I don't think there's a crisis. It's like a forest gets big and old and every so often there's a fire and it mostly burns down and then new trees spring up.
The US population in 1980 was 220ish million people. We're at 330M as of 2020. So forty years later it increased by 50%.
Id wager most people society can function just fine without. And I don't mean kids or elderly. I mean income earning aged adults.
Been to a restaurant and seen ten people on the floor when 3 could run the whole place? We have a LOT of dead weight population just existing, using infrastructure, sucking the government tit, producing little of value.
Remove the welfare state and population growth would be contained to only productive people raising eventual productive children.
Instead we get welfare queens popping out half a dozen gremlins who commit crime. We can manage with half our current population of it's the functional half.
I don't think there's a crisis. It's like a forest gets big and old and every so often there's a fire and it mostly burns down and then new trees spring up.
If all of the new trees are members of an invasive species, then no, the “cleansing fire” wasn’t good for that forest.
As somewhat of an ecologist here, yeah, that’s basically what happens.
Or, somewhat more broadly, if the fire is intense enough, you go from a climax community (say, a rainforest) right back to early-stage succession, with things like weeds and/or native small shrubs.
It takes centuries for that rainforest to return, if ever…
Exceptions for the dry schlerophyll forests of places like Australia, but that’s almost certainly because the Abos burned the place so thoroughly, 10s of thousands of years ago, and it was already so dry anyway, that it was never able to recover to the vegetation levels it likely had beforehand…
To take a human metaphor, let’s go with somewhere like Japan, or alternatively Iceland. You have a largely homogenous society (excluding the Ainu here, for Japan, but still), built up over centuries, that is reasonable stable and successful (again, excluding the issue of birth rates). Then a crisis happens (WW2), and you end up with “disruption” to that society, and the large-scale arrival of foreigners.
Unlikely that it can ever return to its original “base” situation. Once they’re in, they’re in.
Unfortunately many countries created the circumstances that led to this situation by themselves, with the whole… Marriage and birth rates thing.
I don't think there's a crisis. It's like a forest gets big and old and every so often there's a fire and it mostly burns down and then new trees spring up.
The US population in 1980 was 220ish million people. We're at 330M as of 2020. So forty years later it increased by 50%.
Id wager most people society can function just fine without. And I don't mean kids or elderly. I mean income earning aged adults.
Been to a restaurant and seen ten people on the floor when 3 could run the whole place? We have a LOT of dead weight population just existing, using infrastructure, sucking the government tit, producing little of value.
Remove the welfare state and population growth would be contained to only productive people raising eventual productive children.
Instead we get welfare queens popping out half a dozen gremlins who commit crime. We can manage with half our current population of it's the functional half.
If all of the new trees are members of an invasive species, then no, the “cleansing fire” wasn’t good for that forest.
As somewhat of an ecologist here, yeah, that’s basically what happens.
Or, somewhat more broadly, if the fire is intense enough, you go from a climax community (say, a rainforest) right back to early-stage succession, with things like weeds and/or native small shrubs.
It takes centuries for that rainforest to return, if ever…
Exceptions for the dry schlerophyll forests of places like Australia, but that’s almost certainly because the Abos burned the place so thoroughly, 10s of thousands of years ago, and it was already so dry anyway, that it was never able to recover to the vegetation levels it likely had beforehand…
To take a human metaphor, let’s go with somewhere like Japan, or alternatively Iceland. You have a largely homogenous society (excluding the Ainu here, for Japan, but still), built up over centuries, that is reasonable stable and successful (again, excluding the issue of birth rates). Then a crisis happens (WW2), and you end up with “disruption” to that society, and the large-scale arrival of foreigners.
Unlikely that it can ever return to its original “base” situation. Once they’re in, they’re in.
Unfortunately many countries created the circumstances that led to this situation by themselves, with the whole… Marriage and birth rates thing.