You are wrong, we produce too little. Or to put it better, we have a lot of people who don't produce much at all. There is no excuse with our level of advancement for not everyone to be materially wealthy.
If we produce too much, why are so many people starving? Why are so many people poor? Why is our environment in shambles? Why don't we succeed as much as we could? How are we ever going to fix our problems when we are short productive people? Things don't fix themselves. And first world people are part of the problem, but are also the only solution (I mean, the only other solution I can think of is robots keeping the world at some hunter/gatherer level. Even agriculture societies and any society left to it's own devices to grow plays havoc with the environment).
And this discussion of solving problems doesn't even begin to look at the issues of needing productive people to produce art, to love and enjoy themselves, to increase knowledge and understanding.
The whole is greater than the parts, humanity is more important than any individual.
It is true, we waste tons of ability and production. But doing so seems to make some people less unhappy, or to think they are less unhappy for a time, or something.
And it is true that first worlders produce far more than the poorer nations. We should be feeding them, educating them, healing them, and helping them to produce, be happy, and be free from pain. But instead we focus on our own selfish pleasure and spend hardly any efforts into solving our fellow human's problems. As long as we can enjoy ourselves, everything is fine according to us. And this even ignores future humanities problems, who we completely screw over when we don't have children ourselves. So instead of wealthy, educated people trying to solve the problems of the world (which we have given them, in part), it will be the children of the poor, with no education and little resources, who will be left to solve these problems.
And poorer nations always ave lots of kids. They always reproduce rapidly. This is because for them, it increases individual wealth, rather than decreasing it. And a lot of those societies appear a lot less selfish because they think on the tribe and family level while we mostly just think on the individual level.
And it isn't about brainwashing or thinking just like me. Obviously most people who go through our education system don't think just like me. Or we would have a lot less capitalists and a lot more Christians. But it is true that you need knowledge, education, skills, and resources to be more productive. There could be potentially millions of Einsteins struggling to feed their families in Africa. And it doesn't matter that they would make brilliant physicists, because they don't have the resources, knowledge, education, and skills to make use of them.
The poor nations struggle to feed themselves. They can't heal themselves or take care of their environment. We were in the same boat in the past, we struggled through and made it to the point where every person we have has the opportunity to produce over a 1000 times more than some subsistence farmer. And we don't help out those who are struggling now. And yeah, someone in Africa having 10 kids does nothing to help the situation overall (of the tribe/etc), but you having 2 kids will do a lot more.
Please note that (except for biological issues) adoption is great, even better than having a kid of your own.
Now personally from a religious perspective, I hope that God comes and solves all our problems. But while I have faith that this will occur, I also recognize that we need to work at it ourselves (as humanity). And looking out just for ourselves will never get us there. In fact, that is what is ruining people's lives and the earth in the first place.
And I probably should have put this in Word and made something coherrent, maybe I will later.
The US is the only first world nation doing OK for 2 reasons. One, we take in a lot more immegrants than other nations. Two, we are more religious than most (all?) other first world nations (more religions, from a pure practical/utilitarrian/logical perspective encourage child raising as it is far more likely to raise a new member than to convert someone raised as a non-member).
JM
If we produce too much, why are so many people starving? Why are so many people poor? Why is our environment in shambles? Why don't we succeed as much as we could? How are we ever going to fix our problems when we are short productive people? Things don't fix themselves. And first world people are part of the problem, but are also the only solution (I mean, the only other solution I can think of is robots keeping the world at some hunter/gatherer level. Even agriculture societies and any society left to it's own devices to grow plays havoc with the environment).
And this discussion of solving problems doesn't even begin to look at the issues of needing productive people to produce art, to love and enjoy themselves, to increase knowledge and understanding.
The whole is greater than the parts, humanity is more important than any individual.
It is true, we waste tons of ability and production. But doing so seems to make some people less unhappy, or to think they are less unhappy for a time, or something.
And it is true that first worlders produce far more than the poorer nations. We should be feeding them, educating them, healing them, and helping them to produce, be happy, and be free from pain. But instead we focus on our own selfish pleasure and spend hardly any efforts into solving our fellow human's problems. As long as we can enjoy ourselves, everything is fine according to us. And this even ignores future humanities problems, who we completely screw over when we don't have children ourselves. So instead of wealthy, educated people trying to solve the problems of the world (which we have given them, in part), it will be the children of the poor, with no education and little resources, who will be left to solve these problems.
And poorer nations always ave lots of kids. They always reproduce rapidly. This is because for them, it increases individual wealth, rather than decreasing it. And a lot of those societies appear a lot less selfish because they think on the tribe and family level while we mostly just think on the individual level.
And it isn't about brainwashing or thinking just like me. Obviously most people who go through our education system don't think just like me. Or we would have a lot less capitalists and a lot more Christians. But it is true that you need knowledge, education, skills, and resources to be more productive. There could be potentially millions of Einsteins struggling to feed their families in Africa. And it doesn't matter that they would make brilliant physicists, because they don't have the resources, knowledge, education, and skills to make use of them.
The poor nations struggle to feed themselves. They can't heal themselves or take care of their environment. We were in the same boat in the past, we struggled through and made it to the point where every person we have has the opportunity to produce over a 1000 times more than some subsistence farmer. And we don't help out those who are struggling now. And yeah, someone in Africa having 10 kids does nothing to help the situation overall (of the tribe/etc), but you having 2 kids will do a lot more.
Please note that (except for biological issues) adoption is great, even better than having a kid of your own.
Now personally from a religious perspective, I hope that God comes and solves all our problems. But while I have faith that this will occur, I also recognize that we need to work at it ourselves (as humanity). And looking out just for ourselves will never get us there. In fact, that is what is ruining people's lives and the earth in the first place.
And I probably should have put this in Word and made something coherrent, maybe I will later.
The US is the only first world nation doing OK for 2 reasons. One, we take in a lot more immegrants than other nations. Two, we are more religious than most (all?) other first world nations (more religions, from a pure practical/utilitarrian/logical perspective encourage child raising as it is far more likely to raise a new member than to convert someone raised as a non-member).
JM
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