• BallsandBayonets@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Overpopulation as a dogwhistle for racism is a conservative myth.

      Overpopulation in a “I’d rather not turn Earth into Coruscant and so many of our climate and food/water issues would be easier to deal with if the global birth rate slowed voluntarily” is not.

      • masquenox@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Overpopulation as a dogwhistle for racism is a conservative right-wing myth.

        FTFY.

        I’d rather not turn Earth into Coruscant

        Sooo… when will you actually be rejecting this right-wing myth?

        Soon, I hope?

      • explodicle
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        9 months ago

        We don’t need to make nearly this much trash; it’s just more profitable for shareholders. Not denying that some plastics are essential for medicine though.

      • masquenox@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        We can handle feeding everybody, we can’t handle the trash capitalist parasitism.

        FTFY.

    • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      The fear of overpopulation, of the poors overbreeding and overcrowding the rich is basically a given in all political elites. Basically part of the washington consensus.

      Our current, below replacement birthrate, no matter how much they try to hide it, is not an accident.

    • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 months ago

      i have a theory that the food shortage is a sort of example of the overpopulation at play.

      The sheer fact that there are so many people in this one place, that we can produce too much food, and then not distribute it effectively, implies to me that there are simply too many people in one place for it to be effectively distributed. I.E. over populated.

      • candybrie@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        That’s not because there are too many people. That’s because the incentives are set up wrong.

        • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          9 months ago

          that’s definitely a possibility as well. Regardless, if it were literally as simple as “just give food to people” then one would think it would already be done. I suppose this could be an evil capitalism moment, but honestly, i just don’t think that’s the whole story.

          It’s not hard to imagine a room with 1000 people, and only 10 of those people distributing things at the wholesale level. There is inevitably going to be some amount of people that never get distributed to. It’s just a lot of people in one space.

      • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        There isn’t a food shortage, there’s an equitable food distribution shortage.

          • masquenox@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            If people in a city starve, it’s not because there are “too many people in one place” - it’s because the people who has control of the food distribution systems of that city chose to let them starve.

            Pick a famine - Irish, Bengal, Ethiopian, the current ongoing one in Gaza… you name it. All preventable. All of them not prevented because the people who had control of the food distribution system saw fit not to prevent it because doing so didn’t serve their interests.

            It has absolutely nothing to do with there being “too many people in one place.”

            • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              9 months ago

              that’s the thing though, it’s not people in a city starving. It’s people across the world starving. I mean sure homeless people are starving and food security IS an issue in the states. But that’s also a macro level issue type deal.

              Pick a famine - Irish, Bengal, Ethiopian, the current ongoing one in Gaza… you name it. All preventable. All of them not prevented because the people who had control of the food distribution system saw fit not to prevent it because doing so didn’t serve their interests.

              It has absolutely nothing to do with there being “too many people in one place.”

              yeah, no shit, that’s not what im talking about. You could argue an abusive mother not feeding their child one night is also proof against that claim.

              My point is that currently, in our collective society, globally, i do not think that our system is capable of supporting the amount of people that exist, in a functional manner. For example, if there were less people in the israel/palestine region, and the rest of the middle east, since they seem to love proxy wars so much. There would likely be a lot less war leading to famine. These wars are cropping up LITERALLY over territorial disputes, gaza especially is done for this reason. Seems like the Irish famine you referenced was in part, due to unsustainable population growth. Again, the Bengal famine, was in part, due to an increase in population, which was unsustainable. Ethiopian famine is actually a little bit different, seems to be both in part due to war, and drought, or just drought, but it seems like another significant factor at scale was the food being grown being sold to other parties. As well as political shenaniganry. Though this was also happening during a civil war. Probably also in part, due to well, people existing over top of eachother.

              But yeah no, those were absolutely preventable. Just give them food. Then they won’t starve. It’s that simple.

              • masquenox@lemmy.world
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                9 months ago

                It is very discouraging to see someone with a presumably functional brain make an argument like this. Back in the 80s this could be written of as simple ignorance - but not today, when we have the information available at our fingertips.

                There would likely be a lot less war leading to famine.

                So how do you explain the very same kind of genocidal colonialist wars of the previous three centuries when there were a whole lot less people around?

                These wars are cropping up LITERALLY over territorial disputes

                Colonialism is not merely a “territorial dispute.”

                Seems like the Irish famine you referenced was in part, due to unsustainable population growth.

                No, genius - it wasn’t. Stop trying to apologize for colonialist exploitation by hiding behind right-wing “overpopulation” myths.

                • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  9 months ago

                  So how do you explain the very same kind of genocidal colonialist wars of the previous three centuries when there were a whole lot less people around?

                  the only people who liked colonialism were the colonizers. Also to be clear, i never stated that over population was the only reason, merely that i think it’s an influential factor.

                  Colonialism is not merely a “territorial dispute.”

                  a little bit, 90% of the time colonialism turns into a war, is because the people being colonized, would prefer to not be colonized. You know, on account of the colonialism. I don’t know if you understand what colonialism is, but it’s basically the equivalent of me walking into a random suburban home with a gun, and claiming that it’s my home now, and that everybody in that home now works me. Seems rather territorial by nature to me.

                  No, genius - it wasn’t. Stop trying to apologize for colonialist exploitation by hiding behind right-wing “overpopulation” myths.

                  i’m not, colonialism was pretty explicitly a part of the reason as well. I don’t know if your eyes just glazed over at every instance of me saying “in part” or something, but i was being pretty explicit about it.

                  • masquenox@lemmy.world
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                    9 months ago

                    Also to be clear, i never stated that over population was the only reason, merely that i think it’s an influential factor.

                    You have, so far, made absolutely no case that “overpopulation” was a factor in any way whatsoever. Period.

                    It seems to me that you think a community becomes “overpopulated” as soon as anything bad happens to them - which is pretty much the shittiest take I’ve ever seen when it comes to this myth.

                    but it’s basically the equivalent of me walking into a random suburban home with a gun

                    You don’t know a lot about the subject matter involved in this conversation, do you?