more opinions about children

March 31, 2009 by  
Filed under News, Uncategorized

I need to share with you all that I am terribly surprised about something.  Let me start by saying… admitting.. that I have a preconceived notion of all things religious.  

csm-imageI think we are so bombarded by extremes about religion that my opinions are justified. You hear much more about the religious fanatics starting a cult in Montana, Texas, or San Diego. So much so, that I might guarantee that this image evokes an emotion in you that might be negative.  However, it must be argued that the news rarely mentions the good news or the reasonable opinions of different sects.  

So, my admission is this… the Christian Science Monitor is a great periodical and has become a constant source of information for me.  Go to the wikipedia reference information, here, and you will see it was formed specifically to not evangelize and is not a religious themed newspaper.

There is no point in sharing this except I felt it was an elephant in the room that I had to address before continuing to link you all to articles I find useful.

So, now that that is out of the way… let’s discuss an article I happened upon.  It’s about overpopulation.

brat-child

The author discusses the current articles being published about over-population and criticizes what has been said.  For one, he didn’t like this article, citing for example, that:

And if we’re to blame for the emissions of all of our progeny forever and ever, doesn’t blame equally fall upon our progenitors, going all the way back to a clump of self-replicating molecules some four billion years ago?

He also briefly mentions this article where there is a simple conclusion to over population: educating women.  And, if any of you have ever seen Idiocracy, the following argument sure rings true:

 

And is it really a wise strategy to deploy environmental stewardship to urge people to voluntarily stop having kids? Even if such a strategy worked (a big if), the only people to heed this advice be those who care about the environment, while those who don’t care about the environment would continue breeding as usual. Given that children generally tend to share the social beliefs of their parents, this starts to looks like a recipe for eliminating environmentalism from the gene pool.

And, so, like many of us he concludes that it is not so much over-population but what kind of people we consist of:

 

But in the end, it’s not really population itself that is inherently the problem. While there are no doubt physical limits to how many people can occupy the planet at one time, the real issue here is waste. If we continue with our current methods of production and consumption – extracting finite resources, rearranging their chemistry, and then dumping them into the sky, the sea, and the soil – then its almost inevitable that we will make the weather go all weird, poison our oceans, and consign our descendants to picking through our landfills.

And, really, isn’t that what we are all aiming for anyway?  We all try to raise good children.  Some people are succeeding.  Some people are failing.  But, we all have the expectation to raise good children.  Somewhere, we’ve just gotten a bit lost.  
So, we just need to get back on course.  And, I have every bit of faith that we can!