Mott the Hoople
Sweet Jane
Well let's get off to a good start then and kill Grind!What really makes me laugh fit to cry is that so much is invested in worrying about climate change yet virtually nothing in the real menace which is overpopulation.
Well let's get off to a good start then and kill Grind!What really makes me laugh fit to cry is that so much is invested in worrying about climate change yet virtually nothing in the real menace which is overpopulation.
Well let's get off to a good start then and kill Grind!![]()
I have a cousin who is a director for a major defense company who lives a significant amount of time in the north London Suburbs and he loves it there, love the people, culture, etc, but he does admit that the maritime climate can get deppressing.....Good thing he has a home in Orlando too.If you want to know where all the rain has gone well we have had bucket loads since May, it has mostly stopped in time for the Olympics.
No way. He'll find a Grindette and breed like cock roaches. I say play it safe and kill him now!No, he can live because he is so devoted to the internet and trying to kill himself on the roads, there is little chance of a new generation of Grindettes.
I have a cousin who is a director for a major defense company who lives a significant amount of time in the north London Suburbs and he loves it there, love the people, culture, etc, but he does admit that the maritime climate can get deppressing.....Good thing he has a home in Orlando too.
What really makes me laugh fit to cry is that so much is invested in worrying about climate change yet virtually nothing in the real menace which is overpopulation.
Could that be because it is not a concern? The fertility rate in over 40% of the countries on the planet is below the replacement rate. The countries with the highest fertility rates also tend to have the lower life expectancies. World population will likely peak within 30 years, then decline.
Meanwhile there is nothing on Earth that will stop it topping 9 billion.
Meanwhile there is nothing on Earth that will stop it topping 9 billion.
yes, the expectation is that it will peak between 8.8 and 10.1 Billion... and then according to projections it will peak around 2055-2060 and then decline back towards 8.4B by the end of the century.
this is assuming of course that there isn't a massive war/plague of some sort.
yes, the expectation is that it will peak between 8.8 and 10.1 Billion... and then according to projections it will peak around 2055-2060 and then decline back towards 8.4B by the end of the century.
this is assuming of course that there isn't a massive war/plague of some sort.
There are destined to be endless resource wars way before then, water for one, unless we can work out a way to tow a few icebergs to the Middle East.
water, perhaps... but that is about it...
We have more than enough oil and nat gas available to us, we have the ability to build more nuclear plants, we have an abundance of technology to continue improving our consumption efficiency, we continue to invest in R&D in cleaner alternatives.
That said, if there are endless resource wars, then we will not likely hit the 9 Billion level. Because fertility rates are dropping rapidly around the world as it is. An increase in death due to war would simply expedite the population peak timeline and its subsequent decline.