Real Science Radio: Overpopulation, RSR, and Wanted: More People!

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Overpopulation, RSR, and Wanted: More People!


This is the show from Friday March 20th, 2015

Summary:

* Nice Places vs. Lousy Places: Real Science Radio hosts Bob Enyart and Fred Williams follow two news stories to their inevitable conclusion: biblical creationism leads to life and anything less leads to death. And in another classic RSR segment, the guys read off a list (just below) of nice places to live, and of lousy places to live, based on population density.

* World Mag & Christian Examiner Reports: In addition to the Huffington Post infanticide article we mentioned on air, after showtime today, we found out that Bob was quoted by the Christian Examiner in their Home Depot article about an employee admonishing the company for promoting homosexuality, and that Enyart was quoted in World magazine's report on the Longmont, Colorado criminal who ripped a baby from her young mother's womb and kidnapped the child.

Is the World Overpopulated?
by Bob Enyart

Six people just survived the sinking of an ocean vessel. They are afloat in a lifeboat with only enough water for five. On board are a doctor, a carpenter, a nurse, a blind elderly woman, a sailor, and a counselor.

Public school students given this scenario over the years were then asked, "Who should be thrown overboard?" Environmentalists designed this exercise to teach public students to solve problems by "eliminating" excess people.

Jacques Cousteau said, "to stabilize the world population we must eliminate 350,000 people per day. It is a horrible thing to say," he admitted, "but it’s just as bad not to say it." This Hitlerian sentiment, published in UNESCO Courier in November 1991, is not rare among envirochondriacs.

Britain’s Prince Philip, president of the Worldwide Fund for Nature, is quoted by The New American’s Robert Lee, Sept. 5, 1994 saying that he would like to be reincarnated as a "killer virus to lower human population levels." Prince HIVlip, perhaps?

How does anyone know there is only enough water for five? Utterly discredited, yet an authority to liberals, is Population Bomb author Paul Ehrlich, who has apparently not had a single prediction come true. America, he declared: would have widespread food rationing by the late 70s, would be "literally dying of thirst" by 1984, and would have 65 million famine deaths in the 80s. [See more politically correct predictions.]

Jack Fish, Brighton, Colorado public school teacher, school board member and local columnist insisted on KGOV.com’s Bob Enyart Live that the reason for Somalia’s famine was their over-population:

Enyart: What is Somalia’s population?
Fish: I’m not sure.
Enyart: I’m not asking for an exact number, just to the nearest million.
Fish: I don’t know.
Enyart: Well, then, if they are over populated, what is their population density per square mile?
Fish: I don’t know.

Somalia’s density was 29 people per square mile in 1994 and in 2014 has risen to only 36. Apocalyptic doomsayers like enviro*chondriacs are prone to flatly invent facts. Somalia is under-populated. Underpopulation often does produce famine. Compare Somalia’s population density to countries in Western Europe. As a rule of thumb, countries with greater population density have higher standards of living, literacy rates, and life expectancies. The following numbers for 2014 indicate the people per square mile for:

Nice Places / Density
Austria 259
Belgium 919
Denmark 332
England 660
France 295
Germany 593
Ireland 168
Israel 961
Italy 518
Japan 873
Luxembourg 502
Netherlands 1,052
Poland 316
Spain 236
Switzerland 487
Rhode Island 1,006
Athens 44,140
Boston 13,340
Madrid 14,000
Rome 43,949
San Fran. 17,867
Sydney 965
Toronto 10,750

Lousy Places / Density
Angola 39
Bolivia 23
Botswana 9
Ctrl. Afr. Rep. 18
Chad 23
Rep. of Congo 31
Laos 70
Liberia 80
Libya 9
Mozambique 75
Namibia 7
Niger 31
Paraguay 41
Papua New Guinea 39
Peru 60
Russia 21
Sudan 44
Somalia 36
Uruguay 52
Venezuela 88
Zaire (DRC) 75
Zambia 44
Zimbabwe 85


Countries with lower population densities generally have lower standards of living. Notice the scarcity of human beings in the poor nations. Whereas some of the most beautiful places on earth, and certainly the most prosperous and desirable, have tremendously dense populations. An average of 37,500 Tokyo residents live in each square mile of their city. In Paris, 54,899 Frenchmen, women, and children live in each square mile. And the 1.6 million New Yorkers living on Manhattan Island boast a density of 66,940 people per square mile!

You run a motel in a country with less than 35 people per square mile. Four guests all have their window air conditioners running at the same time and a fuse burns out. Trying to open an electrical panel you strip your Phillips-head screwdriver. How far do you have to drive to get a new one or how long do your guests wait for an electrician?

