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FrostyWooldridge's Blog

by FrostyWooldridge from Westminster, CO

Last Post 1 day, 15 hours Ago


By Frosty Wooldridge

www.frostywooldridge.com

“Democracy cannot survive overpopulation. Human dignity cannot survive it. Convenience and decency cannot survive it. As you put more and more people into the world, the value of life not only declines, it disappears. It doesn't matter if someone dies. The more people there are, the less one individual matters.”

Isaac Asimov

Thomas Jefferson proposed that every American enjoy, "Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." Back in 1776, that meant food, shelter, a rich and rewarding family-life, spiritual awakening, employment and creative expression.

High-speed, high-stress life— is that what YOU want?

In the 21st century, another phrase becomes more important in our high speed— high stress lives. "Quality of life" surfaced in the American lexicon in the last twenty years. Why? Because we grew too much, moved too fast and suffered accelerating consequences.

For those of you who remember the 1950s and 60s, no one ever heard about gridlock traffic, air pollution, species extinction, global warming, zip codes, overpopulation, cell phones, computers or drugs. Most guys knew every make, model and year of our cars. Choices included Chevy, Plymouth, Ford, Chrysler and some strange little Japanese import called a Datsun. California featured 16 million people in 1965.

That was then; this is now!

Forty years later, California sports 37.5 million high stressed, high speed, road raging, cell phone talking, grid locked traffic victims, 1.5 hour commutes, air polluted, gang infested towns and cities. That's for starters! California adds 40 million people by 2050.

Would anyone say that the quality of life in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Atlanta, New York City, Detroit, Miami, Houston, and our nation's capital— or any other multiple million populated city— measures up to something envisioned by our founders as reasonable and appropriate?

In truth, DC took my breath away.

I am astounded at how people hit the expressways at 4:30 A.M., daily, to beat the rush hour. I jumped on the Metro Subway at Shady Grove 30 miles out of Washington, DC. By the time I reached Union Station, I felt like a sardine crammed into a tin.

Unpleasant, unhealthy, obnoxious and insufferable! As I stepped off the subway, little old ladies tried to run me over on their rush to the escalator. I felt like a cork being swept away in a human ocean of people. Every metropolitan arena features maddening crowds and endless congestion.

The traffic within and around our cities grows to crisis gridlock levels. What's the latest plan to alleviate the beltways around our cities? Engineers plan to build second beltways around the first beltways— some are already done!

The future will bring more overcrowding, unless—

Where does it all lead as we add 100 million more people? What about quality of life? What about 'peace of mind?' First, a reminder— with thanks to Wikipedia;

Overpopulation is the condition of any organism's numbers exceeding the carrying capacity of its ecological niche. In common parlance, the term usually refers to the relationship between the human population and its environment, the Earth.

Overpopulation is not simply a function of the size or density of the population, but rather the number of individuals compared to the resources (for example, food production or water resources) and "personal space" needed for healthy survival or well-being.

Are these simple examples "good things?"

Please, stop for a moment and close your eyes as you consider our current dilemma. Have you noticed the little advantages we lose as we overpopulate?

  • You must dial all 10 digits for local phone calls today because of our massive population overload in our cities— some areas have five area codes.
  • Commuters added 20 minutes to commute time in the past 15 years. They can expect to add another 20 minutes in the coming 10 years. It's not uncommon in many states for 1.5 hour commute times.
  • In some regions you are already expected to make reservations by lottery for our national parks— within 20 years, we will all be doing that because too many people want to visit a limited space.
  • For those who want to ride a raft down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon— that lottery takes 10-12 years to gain a permit.
  • As highways overload with another 100 million people, your chances of making it to and from your destination erode dramatically— with more risk. Currently, 44,000 people die from traffic accidents every year, and half a million are maimed to one degree or another in "accidents." Those numbers grow exponentially as we add 100 million people.
  • The "quality-time" that nourishes each of us diminishes; we suffer that loss.

I'm certain you can enumerate another 50 examples of the loss of quality of life from your neck of the woods.

Change can be planned-managed, and strategies chosen sensibly.

Wikipedia continues to help us as we allow the magnitude and depth of the personal impacts to sink in here:

In the context of human societies, overpopulation occurs when the population density is so great as to actually cause an impaired quality of life, serious environmental degradation, and/or long-term shortages of essential goods and services. This is the definition used by popular dictionaries such Merriam-Webster.

Overpopulation is not merely an imbalance between the number of individuals compared to the resources needed for survival, or a ratio of population over resources, or a function of the number or density of individuals, compared to the resources (i.e. food production) they need to survive.

It is rather a situation of shortage of resources and elbow-room that must be caused by population, and not by other factors. This is because such an imbalance may be caused by any number of other factors such as bad governance, war, corruption or endemic poverty.

People feel each human-crowding factor as an agitation, a gnawing and bothersome affect that is difficult to describe— until you venture to a pristine natural area, and begin to breathe deeply. Then, you remember what you really want, and don't.

Please ask yourself; why choose to drift aimlessly into this overcrowding?

Are we squeezing together to make room for the unfortunates of the world who have overpopulated themselves into a squeeze-play of their own choosing?

Strategic Action and Planning work!

It may startle you to learn a basic truth; those nations already manifest what we move toward. They planned no strategy for gentle population balancing, and neither do we.

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Take action: www.numbersusa.com ; www.thesocialcontract.com ; www.cairco.org


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FrostyWooldridge

Frosty Wooldridge possesses a unique view of the world, cultures and families in that he has bicycled around the globe 100,000 miles, on six continents and six times across the United States in the past 35 years. He has written hundreds of articles (regularly) for 17 national and two international magazines. He has had hundreds of guest editorials published in top national newspapers including the Rocky Mountain News, Denver Post, Albany Herald, Las Vegas Tribune and Daily Camera. He wrote a column, "CRYSTAL DESERT CONTINENT," for a major newspaper in Colorado while he lived in Antarctica. His books include, "HANDBOOK FOR TOURING BICYCLISTS"; “STRIKE THREE! TAKE YOUR BASE”; "BICYCLING AROUND THE WORLD”; “MOTORCYCLE ADVENTURE TO ALASKA: INTO THE WIND—A TEEN NOVEL”; “AN EXTREME ENCOUNTER: ANTARCTICA”; “BICYCLING THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE: SLICE OF HEAVEN, TASTE OF HELL”; “IMMIGRATION’S UNARMED INVASION: DEADLY CONSEQUENCES.”

Member Since: 3/19/2008