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- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!uniwa!DIALix!tillage!gil
- From: gil@tillage.DIALix.oz.au (Gil Hardwick)
- Newsgroups: sci.environment
- Subject: Save the Planet and the Economy at the Same time!
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <726033078snx@tillage.DIALix.oz.au>
- References: <1993Jan2.194139.16483@sactoh0.sac.ca.us>
- Date: Sun, 03 Jan 93 03:51:18 GMT
- Organization: STAFF STRATEGIES - Anthropologists & Training Agents
- Lines: 175
-
-
- In article <1993Jan2.194139.16483@sactoh0.sac.ca.us> kberry@sactoh0.sac.ca.us writes:
-
- > The problem with your proposal that we solve the population problem
- > by providing education, reducing poverty, and raising living
- > standards is that is nearly impossible on a global scale.
-
- *Nearly* impossible is a crock. Indeed, attempting to do anything on a
- global scale is far too complex to achieve acceptable returns per unit
- input. The trends are to raise living standards on a *local* scale by
- handing people back their own problems (current jargon is "community
- empowerment").
-
- > The U.S. cannot even curb these problems within its own borders,
- > and the global economy depends upon the exploitation of poorer
- > countries. Automated factories flood the world with consumer
- > goods while providing relatively little employment opportunities.
- > Economists generally agree that the U.S. could not survive if it
- > severed all trade in and out. So why should we believe a global
- > economy comprised entirely of first-world countries could exist?
-
- Your "global economy" is also a crock. Read Wallerstein and Wolf, as
- examples, now well established critiques of the European World System
- underwriting development trends over the past twenty years.
-
- A more reliable reframing of the question on the survival of the US
- is rather more concerned with the situation where people simply went
- elsewhere to do their shopping, where in the absence of an armed
- presence at every corner of the globe how the US would attract their
- custom once again. I doubt myself that "a global economy comprised
- entirely of first-world countries could exist", but that is not the
- question, is it?
-
- The question raised is somewhat oriented toward the US consuming so
- much more than they possibly need while so many others starve for
- anything at all, underwritten by US marines *not* equitable trade
- policies. But whether your navy visits here regularly or not, I am
- still free to buy Japanese (or Chinese, or Bangladeshi, or Pakistani,
- or wherever) where I see the value and quality for my money, so your
- strategy like the British before it isn't finally going to work very
- well, is it?
-
- > You correctly stated that individuals in the first world consume
- > 100 times the earth's resources and energy as third world
- > individuals. And I hope you agree that this level of consumption
- > is a crisis. Yet your proposed solution would perhaps triple the
- > number of first world individuals in the world.
-
- You grievously misinterpret the situation, where in fact relatively
- few countries will industrialise to the order of magnitude of those
- already industrialised. Australia for one has no plans to that effect
- either, but sees itself as a resource provider where its interests are
- negotiated in terms of value-added on-processing of those resources in
- partnership with its clients.
-
- Wool scouring is a classic example of a case where we produce the
- commodity and our client is the consumer, while in joint venture the
- heavy, greasy wool attracting high freight charges is scoured here
- in Australia so that light, clean wool is exported cheaply. The wool
- by-products (esp. lanolin) in theory cover the cost of scouring as
- well as providing better employment opportunities for Australians not
- otherwise available.
-
- We are also involved with metal refining, where for example we are
- able to add value one thousand fold to titanium units prior to export.
- There are specialist foundries which produce high quality steel and
- alloy castings to the client's specification for export. Honda make
- alloy cylinders for Ford as a good clear example, but there are very
- many specialised one-off and small batch castings which can be made
- most economically, and then sent off to the client's factory to be
- finished and assembled.
-
- The only outstanding matters *currently* in dispute, if you care to
- keep yourself up to date on developments, are focused on the terms of
- trade from one situation to the next, and in particular training the
- local people to participate as equity partners in such ventures as
- appropriate. There is *plenty* for everybody, and the potential is
- not being fulfilled to our mutual detriment, that's a fact.
-
- > Face it. The PC term "Developing Nation" is a misnomer, since in
- > the past 30 years conditions in most "developing nations" have
- > deteriorated. What hope do Egypt, Somalia, and Ethiopia have of
- > competing globally against Japanese and Korean mega-corporations?
