• just_change_it@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      ah no stress, no costs… perfect to increase the population and put more strain on the system.

      I’ll wait for you to solve the overpopulation crisis while giving us all a first-class work free experience.

      • all-knight-party@kbin.run
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        10 months ago

        If we’re gonna go to sci Fi then you could solve overpopulation with FTL travel, terraforming, and farming, and we’d just spread out across the galaxy and then galaxies until the universe experiences heat death, I assume that solves it.

        • DreamButt@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Also like. Overpopulation isn’t really an issue. Every country that has modernized and increased education, distribution of goods, and gained some sense of reasonable health care has seen a reduction in births

        • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          “This transporter will help us solve overpopulation”

          “How’s that work?”

          “Stand right here”

        • just_change_it@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          We’ll all be long dead by the time interstellar travel is here for a handful of individuals, and we may even be dead before we find another planet that could be habitable in a million years time.

          You’re realistically targeting ultra-long-term solutions, all of which ignore the fact that we’re trashing this one pristine planet right now by filling it with billions and billions of souls more than it can sustainably support.

        • just_change_it@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Any hard science fiction clings to the fact that taking people off the earth is a luxury only afforded to the most influential and powerful, unless you have critical skills to do a job that they can’t find with space residents.

          Imagine what would be needed to ferry a million people off the earth in one year. Then imagine that there are 20-50 billion souls eager to have that luxury off-planet destination life. The math never adds up.

          • all-knight-party@kbin.run
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            10 months ago

            Oh, I just mean in the instance that the entire earth is completely full to comfortable capacity and the government is not totally evil, so when necessary people get shuttled to a different planet for comfortable spread. In my head this wouldnt be up to the individual, but the government would be looking out for and monitoring comfortable living space.

            Totally unrealistic, but y’know

          • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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            10 months ago

            Imagine what it would have taken in 1800 to build an iphone. Now imagine there are hundreds of millions of people wanting that same luxury. The math doesn’t work out.

            • just_change_it@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              Not the same scale. If we had the same technology back then it would probably be possible, but the population has exploded since. If we still had 1/8th the people we might get that, but there’s no way we can produce a billion iphones every time an upgrade comes along, let alone 8 billion.

              Standards have to drop for real even equity compared to what we are used to in the west. This would be true even if we took everything from the top 10% (which globally seems to include nearly all of the US, even us middle class working peons.)

        • just_change_it@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          That won’t stop population growth. Remember… the stress of work is gone. Now we all can have big happy families if we want without ANY pressure to ever juggle all those stressful conflicting priorities that take up familial resources. Voluntary contraception would not keep population stable or provide a sustainable ecosystem. I personally would have at least six kids. My wife would want more than that. You are free to be childless if you so choose of course, but statistically proven biological imperative drives us to procreate as-is, it’s literally human nature.

          The biggest problem will quite literally be real estate. Unless you can picture a fully urbanized earth where everyone lives in tiny little cubby holes and not much else as being some kind of utopia. Even then the land on earth is finite.

            • just_change_it@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              Eh? Why does birth rate drop in countries with top economies versus those that don’t?

              Developed countries tend to have a lower fertility rate due to lifestyle choices associated with economic affluence where mortality rates are low, birth control is easily accessible and children often can become an economic drain caused by housing, education cost and other cost involved in bringing up children. Higher education and professional careers often mean that women have children late in life. This can result in a demographic economic paradox. sauce

              In order to maintain that high quality of life you have to work a shitload and to get those high paying jobs you have to spend years of your life upskilling and competing for better jobs.

              Remove the economic factor and give everyone that astounding QOL and boom… we can breed without worries of providing and we don’t even have to stress about maintaining our QOL. We can all be stay at home parents who just raise our kids if we choose to.

              I can’t afford a 4-6+++ bedroom house in the Greater Boston area where my friends and family are without having soul-crushing long commute times. I need a commute because I need to work to put food on the table and pay for rent. Remove the barriers and keep at least even QOL and I will not work, i’ll instead devote my time to doing literally anything else.

                • just_change_it@lemmy.world
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                  10 months ago

                  We’re talking about a potential utopia where education is available to everyone, not restricted to first world countries. If you bring everyone UP to western world QOL and they are educated, you have to consider it in that aspect.

                  The immigrant fertility rate thing is because they come from a place with low expected QOL so they don’t think they need the american dream with air conditioning, going out to eat or having nice things and instead go with more kids because they were raised that way. The second generation gets used to say american QOL and wants to have those same nice things the neighbors have- after all they grow up in the american school system meeting other kids right?.. so you need to work to get those high QOL things and suddenly you’re in the situation I have described: needing more professional attainment to keep up the expected QOL and delaying children.

                  Does that make sense?

                  Do you have any kind of evidence showing that free of all financial constraints people will not have children in a mid-high COL area?

      • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        People with the lowest income have the highest birth rate.

        Seems to me like lots of wealth is the solution to the population crisis.

        Also with Star Trek technology we can let people live in the holodeck.

      • gordon@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I mean not really no. Even without any artificial limits, as people gain education and move out of poverty, birth rates naturally go down.

        In fact birth rates in some places are decreasing as we speak.

        Allowing everyone access to education and a UBI would cut birth rates. Going below 1.5 or so would actually be undesirable.