251: Let's make overpopulation only a finance issue episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 23, 2019 · 8 MIN

251: Let's make overpopulation only a finance issue

from This Sustainable Life

Here are my notes that I read from for this episode.New comment from reading Countdown by Alan WeismanOverpopulation is major issue.Challenges are culture, religion, lack of education, lack of birth controlHe presented research results of demand for birth control by women -- about 250 million. Figure about a guy for each: 500 millionI figure low because many don't know it exists or are swayed by not seeing it so not realizing they could want itHe also showed results that unwanted children lead to poverty while smaller families where most people live today, ie cities, prosperCombination of huge unmet demand that when met leads to money tells me birth control isn't a moral issue, nor legal, religion, or charity issue but a finance issue. The money comes later if demand is metShould be profitable if someone can figure out financingMany people may default, may be hard to keep track, but look at how huge the demandWomen risk their lives and die for abortions. No products or services have that kind of demand. Maybe heroin, which is also profitable.In all of environmental efforts, reduction being major goal and profit coming from growth, profit rarely comes from conserving environmentMost would-be environmentally sustainable businesses look like steam engine, which I've talked about before. It looked like it would lower coal use and did for each use but increased it overallMaking meeting the interests of half a billion people a finance issue seems a huge change in perspectiveDon't have to look for charity or government aidAs for morals and legality, Coca-Cola shows what happens when profits face against morality. They sell unhealthy sugar water everywhere in the world, including parched places with no water, charge for it, and people keep investing in it.Could be a major route to bringing human population down to sustainable level of a couple billion.Signs I see show we are over sustainable and projections people say imply we're leveling off still show growth in 2100.I hope some enterprising entrepreneur sees opportunity and meets it.Many stories of successful family planning nationwide in Thailand, Iran, Mexico, Costa Rica, as well as cultural shifts in Japan, Italy, and moreAnd economics seem likely, unlike growth economics which are failing everywhere, environmentally, culturally, socially, failing in every way but making a few people incredibly wealthy, mostly by birth Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Here are my notes that I read from for this episode.New comment from reading Countdown by Alan WeismanOverpopulation is major issue.Challenges are culture, religion, lack of education, lack of birth controlHe presented research results of demand for birth control by women -- about 250 million. Figure about a guy for each: 500 millionI figure low because many don't know it exists or are swayed by not seeing it so not realizing they could want itHe also showed results that unwanted children lead to poverty while smaller families where most people live today, ie cities, prosperCombination of huge unmet demand that when met leads to money tells me birth control isn't a moral issue, nor legal, religion, or charity issue but a finance issue. The money comes later if demand is metShould be profitable if someone can figure out financingMany people may default, may be hard to keep track, but look at how huge the demandWomen risk their lives and die for abortions. No products or services have that kind of demand. Maybe heroin, which is also profitable.In all of environmental efforts, reduction being major goal and profit coming from growth, profit rarely comes from conserving environmentMost would-be environmentally sustainable businesses look like steam engine, which I've talked about before. It looked like it would lower coal use and did for each use but increased it overallMaking meeting the interests of half a billion people a finance issue seems a huge change in perspectiveDon't have to look for charity or government aidAs for morals and legality, Coca-Cola shows what happens when profits face against morality. They sell unhealthy sugar water everywhere in the world, including parched places with no water, charge for it, and people keep investing in it.Could be a major route to bringing human population down to sustainable level of a couple billion.Signs I see show we are over sustainable and projections people say imply we're leveling off still show growth in 2100.I hope some enterprising entrepreneur sees opportunity and meets it.Many stories of successful family planning nationwide in Thailand, Iran, Mexico, Costa Rica, as well as cultural shifts in Japan, Italy, and moreAnd economics seem likely, unlike growth economics which are failing everywhere, environmentally, culturally, socially, failing in every way but making a few people incredibly wealthy, mostly by birth Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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This episode was published on November 23, 2019.

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Here are my notes that I read from for this episode.New comment from reading Countdown by Alan WeismanOverpopulation is major issue.Challenges are culture, religion, lack of education, lack of birth controlHe presented research results of demand for...

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