I don't really argue against this. But this point isn't really related to overpopulation.
No, it's related to "Global warming, rain forest depletion, over fishing, energy-crisis, water shortage, food shortage, etc." and your personal "So far, so good" attitude as you plummet past the second floor.
You'd be well advised, IMO, to apply a bit more judgement than that to global warming (and the other things that we're collectively doing).
Perhaps. But that isn't my stance.
Yet it appears to be. We seem to have a communication problem.
Yes. Humanity for the most part goes on.
Which is no comfort to the part that
doesn't go on. Which may include you and yours, remember.
There are many things which may have no solution, try as we may.
Best we not cause any more problems, then.
I don't think this is wishful thinking at all. Look at where we are right now. Humanity as a whole is better off than it's ever been.
And plummeting past the second floor. Living on capital, not income. So far, so good ...
At the same time, the world population is larger than ever. I don't expect hydroponics, or vat cultured meat or soylent green will happen tomorrow, if ever. But it will happen when the demand arises.
It will happen
after the necessity arises, which will be too late for most people.
At the same time, there are things which may be out of our control. including global warming, disease, asteroid impact, etc. Humans really have no special place in the universe or on the planet. Humans do have a particularly good skill at adapting, however. If one contends that global overpopulation is indeed a problem, there is little evidence to support that notion.
That paragraph lacks a unifying theme. You might want to work on that.
I don't myself contend that global population is a problem; my contention is that the apparently
prospering population is the problem because it's living on capital, with no thought to the future.
I am concerned with the limitations of freedoms imposed by people, less than those imposed by nature.
Nature's authority is a damn' sight more imposing than any social authority will ever be until we cut ourselves off from it entirely, living under domes in an entirely artificial environment, and how much freedom can you expect in such a situation?
Limitations restrict the ability of people to thrive, limitations that prevent people from migrating to more prosperous regions, limitations that limit the ability of people to make the best decisions for themselves.
It's the freedom of people to make short-term decisions
for themselves (and screw everybody else) that will lead to the survivors living under domes.
Defending China's limitation of personal freedoms strikes me as pretty crazy, though.
Is it less crazy than Mao's idea that population creates its own means of survival? Which, funnily enough, seems to be
your position.
I can't see how government choosing what one can do with an individual's body, particularly on such a personal level, is in any way commendable.
Following Mao's path there'd be two billion Chinese today, except that the Chinese population would have collapsed spectacularly unless it had expanded beyond China's current borders. It wouldn't just be Tibet that took the strain, it would be Russia, India, and South-East Asia. Which would not be a good thing.
Really? I contend that humanity can be wiped out by means which may or may not be under our control. Is that really a rose colored view of the universe? I find that sort of thing tends to drive people to despair or deities. I do tend to think our destruction will not be our own doing. As awful as humans can be, the long trend has been more bright than bleak.
A trend you project into the future on no basis at all, as far as I can see.