Reminds me of WALL-E where the future human population are tubs of lard getting around on floating cinema seats
inane little opines
Modern day Malthusians are jackasses. The world was supposed to starve to death in the 70s according to them.Shocking wrote:
I did say 'if', that was page 3 in the discussion or so and I wasn't sure if the population problems were already touched on. Reality is that there's no way people can be convinced en masse to settle for less without there being some very evident & immediate threat to provide the proper motivation.
I'm just wondering if we'll live to witness our impending doom by the middle of this century or if it will all end up being completely avoidable and that the scare will be seen as comical in retrospect a la thomas malthus and his prediction of global food shortage.
Their basic premise is pretty much an inevitability though and if future prospects are anything to go by they'll be right much sooner than anyone would like. Even the most conservative estimates see worldwide problems by the middle of this century.Jay wrote:
Modern day Malthusians are jackasses. The world was supposed to starve to death in the 70s according to them.
You know the Amazon is being cut down to supply America with beef?Jay wrote:
No, but it means that we have the capacity for plenty and our diet reflects it. Food is cheap.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
i'm not talking about cow farts. i'm talking about industrial waste. i'm talking about the inefficiency of growing grain to feed animals that we don't need to be breeding/holding in such quantity, anyway. never once did i mention 'greenhouse gases' or 'global warming'.
and a country has to run a massive export/surplus every year in order to have a large meat industry? uuuh okay then. i guess i'll go tell the british beef industry that their whole industry is a sham.
"perfectly sufficient, huge surpluses".Dilbert_X wrote:
You know the Amazon is being cut down to supply America with beef?Jay wrote:
No, but it means that we have the capacity for plenty and our diet reflects it. Food is cheap.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
i'm not talking about cow farts. i'm talking about industrial waste. i'm talking about the inefficiency of growing grain to feed animals that we don't need to be breeding/holding in such quantity, anyway. never once did i mention 'greenhouse gases' or 'global warming'.
and a country has to run a massive export/surplus every year in order to have a large meat industry? uuuh okay then. i guess i'll go tell the british beef industry that their whole industry is a sham.
don't you mean the 1870's?Jay wrote:
Modern day Malthusians are jackasses. The world was supposed to starve to death in the 70s according to them.Shocking wrote:
I did say 'if', that was page 3 in the discussion or so and I wasn't sure if the population problems were already touched on. Reality is that there's no way people can be convinced en masse to settle for less without there being some very evident & immediate threat to provide the proper motivation.
I'm just wondering if we'll live to witness our impending doom by the middle of this century or if it will all end up being completely avoidable and that the scare will be seen as comical in retrospect a la thomas malthus and his prediction of global food shortage.
don't worry, you took money for a war you didn't believe in and went to college on a government grant to learn about libertarianism.Jay wrote:
I make my money off the environmental movement so I can't be TOO harsh
Yes, anyone who is vegetarian has some latent mental illness, good lord.Jay wrote:
It's completely sustainable, that's a non-issue. People eat meat because it's available and tasty. Veggies tend to be comparably priced to meat, and frankly, who in their right mind wants to live on salad? Vegetarianism is for vain women (and men) who would otherwise be anorexic or bulimic, or for those over-sensitive types that cry when they think of an animal being killed. Eat less meat? Sure, like EM said, it's about portion control, and a lot of people fail at that.
I actually do good work, work that I enjoy. I conduct energy use audits for buildings and make recommendations that they have to follow to increase energy efficiency. Stuff like recommending light timers and occupancy sensors and making sure the heating and ventilation system meets energy star levels. Look up LEED on wiki. I do more to save the environment than the lot of you.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
don't worry, you took money for a war you didn't believe in and went to college on a government grant to learn about libertarianism.Jay wrote:
I make my money off the environmental movement so I can't be TOO harsh
we forgive you.
you drive a stupid suburban 4x4, guzzle american gasoline, eat an american diet, and live and work in a giant city.Jay wrote:
I actually do good work, work that I enjoy. I conduct energy use audits for buildings and make recommendations that they have to follow to increase energy efficiency. Stuff like recommending light timers and occupancy sensors and making sure the heating and ventilation system meets energy star levels. Look up LEED on wiki. I do more to save the environment than the lot of you.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
don't worry, you took money for a war you didn't believe in and went to college on a government grant to learn about libertarianism.Jay wrote:
I make my money off the environmental movement so I can't be TOO harsh
we forgive you.
I take the train to and from work and only drive on weekends.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
you drive a stupid suburban 4x4, guzzle american gasoline, eat an american diet, and live and work in a giant city.Jay wrote:
I actually do good work, work that I enjoy. I conduct energy use audits for buildings and make recommendations that they have to follow to increase energy efficiency. Stuff like recommending light timers and occupancy sensors and making sure the heating and ventilation system meets energy star levels. Look up LEED on wiki. I do more to save the environment than the lot of you.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
don't worry, you took money for a war you didn't believe in and went to college on a government grant to learn about libertarianism.
we forgive you.
i take public transport, eat healthily, and work with ideas. who has a bigger carbon footprint?
lol i'm just fucking around with you. i couldn't care less who has the bigger carbon footprint, anyway.Jay wrote:
I take the train to and from work and only drive on weekends.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
you drive a stupid suburban 4x4, guzzle american gasoline, eat an american diet, and live and work in a giant city.Jay wrote:
I actually do good work, work that I enjoy. I conduct energy use audits for buildings and make recommendations that they have to follow to increase energy efficiency. Stuff like recommending light timers and occupancy sensors and making sure the heating and ventilation system meets energy star levels. Look up LEED on wiki. I do more to save the environment than the lot of you.
i take public transport, eat healthily, and work with ideas. who has a bigger carbon footprint?
It's a pretty floaty claim.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
vegetables are comparatively priced to meat? i missed that little bit of crazy. over here some fresh meat/beef for a meal will cost 70% of the total meal cost.
Cybargs wrote:
so how many people here grew up on a funny farm? just wondering.
You've never had to go out and lug around firewood, landscaping equipment, horse feed, cattle feed, fertilizer, wood pellets, wood pallets, scrap metal, tractors, horses, cattle, dairy cows, gravel, wood chips, concrete mix, lumber.... There aren't as many of those "behemoths" as there are actual trucks that are a necessity. Personally I think people that trick their trucks out and never actually use them are redneck or wannabe redneck assholes that need a lifestyle adjustment, but that's just me.Dilbert_X wrote:
As for ethanol farming, the govt subsidising fuel production so dumbasses can drive everywhere in 10mpg behemoths is just as unethical.