
CONNECTING THE DOTS
Frosty Wooldridge
More About: BooksLife on the Brink: Environmentalists Confront Overpopulation
Book review: Life on
the Brink: Environmentalists Confront Overpopulation
Part 1: Driving animal life off planet Earth
The brilliant Harvard University biologist, Edward O. Wilson,
addressed human overpopulation with this statement, “It’s not the Nature of
human beings to be cattle in glorified feedlots. Every person deserves the option to travel
easily in and out of the complex and primal world that gave us birth. We need freedom to roam across land owned by
no one but protected by all, whose unchanging horizon is the same that bounded
the world of our millennial ancestors. Only in what remains of Eden, teeming
with life-forms independent of us, is it possible to experience the kind of
wonder that shaped the human psyche at its birth.”
Unfortunately, as humanity piles itself up at 80 million net
gain annually, 1 billion added every 12 years and on its way from 7.1 billion
in 2013 to over 10.1 billion by 2050—all life on Earth faces a portentous path.
In the face of that future, Colorado State University
philosophy Professor Philip Cafaro and Professor Eileen Crist of
Virginia Tech, authored: Life on the Brink: Environmentalists
Confront Overpopulation.
While many Americans watch the political unrest of countries
in Africa such as Egypt, Syria and Libya, few connect the dots as to endless
human population growth, food shortages, water depletion and energy exhaustion.
At an unsustainable 80 million today in Egypt, demographers
project that country to exceed 138 million within 38 years. Their only form of birth control remains to
dig yet another canal off the Nile River and fill it with mud dwellings, no
sewer, little food and accelerating poverty.
While Africa houses nearly 1 billion in 2013, that ancient land expects
to grow to 1.8 billion by 2050 and on to 3.1 billion by the end of this
century.
The question begs an answer: where will the wild things go
for food, water and raising of their offspring?
How will they survive the human horde scavenging the land for food? Answer: they won’t!
Today, over 2.5 to 3.0 billion people live on $2.00 per day.
Over 2.5 billion lack toilets and running water. Yet, humanity plunges into accelerating
fecundity with intrepid stupidity.
As of 2013, according to United Kingdom Oxford’s Norman
Myers life-long studies on human encroachment on animal habitat around the
world, extinction rates run from 80 to 100 creatures DAILY around the
planet. Those numbers cannot help but
accelerate with the added 3.1 billion added humans within 38 years.
“Upwards of
two hundred species…mostly of the large, slow-breeding variety…are becoming
extinct here every day because more and more of the earth's carrying capacity
is systematically being converted into human carrying capacity. These species
are being burnt out, starved out, and squeezed out of existence. Thanks to
technologies that most people, I'm afraid, think of as technologies of peace. I
hope it will not be too long before the technologies that support our
population explosion begin to be perceived as no less hazardous to the future
of life on this planet than the endless production of radioactive wastes.” Daniel Quinn
In this book, Cafaro and Crist feature over a dozen of the
finest environmental minds on the planet.
These “Galileo’s of the 21st century” bring you the stark
realities that humanity faces.
Can our species change course? It will take a “consciousness shift” through
books like this one that educate Americans, Canadians, Europeans, Australians,
Chinese, Indians, South Americans and Africans.
Once educated, a profound “critical mass shift” must take the knowledge
into action. That allows a “tipping
point” where humanity stabilizes, then reduces its numbers gracefully via birth
control and family planning all over the planet.
If we humans refuse to move on the knowledge within this
book and many other emerging books like it, Mother Nature will bring her weight
onto the environmental ball field. As we
have seen with Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy, she grows merciless. And, she always bats last.
This book must be read by every citizen and passed on to the
leaders of all countries in order to create the new paradigm where humanity
lives, works and stabilizes its numbers into a sustainable balance with all
life on Earth.
"The raging monster upon the land is population growth. In its
presence, sustainability is but a fragile theoretical construct. To say,
as many do, that the difficulties of nations are not due to people, but to poor
ideology and land-use management is sophistic.” Harvard scholar and
biologist E.O. Wilson
Part 2: Does the rest of life on Earth matter?
Impacts of destructive population momentum, why the silence on population? The great backtrack.
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Life on the Brink: Environmentalists Confront Overpopulation
Authors: Philip Cafaro, Eileen Crist
Publisher: The University of Georgia Press, www.ugapress.org
ISBN: 978-0-8203-4385-3
Price: $24.95 www.amazon.com
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Frosty Wooldridge has bicycled across six continents - from
the Arctic to the South Pole - as well as eight times across the USA, coast to
coast and border to border. In 2005, he bicycled from the Arctic Circle, Norway
to Athens, Greece. In 2012, he bicycled coast to coast across America. He
presents "The Coming Population Crisis in America: and what you can do
about it" to civic clubs, church groups, high schools and colleges. He
speaks all over the United States on his latest book: How to
Live a Life of Adventure: The Art of
Exploring the World. Copies at 1 888 280 7715. Programs click: http://www.HowToLiveALifeOfAdventure.com