PkbonupePeter_Kcos8 wrote:First off, I'm not opposed to birth control. If people want to use birth control, I'm all for it. It is their choice. I simply think that making it the utmost priority in relieving the problems of the Third World is a kind of ass backwards way of going about fixing things.
Is it made the utmost priority in normal aid programs? Compared to, say, providing clean water or medical treatment? Or pressuring governments to stop the oppression of women in rural areas? Or providing food during famines?
You are toting a ideologized "party line" which, as far as I can tell, doesn't have much of an historical basis in reality. It has simply become so ingrained in Western political thought that
daring to challenge it generally results in the modern secular equivalent of a torch and pitchfork wielding lynch mob screaming things to the effect "
BUUUUURRRRN HIIIM," and "
HERESY!!! "
Umm... I think you are missing a really huge point here.
Specifically, you're ignoring that the entire "zero population growth" argument revolves around the claim that limiting population growth in rapidly growing countries would be a
good idea, not that it has happened in the past. There are a lot of arguments for it being a good idea, of which you have addressed none as far as I can tell.
In favor of addressing these arguments, you make up fictional versions of the argument, accuse your opponents of believing them, and then oppose your opponents of coming after you in a mob. This is convenient, of course, because it allows you to ignore that they aren't saying
HERESY! They're saying "Do you seriously believe X, Y, and Z?"
I suspect you're doing this because you can't bring yourself to deny X, Y, and Z with a straight face, nor can you deny with a straight face that X, Y, and Z logically imply that you've been wrong all along.
Exactly. They should focus on making more food and bringing up living standards, rather than shelling out exorbitant amounts of money on birthcontrol. This isn't to say that I think that population control is irrelevant. I simply believe that it should be more of a secondary of tertiary concern.
Question: which is cheaper, birth control for one couple or feeding one person? You do the math; I already have.
"Exorbitant amounts of money," my hat...
I'm sorry, but I simply disagree. Forced sterilization and birth control are NEVER right.
A question: is it right for a government to knowingly sit and do nothing while a famine occurs?
If so, then your standards of right and wrong are so alien to mine that I cannot consider you a moral authority.
If not, then consider:
A government is busily running around trying to increase agricultural production, after the disastrous damage done by a previous administration of incompetent morons. They are already trying to produce food for roughly 20% of the human race on roughly 7 to 8% of the world's cropland. By longstanding custom, rural families have roughly four children apiece. The government has recently introduced semimodern medical care to the country, so that infant mortality has dropped down into the single digits- of those four children, all will probably survive to adulthood, instead of two or three.
Given four children per two parents, and near-zero infant mortality, it is extremely obvious that the population is going to double or triple in the next twenty or thirty years. Meanwhile, agricultural output will NOT double or triple, because the technology to make it happen physically does not exist. Attempts to invent this technology (which does not exist and might not even be possible) are likely to fail, because this government lacks the scientific infrastructure to outpace the combined efforts of the rest of the world to invent better ways to grow crops.
Again:
Food production will not increase to match population growth when all available land is already under cultivation.
Now, the government has several choices:
1) It can do nothing.
Unless they manage to import extra food (from where?) for several hundred million people, possibly billions, there
will be mass famine. The famines in question
will cause deaths in, again, the hundreds of millions, making the Holocaust look like a crime wave by comparison. All this is directly predictable from the government's decision to do nothing; it is simply a matter of arithmetic. Mostly subtraction: "Number of people there will be in thirty years minus number of people we can feed in thirty years equals number of people who won't have anything to eat in thirty years."
Would this be right?
2) The government can restore the stable
status quo by removing modern medical care.
The infant mortality rate zooms up to about 20%, with numerous additional deaths in childhood or early adulthood, along with many deaths of women in child
birth. This keeps the population from expanding beyond the limits of what the available farms can support because, as in medieval times, the farmers are now having
just enough children to work their own farms after they die.
The cost, of course, is hundreds of millions of dead babies, dead children, and dead women over the next few decades. The world will (rightly) wonder what kind of bizarre twisted freak of a government could withhold medical care from its own people, and will (rightly) condemn the government for doing so.
Would this be right?
3) The government can attempt to find more land within its own borders to farm.
Theoretically, this would be a great solution if there were any to be had. Unfortunately, as is true in most of the world, practically all the land the government controls that
can be farmed
is being farmed, as intensively as local infrastructure allows. Expanding farming within the government's borders would require extensive land reclamation projects, at a very high cost in labor and resources per acre. To make matters worse, the reclaimed land would often not be viable in the long term, because it would only be farmable at the expense of draining non-renewable resources like water and oil-based fertilizers. Eventually, this newly claimed land would become desert once again, the farms on it would fail, and the food supplied by those farms would be gone. At which point we're back to option (1), mass death on a scale that makes the Holocaust look petty.
Would this be right?
4) The government can attempt to find more land
outside its borders to farm.
This would involve conquering land and killing the occupants, for reasons and with consequences so obvious I won't insult even your intelligence by trying to detail them.
Would this be right?
5) The government can enact enforced birth control policies on its own soil, to limit future population growth to the bounds set by future
agricultural growth.
This is what China did.
Now, you think this is not right. But what you need to ask yourself is not merely "Is option (5) right?" You need to ask the grown-up version of the question: "Is option (5)
more wrong than options (1), (2), (3), and (4)?
So, what do you think, and why?