#144545 - 08/18/08 03:49 AM
Re: Kids building a debris shelter...
[Re: CityBoyGoneCountry]
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Old Hand
Registered: 02/08/08
Posts: 924
Loc: Toledo Ohio
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Are There Really Too Many People?
We share the planet with 5.7 billion people. If one could stand all the people in the world, men, women and children two feet apart, how much of the world would they take up? All of Africa? All of North America? New York state? If every person alive today stood two feet apart they would fill less than the area of Dallas County! And there would still be room for all the buildings! If the world's people were put together into families of four living on 50' by 100' lots, they could all live in the state of Texas, with more than seven thousand square miles left over. So the total number of people is not the real problem, at least at this point.
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You can run, but you'll only die tired.
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#144546 - 08/18/08 03:52 AM
Re: Kids building a debris shelter...
[Re: BobS]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 11/04/07
Posts: 369
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Are There Really Too Many People?
We share the planet with 5.7 billion people. If one could stand all the people in the world, men, women and children two feet apart, how much of the world would they take up? All of Africa? All of North America? New York state? If every person alive today stood two feet apart they would fill less than the area of Dallas County! And there would still be room for all the buildings! If the world's people were put together into families of four living on 50' by 100' lots, they could all live in the state of Texas, with more than seven thousand square miles left over. So the total number of people is not the real problem, at least at this point.
Therein lies the problem -- no forward thinking. You are looking at the world where it is right now. But you are not looking at where the world is going.
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#144547 - 08/18/08 03:54 AM
Re: Kids building a debris shelter...
[Re: CityBoyGoneCountry]
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Member
Registered: 06/17/06
Posts: 192
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Take into consideration the number of deaths due to murder,accidents,illness,honor killings,abortion,neglect,abuse,suicides,natural disasters,starvation,executions,and lack of health care,and wars, does man really need a predator to keep him in check.
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#144548 - 08/18/08 03:58 AM
Re: Kids building a debris shelter...
[Re: Angel]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 11/04/07
Posts: 369
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Take into consideration the number of deaths due to murder,accidents,illness,honor killings,abortion,neglect,abuse,suicides,natural disasters,starvation,executions,and lack of health care,and wars, does man really need a predator to keep him in check. The world population has continued to rise despite those things. The number of births is larger than the number of deaths.
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#144549 - 08/18/08 04:03 AM
Re: Kids building a debris shelter...
[Re: CityBoyGoneCountry]
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Old Hand
Registered: 02/08/08
Posts: 924
Loc: Toledo Ohio
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Are There Really Too Many People?
We share the planet with 5.7 billion people. If one could stand all the people in the world, men, women and children two feet apart, how much of the world would they take up? All of Africa? All of North America? New York state? If every person alive today stood two feet apart they would fill less than the area of Dallas County! And there would still be room for all the buildings! If the world's people were put together into families of four living on 50' by 100' lots, they could all live in the state of Texas, with more than seven thousand square miles left over. So the total number of people is not the real problem, at least at this point.
Therein lies the problem -- no forward thinking. You are looking at the world where it is right now. But you are not looking at where the world is going. OK lets look forward If world population tops out at 12 billion eventually, then each person could have 608½ sq ft in Texas (more space then many New York apartments) Back to the tree, cutting a few branches is not going to harm anything; heck Mother Nature does it all the time. A month ago I had a tree come down in a wind storm, the world did not end over it. But I do have a lot more campfire wood.
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You can run, but you'll only die tired.
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#144550 - 08/18/08 04:06 AM
Re: Kids building a debris shelter...
[Re: BobS]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 11/04/07
Posts: 369
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OK lets look forward
If world population tops out at 12 billion eventually, then each person could have 608½ sq ft in Texas (more space then many New York apartments) LOL! Where did you get that number from? Did you just make it up?
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#144552 - 08/18/08 04:16 AM
Re: Kids building a debris shelter...
[Re: CityBoyGoneCountry]
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Old Hand
Registered: 02/08/08
Posts: 924
Loc: Toledo Ohio
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I didn’t make it up, do a search on it.
Just because it’s on the evening news, doesn’t make it a fact.
This is my last go around on this; it’s getting tiring and serving no point.
I will say again, a few branches is not going to hurt anything.
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You can run, but you'll only die tired.
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#144557 - 08/18/08 04:33 AM
Re: Kids building a debris shelter...
[Re: BobS]
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/09/01
Posts: 3824
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My duties as moderator preclude comment. I would suggest people who love the timber industry take it to the campfire forum and not here. I would also point out every enlightened survival tome today reminds us not to abuse our ever more limited natural world with uneccesary exercises. Why not take your kids and build an urban shelter out of trash? Lots of people sleep in these every night in every major urban center of this underpopulated planet.
Edited by Chris Kavanaugh (08/18/08 04:35 AM)
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#144569 - 08/18/08 11:11 AM
Re: Kids building a debris shelter...
[Re: Chris Kavanaugh]
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 02/16/08
Posts: 2463
Loc: Central California
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And there you have it. Our world is transitioning unevenly from times and places where the resources seem inexhaustible, and so we use them freely, to times and places where using it the way we always have reveals itself as overuse. Sometimes overuse is clear, sometimes it will be the next generation that sees the loss of habitat and species. Rarely do we see culture teach lessons of conservation and respect sufficiently to curb our instinct to consume in time to find harmony.
So then you have folks who live in or see the effect of certain practices, and act to inform folks who are not experiencing or seeing - and whose experience informs their instinct to deny the reality of - those effects. The honest difference in opinion and experience is part of the transition we are collectively imposing on the world.
It seems unfair to react negatively to a few children innocently using a few live branches. Certainly in a few years most trees will survive such treatment, most ecosystems and life cycles will not be significantly affected, and it is currently impossible to trace the impact from such a small event on the rest of the world and its inhabitants.
But that does not mean we want to have every child everywhere taking branches from every tree, because we can all imagine the effect of that.
So where does that leave us? As the wise ones who came before us suggest, it leaves us trying to find a balance in the lessons we teach the children [and take to heart ourselves]. Passing on woods skills, love of nature, etc. is important - and should be fun. Kindling respect for nature and natural resources is also important - and should also be fun.
So, especially if the acts were innocent, perhaps we can respectfully strive to use the opportunity to offer the lessons our history and science have taught us. We can briefly share that we know use of live trees has an unknown but potentially significant impact, and because of that such use is often against the law. We can suggest with humor and affection that good woods skills include being respectful to everybody else on the planet, and to future generations whose world we are borrowing, by using deadfall when we can and by not building recreational things when we cannot.
We can teasingly remind that if the branches are left growing we can get pine tea every year from the new growth, and that birds and squirrels can live on the insects and cones that will be part of the future of the branch, etc. With appropriately applied tickling, we can ask the children to stretch their imaginations to see their children enjoying the shade, the tea, the birds, and the squirrels that a live branch can share with us in the future.
It's not just a touchy-feely, tree-hugging, foolish thing; it is a brutal, ruthless, selfish, economic calculation.
Edited by dweste (08/18/08 11:13 AM)
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#144588 - 08/18/08 02:17 PM
An Inconvenient Debris Shelter
[Re: dweste]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 11/17/06
Posts: 351
Loc: New Jersey
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Wow, this thread really went off the rails......
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....he felt the prompting of his heritage, the desire to possess, the wild danger-love, the thrill of battle, the power to conquer or to die. Jack London
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