation of WWII... the large-scale slaughter of people under the rule of Nazi Germany was not prompted by food shortages but rather ideology. Yes, towards the end of the war simple lack of food was a factor, but slave labor was being worked to death on a starvation diet years before lack of resources required it.energiewende wrote:Actually that's not entirely true. One country in history did respond to a food shortage caused by self-imposed trade restrictions with mass starvation of presumed less useful parts of the population: Nazi Germany.
An entirely unsubstantiated claim made by a poster with a long history of concealing his location and what he does for a living. Are you the coffee boy or mail clerk for a large multinational based in the US? Because such would fit what you describe as well as a claim to be a high-level executive in such a place.energiewende wrote:But you asked if I provided my services to the US and I do.
What unadulterated horseshit! The only reason you make that claim about US economic institutions is because, in the recent past to the present, the US has been the richest country in the world. You ignore that that had more to do with European nations bombing and murdering the shit out of each other during WWI and WWII, setting them back via mass destruction of infrastructure and production capabilities, than the US suddenly leaping forward. The US is now slipping in the number one spot because of BAD economic choices, ass-backward thinking (or entire lack of thinking) on the part of the elected officials, and the selfish, short-sighted policies and attitudes of the ruling oligarchs.energiewende wrote:The US has good economic institutions, about the best in the world, and the reason it is growing slower than PRC is only that developing new technologies is harder than adopting them from others.
Sure – I'll need the money when the US economy crashes again. There's really nothing preventing a disaster (either natural or stupidity-generated) that kicks the US down to a lower GDP, standard of living, or quality of life than other nations (arguably, we already have a lower standard of living here by several measures).The PRC's growth rate will reduce to the US level with a per capita GDP still susbtantially below that of the US (if you disagree, I'm willing to bet cash).
You clearly DO think you're special, more enlightened, and smarter than anyone else. Unfortunately for you, no one here believes that because we've yet to see evidence of it. You strike me as an uneducated, arrogant man-child with less grasp of history than the average US high school student – which is such a low bar mice have to stoop to walk under it.energiewende wrote:If I had run China throughout the 20th century it would be much better off than it is. Not that I'm special, it's just not that hard to do better than the morons who ran China.
Just completely ignore that China has been densely postulated for centuries, if not millenia, and US still has more room for people. Just completely ignore the differences in arable land, mineral resources, and every other variable factor.energiewende wrote:No, this problem seems to be scale independent. US, which is a huge continental empire and the 3rd most populous country in the world, developed with very similar policies.
You do realize that even in the free-for-all US the government DOES have regulations about where people can and can't live? This ranges from the small scale (developers can't build an apartment block in a part of the city zoned for industrial use, for example) to the large (huge tracts of land set aside as permanent wilderness – see places like Yellowstone National Park), from local governments to Federally owned land under military control where civilians are not permitted (training grounds and top secret project areas). The government has forcibly relocated civilians from flood-prone river zones, (occasionally relocating entire towns) and disaster areas (see the Centralia, Pennsylvania mine fire after effects).energiewende wrote:This is actually an artificial problem, caused or at least exacerbated by internal movement controls. Again the reasoning behind this is partly a fault economic belief (the state is better at planning where people should live than the market) and partly an attempt to solidify CPC rule (fear of riots if poor immigrants were able to move freely into the cities, as they were to the US East Coast in the 19th century).
Also – the US has experienced urban riots so it's not like there is no basis for fear of such. Just in the 20th Century there were the 1909 Greek Town riot in Nebraska, the 1917 East St. Louis, Illinois riot, the 1919 Chicago race riot, the 1921 Tulsa riot, the 1935 Harlem riot... this was all before we got to the 1960's and Civil Rights. There were urban riots in the 19th Century as well, particularly around the time of the Civil War. There are plenty of examples from other nations as well. Fear of rioting is not baseless or unfounded. As Stas Bush has pointed out, uncontrolled movement from rural areas to cities has had unpleasent to downright hellish consequences in other parts of the world. The Chinese solution to this may or may not be justifiable, effective, too extreme, not sufficient, or any number of other things but the fact the Chinese government actually considers such things shows that they are not as stupid as you are.