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The Impossibility of Growth

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  • It's a very simple calculation. It gives a pretty good idea of the problem, i.e. it's massive.

    You don't even have to cover close to the entire planet to ruin it. Just a tiny portion of this thrash can permanently damage ecosystems.

    The oceanic garbage patches are the tip of the iceberg, and we're having a ball on the Titanic.
    In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

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    • There are currently seven billion people--or a little more--and very few of them generate anywhere near as much as trash as Americans do, because most of them are poor and do not consume as Americans do. I do not see why the same truth would not apply with another three. At some point, we will likely reach a hard limit, but that's different from impending doom.
      1011 1100
      Pyrebound--a free online serial fantasy novel

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      • Does anybody have an animated image of Hudson from Aliens freaking out? gameoverman.jpeg, something like that?
        1011 1100
        Pyrebound--a free online serial fantasy novel

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        • Originally posted by Elok View Post
          There are currently seven billion people--or a little more--and very few of them generate anywhere near as much as trash as Americans do, because most of them are poor and do not consume as Americans do. I do not see why the same truth would not apply with another three. At some point, we will likely reach a hard limit, but that's different from impending doom.
          We're close to the limit as things are now.

          World economic growth is at 3%. You may not realize it, but 3% compounds very quickly.
          In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

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          • Well, if growth really terrifies you that much, we could have some massive, devastating wars instead, or just tell the poor to die in a gutter. Then you could mope about those instead. Might make a nice change of pace.
            1011 1100
            Pyrebound--a free online serial fantasy novel

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            • We could also try ecological reforms.
              In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

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              • Growth is a big issue, and getting bigger all the time, but not one that yet generates serious discussion in the community. Nor has it been the subject of mainstream political critique. That economic growth is good is a view unchallenged by any major political party in Australia, with the exception of the Greens – and more than anything else it is their questioning of growth that has seen the major parties condemn the Greens as a fringe political movement. No doubt there are deep philosophical – or at least ideological – reasons for this, but the problem might also be explained by our simple failure to understand the mathematics of growth.
                In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

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                • Originally posted by Oncle Boris View Post
                  Here is my astonishing proposal to combat malnutrition: PROPER DISTRIBUTION
                  A) just about everyone would like to see better distribution, but it doesn't happen.

                  B) if you move us from 1kg/sq m production to 1kg/10sq m production you can distribute the output however you want, we're still going to be working an awful lot more land just to avoid people we care about starving. Let alone what will happen to the people we don't care about.

                  *ahem* You might have forgotten other benefits:

                  - partial forestation to prevent erosion
                  - less use of herbicides, pesticides, etc
                  - no GMOs necessary
                  - wildlife adapts more easily
                  Extensive agricultural land (eg. marginal grasslands) have high rates of erosion. Marginal grasslands tend to stay marginal grasslands or turn to desert. This is what quickly happens when tropical forests are cut to open up grazing land for instance. I see it happening all around me sadly. We need to replant the forests to help regulate watershed, pull nutrients from deeper in the ground to replenish top-soil, and limit erosion. But to do that requires giving people an alternative that actually works ... intensive farming with modern technology. Because no one is going to just sit and watch their family starve if they can chop down a few trees and eat beef and grains instead.

                  The second one is untrue if you look at it from a ratio of volume of herbicides/pesticides to volume of output. They do spray wheat with herbicides to reduce competition for already scares nutrients and moisture. Livestock have their own chemical issues in regards to medicine to prevent diseases. (Not a big factor, but along the same lines as the health impact of herbicides.)

                  Reducing the impetus to GMO research is a negative. There is a huge amount of potential within the field.

                  The fourth is not true. Expansive agriculture requires disrupting much more area for any given level of output. Also, since expansive agriculture tends to be in marginal areas and promotes the creation and perpetuation of marginal areas, it means the more limited resources (nutrients, water) consumed by herd animals or grain crops are more likely to crowd out wildlife.
                  Last edited by Aeson; June 5, 2014, 21:09.

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                  • Originally posted by Oncle Boris View Post
                    It's a very simple calculation. It gives a pretty good idea of the problem, i.e. it's massive.

                    You don't even have to cover close to the entire planet to ruin it. Just a tiny portion of this thrash can permanently damage ecosystems.

                    The oceanic garbage patches are the tip of the iceberg, and we're having a ball on the Titanic.
                    Since the vast majority (by weight and volume) of trash in the US is still not exported we can get a pretty good model of a world in which everyone produced as much trash as Americans by looking at the US. There are so many filled-to-capacity landfills that many are being "reclaimed" and communities are being built over these landfills. It's distasteful but hardly apocalyptic.

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                    • Started reading it, stopped at the crack-brained nonsense about Egypt. Economic growth =/= endless accumulation of increasing amounts of physical matter. Modern wealth is increasingly immaterial--energy and information.
                      1011 1100
                      Pyrebound--a free online serial fantasy novel

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                      • Originally posted by Oncle Boris View Post
                        We're close to the limit as things are now.

                        World economic growth is at 3%. You may not realize it, but 3% compounds very quickly.
                        Recycling and biodegradeable wastes need to be factored in. Maybe you should graph methane capture since the neolithic. You can look at the hockey stick and miss the point entirely and feel great about how in the future we'll be able to power a billion trillion % of our energy needs just with methane!

                        Specifically to agriculture, most of the waste is biodegradable. They can actually be used to offset petroleum inputs, but it requires more intensive agriculture, not more extensive. Extensive agriculture makes collecting agricultural wastes essentially impossible.

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                        • Originally posted by Sava View Post
                          It would take a concerted effort to achieve that level of fatness.
                          If we graph out the fatness of Americans since the neolithic we will see that we will all weigh several tons only a few centuries into the future.

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                          • At even 1% compound growth since the Neolithic age, the earth would already have collapsed into a brown dwarf because of humanity.
                            “It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see.”

                            ― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man

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                            • I will say that I have never believed that growth is essential for any civilization. I only believe it is necessary for this one. There is a great deal of scarcity in the world and growth helps reduce this. Reduced scarcity seems to keep international relations less tense and greatly reduce the odds of apocalyptic global warfare. I only want civilization to grow until various landmarks are achieved that would obviate much of the need for growth such as if some version, weak or strong of "technological singularity" turns out to be achievable and is successfully harnessed for the general welfare or if human population begins to shrink or a "post human" economy results in which human labor of any sort becomes a superfluous component of the economy such that capitalism ceases to be the fastest route to innovation.

                              Perhaps some day zero growth would make the world a better place. If we try to enact it in any manner right now, however, it will simply transfer power and wealth to the cheaters and probably increase ecological damage in process. Certainly zero growth while population increases is asking for a tragic and devastating uncontrolled collapse. A cure as bad or worse than the disease.

                              Furthermore, depending on the technologies that one day prove possible, it is hypothetically possible for growth to continue to be attractive and achievable indefinitely. Especially if physics turns out to have loopholes allowing access to truly unlimited energy.
                              Last edited by Geronimo; June 5, 2014, 21:28. Reason: this is all you'd need

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                              • Originally posted by Geronimo View Post
                                Since the vast majority (by weight and volume) of trash in the US is still not exported we can get a pretty good model of a world in which everyone produced as much trash as Americans by looking at the US. There are so many filled-to-capacity landfills that many are being "reclaimed" and communities are being built over these landfills. It's distasteful but hardly apocalyptic.
                                The US has not been industrialized for a long time.

                                Compound.
                                In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

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