- > Even the U.S. was unable to compete in the cellular telephone and
- > LCD video screen market. The U.S. cannot play AFDC-to-the-world by
- > unconditionally air-lifting food to countries that have populated
- > themselves beyond their carrying capacity, while ignoring its own
- > economic problems.
-
- During the past 30 years these countries have suffered the effects of
- the Cold War, where now the UN has a chance to step in as it is doing
- in fact. None of the countries you mention are even trying to compete,
- and indeed have no ambitions to do so at any time. Why would anyone
- waste so much capital and resources manufacturing goods which can be
- bought so incredibly cheap as they are already? The task at hand is
- merely a matter of balancing the terms of trade, and again why don't
- you come up to date on what is happening in the real world out there?
-
- > I disagree that a "fascist world-wide dictatorship" would be
- > required to reduce population growth. In poor countries money is
- > a more powerful incentive than laws.
- >
- > o Provide educational assistance to poor children in places like
- > Brazil and India in exchange for sterilization.
- >
- > o Make voluntary sterilization a condition of receiving food aid
- > in places like Ethiopia and Somalia.
- >
- > o Even in the U.S., deny AFDC increases based on additional
- > children, and limit deductions to two dependents.
- >
- > Certainly there are better ideas. If you feel these are "fascist"
- > measures, consider the alternative: Eventually the first world will
- > be unable to provide aid as the number of Somalia's increases
- > exponentially. Much of the world will deteriorate into a chaotic
- > nightmare of street gangs killing people for the shirt off their
- > backs.
-
- Gaack! John McCarthy, here is *the* original doom-prophecy if you do
- want to have a good look at it. It's basic scenario is outlined in
- the Bible; The Relevation to John, in fact, right there in the last
- chapter. But this particular form of the millenarian prophecy has been
- around since at least the English Civil War (revived again by the US
- for the duration of the Cold War), while none have yet to even appear
- much less have any effect on reality beyond its capacity to induce
- total paranoia among all true believers in apocalypse.
-
- Chaotic nightmare of street gangs killing people for the shirt off
- their backs, indeed! Anyone can tell you it is *far* more easy to
- sew a shirt (or grow food, or whatever) than it is to kill someone.
-
- Sterilisation has already been tried, BTW, but the people subjected to
- such egregiously invasive programs rose up violently against it. As I
- (and I imagine you) would, were a team of foreigner experts to arrive
- demanding we pull down our jocks for a quick snip and tuck. What about
- I just arrive on your doorstep with my little black bag, a pretty nurse
- in tow, and an "Education Officer" to explain in your own language how
- very badly overpopulated the US has become, and therefore we need to
- subject you to a vasectomy? If you are lucky and the funds have not yet
- run out, we may even be able to pay you $5.00 each. If you are really
- lucky we may even have enough cash left over to install a hand pump at
- the well in your village. Yes?
-
- The Ghandis tried exactly that in India, to a monthly quota system no
- less, and for no small reason the dynasty is now very much *EXTINCT*.
-
- > Question: How did Ethiopia and Somalia get by for so long without
- > first world aid? For thousands of years African people survived
- > without huddling around U.N. food distribution centers. Conditions
- > have changed, so must the solutions.
-
- The UN food distribution centres are intended as temporary measures to
- prevent mass starvation. They can always leave, and take their troops
- with them, as the other stresses creating the situation relax. It is
- *never* a simple, one-dimensional issue, and your manner of framing
- the question merely attests to your manifold ignorance.
-
- > Please propose a solution to the education, poverty, crime, and
- > unemployment in the U.S. before you attempt to solve these problems
- > globally.
-
- As you are aware, there is no simple solution to US problems, much
- less to the wholly untenable extrapolation of those problems onto
- other situations. Each case must be addressed on its merits and you
- might simply begin somewhere (anywhere at all; there is no shallow
- end to the pool, unfortunately) in a spirit of practical enterprise
- rather than pursuing this sort of millenarian nit-picking from your
- pulpit.
-
- Maybe you have merely been listening to Ronnie and George for too
- long, but if you don't want to get your *own brain* into gear please
- do us a favour and leave the rest of the world be.
-
- Gil
-
-