KrauserKrauser wrote:Exactly what is your point with China making lots of babies? As someone that has shown themselves to be against birth control implementation and against abortion, infanticide and forced sterilization, what exactly are trying to say?
There are alot of people in China? People make babies? The sky is blue?
Your arguments are getting increasingly infantile and nonsensical.
Perhaps more to the point, he's lying:
Petey wrote:In absolute terms, China produces as many children a year as the whole of Sub-Saharan Africa. By any standard, that's a Hell of a lot of people.
Did you just outright make that up?
The CIA World Factbook on China lists their 2009 birth rate as 14 births per 1000 people, and their 2009 population as 1.339 billion, giving a total of around 18.7 million births.
Meanwhile, the UN,
here reports the crude birth rate for sub-Saharan Africa in 2007 as 39 births per 1000 people, and
here projects the population of the region circa 2010 at 863 million. This gives a total of 32.7 million.
Now, we might tweak that second total up or down by a few hundred thousand either way, because I'm comparing a 2007 birth rate to a 2010 population, which could possibly make a few percent's worth of difference. But that's not enough to save you, because...
Thirty is more than eighteen, not less.
________
Anyway...
PkbonupePeter_Kcos8 wrote:No, really, I'd really like to hear your definition of "liberal entitlement."
The ridiculous sentiment held by many fat and spoiled Westerners which seems to posit that they are "owed" goods and services from the world, life, and government...well, because they fucking say they should be.
All right. Could you detail this? What does "owed?" mean? Are there other explanations for why someone might think that a government should provide various goods and services, explanations that have nothing to do with a sense of entitlement?
Do the goods and services in question include such necessities as irrigation water for one's crops? What about clean air? Military protection?
Opening markets, avoiding putting populist nut jobs in power whose entire view of government basically revolves around hiding economic and social problems behind flowery rhetoric and emotionally charged saber rattling while promoting short term economic fixes tailored more towards PR than practicality which are almost certain to fail (looking at you here Chavez and Mugabe), maximizing the potential benefit that can be derived from your particular nation's available natural resources (agriculture, oil, even tourism...you get the idea), avoiding pointless civil wars and political coups, maximizing exports if and only if it is profitable to do so, staying out of debt by only running social programs which you can afford (a more developed economy can handle more of such programs anyway), ecta, etca...
This is pretty simple stuff here.
Yes, and
none of it is new. It's not like people haven't been advising countries to avoid all these pitfalls for years. No one advises countries to minimize the potential benefit they can get from natural resources, or to fight unnecessary civil wars. No one tells leaders that they should ignore their country's problems and do foolish things that will make the problems worse.
If this is what you mean by "economic development," then I have to ask: why is population control not a significant part of the program? Most other people who advocate the things you advocate
also advocate population control, if they perceive that a country has an overpopulation problem.
At no point does the problem get blamed on anything that might be embarassing
What, like Robert Mugabe utterly destroying Zimbabwe's comparatively prosperous agricultural industry for what basically amounted to
faux socialist "shits and giggles," or some Latin American nations going through as many as two or three "Liberalizing" fascist dictators a year during the early parts of the 20th century? I would say that all of these things are pretty "embarrassing."
Ah, but they're not embarassing to
you.
They're not to me, either; I can call Robert Mugabe an idiot because I have no stake in his policies. So can Stas Bush, and he's (ominious drum roll) a socialist! And he and I can do this because we have no entrenched positions to protect, no sacred cows that must not be harmed in the effort to build poor countries into rich ones.
Whereas it seems to me that you have exactly such a position to protect on the issue of population control. No country's trouble can ever be blamed on overpopulation, even in part, because that would imply that population control might (gasp!) be good policy in Third World countries.
Name a single case in which overpopulation has been the single, or even major cause for the creation of a failed state in the Third World. I'm betting that you can't find a single case where some hair brained revolution, grossly incompetent ruler, or half baked civil war based on ethnic or politcial tensions which could have been easily resolved using diplomacy wasn't at least partially to blame.
You do realize that "overpopulation is a major cause for the creation of this failed state" does not contradict "this failed state had an incompetent ruler" or "this failed state had ethnic tensions," right?
Real disaster areas seldom happen for one and only one reason. You will
always be able to find other factors present, and if you pretend that "other factors were present" means "Problem X wasn't really a problem!" then you will
always be able to dismiss any problem.
For example, imagine that I choose to dismiss "ethnic tensions" as the source of possible problems in a country. I can then go on to dismiss the example of the Nigerian Civil War because the Nigerian government was corrupt and unstable. And to dismiss the genocide in Rwanda because the country was overpopulated, which makes as much sense as doing it the other way around and ignoring overpopulation because there were ethnic tensions. And to dismiss the long-term demographic crisis faced by China as it emerged from Mao's rule as being all the fault of Mao's screwy agricultural policies... and you never did explain to Lusankya exactly what those villagers in Anhei would have done without the One Child Policy, now that I think about it.
To summarize: I can ignore ANY issue by demanding that my opponents show evidence that it acts as the sole cause of trouble. That proves nothing, unless I do a statistical analysis, look at dozens of cases where the issue comes up, and prove that there is
no correlation between the issue and actual problems. That's a much stronger statement, because it means something in real life. For example, I can probably prove that there is no correlation between the number of vowels in a country's name and the likelihood that it will be rich or poor, because those two things have nothing to do with each other.
So. Anyway. Are you claiming that there is
no correlation between rapid population growth and national poverty? Or are you claiming something else?
Once again, I'm not saying that overpopulation in a desperately poor country isn't problematic. However, claiming "this country is only poor because its people are having too many children" would seem to be something of a non sequitur, particularly when there are so many other problems in these nations which should be addressed beforehand.
But is it realistic to maintain that these problems
can be fixed in a country where the population doubles every few decades? And where such a large fraction of the population are nonproductive minors? Minors who, if the country is to thrive, must be schooled at great expense (by Third World standards)?
At some point, the challenge of keeping everyone fed and housed will be so draining that anyone trying to build up the country will be too busy fighting the alligators to drain the swamp.
Or do you deny this?