Tim's blog

Serios about over population

Silver Spring - Police shot a man upset with the Discovery Channel network's programming who took three people hostage at the company's headquarters on Wednesday, officials said. All three hostages escaped safely.

The hostage taker has since died according to unconfirmed reports.

Police spent several hours negotiating with him after he burst into the suburban Washington building about 17:00 GMT waving a handgun and with canisters strapped to his body.

Montgomery County Police Chief Thomas Manger said an explosive device may have detonated, and the suspect may have brought other devices into the building. He said as far as he knows, the 1 900 people who work in the building were able to get out safely.

A law enforcement official speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation was ongoing said authorities had identified James Jay Lee as the likely suspect.

A different official, who spoke on condition of anonymity for the same reason, said Lee previously protested outside the building, where he was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct in February 2008, according to court records.

Police reports indicate he paid homeless people to join his protest and carry signs outside the building. He gave one individual $1 000 for what he considered a prize winning essay.

Money just trash

At one point, a crowd of more than 100 people gathered around Lee, 43, who referred to money as "just trash" and began throwing fistfuls of it into the air.

At the trial, The Gazette of Montgomery County reported, he said he began working to save the planet after being laid off from his job in San Diego. He said he was inspired by Ishmael, a novel by environmentalist Daniel Quinn and by former Vice President Al Gore's documentary An Inconvenient Truth.

A lengthy posting which could be seen on Wednesday on a website registered to Lee expressed anger against the Discovery Channel and said it promoted overpopulation.

He said it and its affiliates should stop "encouraging the birth of any more parasitic human infants." Instead, he said, the network should air "programmes encouraging human sterilisation and infertility."

"NO MORE BABIES! Population growth is a real crisis," he wrote.

He also railed against "programmes promoting War" and said solutions should be found for global warming and automotive and factory pollution.

Save the planet

"I want Discovery Communications to broadcast on their channels to the world their new programme line-up and I want proof they are doing so," he wrote. "I want the new shows started by asking the public for inventive solution ideas to save the planet and the remaining wildlife on it."

Discovery Communications operates cable and satellite networks in the US, including The Discovery Channel, TLC and Animal Planet.

Animal Planet also airs the controversial series Whale Wars, about attempts by environmentalists to disrupt the Japanese whaling industry.

After Lee's arrest, a magistrate ordered a doctor's evaluation, but court records do not immediately indicate the result. Lee was convicted by a jury and served two weeks in jail.

He was also ordered to stay 150m away from Discovery headquarters.


 

Over Population

Human Carrying Capacity and Human Health.   December 28, 2004   PLOS Medicine
The silence around overpopulation prevents the global health community from making the necessary link between the planet's limited ability to support its people and health and development crises. The question has been controversial for over two centuries. In 1798 the Reverend Thomas Malthus put forward the hypothesis that population growth would exceed the growth of resources.

Soon after 1934, the global population began to rise steeply as antibiotics, vaccines, and technology increased life expectancy. By the 1960s, concerns of a mismatch between global population and global food supply peaked.

 

In 1966, United States President Lyndon Johnson shipped wheat to India to avert a famine on the condition that the country accelerate its already vigorous family planning campaign. But the 1970s surprised population watchers. Instead of being a period shadowed by calamitous famine, the new crop strains introduced by the "Green Revolution" (especially grains such as rice,

wheat, and maize) caused a dramatic increase in the global production of cereals, the main source of energy in the global diet. By the end of the decade, the public health community felt sufficiently empowered to proclaim "Health for All by the Year 2000". Average life expectancy continued to zoom upwards almost everywhere — even in sub-Saharan Africa.

 

The introduction of safe contraception contributed to a rapid fertility decline in many countries. But while the rate of global population growth declined from its peak in the late 1960s, the absolute increment of increase in annual global population continued to grow.

 

The 1970s can be seen as the decade when concern about overpopulation started to fade. The social and economic milieu, especially in the US, started to change. US foreign aid declined from the late 1960s.

 

The world oil shock in 1973 contributed to a combination of rising unemployment with higher prices — and to increased economic power for the oil-producing countries of the Third World.

 

Reagan's policies were to cement a new orthodoxy about global overpopulation and development strategies. In the same year, the US surprised the family planning world by abdicating its leadership in the effort to promote global family planning. The US took this position against the opposition of the Population Association of America, which represented many US demographers.

 

As foreign aid budgets fell, the "Health for All" targets began to slip from reach. The increased domestic inequality of recent decades in developed countries probably also contributed to a reduction in concern for the Third World. It is clear that market deregulation and high birth rates have proven disastrous in many Third World countries.

 

Overpopulation is hardly considered, except by dissident public health workers, the discipline that would appear to be the most likely holder of the Malthusian baton, is now almost entirely silent about overpopulation in developing countries. On the other hand, the role of the transition in China from large to small families, with an average of two or fewer children is rarely credited as central to the Chinese economic miracle.

 

The silence on overpopulation is the "Hardinian Taboo", named after the American ecologist Garett Hardin, who described the taboos that humans use to avoid confronting the need for population control. Social norms inhibit debate about overpopulation in one of the world's most intractable trouble spots, Israel and Palestine.

 

Human carrying capacity is the maximum population that can be supported at a given living standard. This apparently simple concept has many nuances and is rarely used by population scientists. It is irrefutable that human ingenuity and cooperation can increase human carrying capacity . But even so, human welfare will continue to depend on the external world, including for resources such as food and water.  rw   Karen Gaia says: Again, the term 'population control', which implies the author thinks that some kind of control is necessary. What really works, and has been proven, is enabling people to choose their own family size - strictly voluntary, without pressure. 023905  

Over population

Watched the movie very informative but nothing was said about over population

I feel that is the number one problem and the reason the major players don't pursue this is because the more people the more consumers the more MONEY!!! POWER!!!

The select few want it all and to hell with the future.

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