In the Far East, Japan, at 873 people per square mile, has a much higher standard of living than countries liberals argue are over-populated such as China at 368, Indonesia at 342, and Thailand at 332. Taiwan has one of the highest standards of living in the East, with 1,655 people per square mile, more than four times as dense as those of much lower prosperity on the mainland.

People are assets, not liabilities. Socialists and communists, however, since they must provide for so many helpless dependents, see people as consumers, rather than the producers most are. A few hundred years ago, famine was rampant in North America. Today, with a nearly thousand-fold increase in population, we not only feed ourselves but much of the left-wing world.

If the world’s five-billion-plus people went to Colorado for a day, they could fit easily into one speck on the map of Colorado, the 404 square miles of Rocky Mountain National Park. They would not have to squeeze together like sardines, but could stand comfortably. The world’s population would double before spilling over into the nearest town.

The sky is falling only in the chicken little minds of the over-population purveyor. Rather than a full house or a crowded lifeboat, an orbiting alien would view our world as nearly empty, as airline passengers can attest. Paul Ehrlich publicly bet a conservative economist that during the 1980s, natural resources would grow more scarce. Ehrlich chose five minerals to monitor. In 1990, losing the bet, Ehrlich made his wife sign the check, which amounted to over $500. The resources he was sure would become more scarce and therefore more expensive, in reality sold at reduced prices due to their greater availability world-wide.

Even the end-of-the-world prophets admit there is no global food shortage. Famine, like that in the former Soviet Union and in Somalia, results from false ideas, harmful religions and interventionist governments, not from too many people.

The Agricultural Economic Institute at Oxford University has estimated that, with current technology, the world could feed 100 billion people, while it is home to less than one-tenth that number, according to Robert Lee. Rapid progress in agri- and aqua-culture make it impossible to determine the upper limit of our future food supply.

Who do you throw overboard? The sailor, the doctor, the nurse? "No, the old woman is already sick," countless students have decided, "it’s her time to go anyway." Planned Parenthood’s founder and longtime president Margaret Sanger wrote that the handicapped, including the "blind, deaf, dumb, mute and epileptics," were the "dead weight of human waste." See her Pivot of Civilization, page 112, available through most public libraries.

With that anti-handicapped attitude from Planned Parenthood's founder, it is not surprising that they support killing handicapped unborn children, since they are only "human waste." It is not surprising that Planned Parenthood still gives out awards in Sanger's name.

When people decide that others are better off dead "for their own sake," it is not a far jump to Jacques Cousteau saying they are better off "eliminated" for the good of all. Whatever happened to one-for-all and all-for-one?

Historically, the over-population myth encouraged the brutal slaughter of the French Revolution. Greek philosophers feared the overcrowding of their ancient world. And even further back in time, the Babylonian and Assyrian accounts of the great flood held that, "the gods led by Enlil, agreed to cleanse the earth of an over-populated humanity."

Those who want ultimate control over others have long wielded the over-population myth. Yet 2,800 years ago wise Solomon knew that, "In the multitude of people is the king’s honor, but in the lack of people is the destruction of the prince" (Proverbs 14:28).



by Bob Enyart
BEL PO Box 583 Arvada CO 80001



GREAT BEL RESOURCE: Environmentalist Paul Ehrlich Loses 10-year Bet - DVD or Download


Is the earth running out of oil? Is global warming fact or fiction? Is air-pollution getting worse? Why does the Sierra Club want to drain Lake Powell? And who wins the 10-year, $5,000 bet on the scarcity of raw materials, the environmentalist Paul Ehrlich, or the conservative economist? And guess who was not man enough to personally concede defeat so that his wife had to write the check? DVD or MP4 video download

You can order Bob's materials online or call 1-800-8Enyart.

Listen to Bob Enyart Live anytime on Internet radio at KGOV.com or in select cities around the country. You’re also invited to call Bob’s show at 1-800-8Enyart. Read The Plot, Bob’s popular unpublished manuscript about the Bible, and watch our God and the Death Penalty DVD by purchasing them online or calling 1-888-8Enyart.
 
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Mark Aurelius

New member
I agree in general with this idea: I think people on average contribute to the economy and social life of the place they live in. But there are some great countries with very low population densities, Australia and Canada for example, at 8.3 and 8.8 people per sq mile respectively.

Also, Norway has about the same density as Somalia, according to the wikipedia article "List of countries by population density". I'm too new to the forum to post the direct link.

So, it would seem that something else is even more important than just having lots of people close by.
 
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