• REDACTED@infosec.pub
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        39 minutes ago

        So what you’re saying is that earth under 8-9 billion people isn’t sustainable and we need to start sacrificing our cars and meat due to overpolulation?

    • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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      2 hours ago

      I saw this infographic posted a few days ago and it’s a bit misleading. The percentages are based on biomass, not population. I also don’t remember what the original source is, and it looks like it got cropped off the one you posted here. If you remember the source, could you link it?

    • Doc_Crankenstein@slrpnk.net
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      7 hours ago

      Yes, and combined with the data presented by OP, we can readily see that this absolutely does not need to be the case.

      Combine these again with food waste data and you will see that the majority of those animals will be slaughtered only for the products made from them to wind up being thrown away without ever having been used. We (capitalist owners of industry) demand the slaughter of these animals en masse knowing full well that most of what comes from the act won’t sell simply because there is a slim chance that it might sell, and we (society as a whole which has the capability of governance) have failed to make it cost prohibitive to do so. It’s fucking disgusting.

      There is absolutely no justification, other than to chase the profit incentive which I do not consider valid, for our practices in animal husbandry that have led to the overpopulation of certain species.

      • bstix@feddit.dk
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        4 hours ago

        Yeah the picture doesn’t really present the issue. The 60% livestock isn’t comparable to wild life. It’s much worse than that.

        I could also say that 100% of bricks are man made and there are no wild bricks.

        Similarly, live stock is a product, that shouldn’t and wouldn’t exist in the first place. It does not represent animals in a way that is comparable to wild life that have full lives.

        The 60% livestock does not live long happy lives. It’s constantly being replaced by new livestock.

        So sure at any given moment there might be 60% mass of animals classified as livestock, but if we were to count the actual number of animals over a year, it would be closer to 100%.

  • HexesofVexes@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Scholars, the real deal, are rare for a reason - few people choose knowledge over wealth and power. There lies the crux of the matter, since anyone who pursues the other two paths would be the antithesis of the system so designed.

    It’s a nice model, but it runs too counter to human nature to work; and there is precious little (if anything) that can change the nature of a species as expansive as humanity.

    • Doc_Crankenstein@slrpnk.net
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      7 hours ago

      You need to read more anthropology studies on how society developed across hundreds of thousands of years. The only thing that is “human nature” is that we will do what we view as best for our interests.

      Those interests are entirely dependent upon the systems we live under. Change the overarching systems that dictate our lives and people’s behavior will change with it.

      If anything, the current society we live in has us far removed from our “natural” behavior and, instead, forces us to go against that nature in order to meet our needs under these oppressive and exploitative systems that have only existed for barely a fraction of humanity’s existence.

  • Almacca@aussie.zone
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    15 hours ago

    We are living in a false-scarcity society when we could be living in a post-scarcity one.

    • Kickforce@lemmy.wtf
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      10 hours ago

      This a thousand times. The world is throwing away resources at an astounding rate while people are sick, homeless and starving because of numbers on digital ledgers. We need to drop the whole idea of money. It’s served its purpose, run its course and has since turned into a life on this planet threatening perversion.

  • The problem is a combination of intrinsic psychological biases of those with means. Once they reach a certain threshold, they become driven to keep accumulating until they own everything. Gotta catch 'em all.

    This threshold is likely different for everyone, and may not be related to other thresholds of accumulation, such as:

    • When you have everything you want, except to upscale your stuff.
    • When you make more money than you can spend on personal expenses, including renting Venice for a wedding.
    • When you make more then you can spend on ther unrelated threshold where you can’t possibly spend all your income without purchasing billion-dollar companies

    Some capitalists are self aware enough to recognize the impulse is not sustainable, (also that profits are better had with happy workers) which often comes from having risen to wealth from more modest means. (But not always).

    At any rate, rich dudes who drop billions into massive public improvement projects are rare, and when they do they tend to see it as revenue source, or at least something to exploit to improve their brand image.

    So the next step for society is to discover a sociological technique that allows rich guys to think I have enough, to drop their surplus into the hands of the community (say the general fund of the local governing body)

    That or accept that we are too simple a species to navigate some very imminent great filters. We may not count as a space-faring civilization that might encounter other space-faring civilizations.

    This is not a new idea. Fourth International–Posadism opined that developing communism (or a refinement thereof) would be a prerequisite for space colonization. I’d argue changing from capitalism is a prerequisite for societal sustainability more than a couple of centuries from now.

  • sobchak@programming.dev
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    19 hours ago

    I’m skeptical. I just skimmed the paper, but most of it seems to be taking a financial/macro-economic perspective without too much analysis on individual resources availability and the damage just current levels of output are causing to our environment/resources. I’ve seen other research that claim we are already over the carrying capacity of Earth, some say by a large margin (e.g. carrying capacity is 2 billion people). I’m pretty sure humans are already using (and degrading) the majority of Earth’s arable land, for instance.

    • AlteredEgo@lemmy.ml
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      18 hours ago

      This is a major flaw in science and basic economic comprehension. You could grow enough potatoes to feed the world enough calories with just the area of France. We could build huge apartment blocks surrounded by farmland and connected via tiny mono rails. We could build apartments and appliances and computers that last for a century. We could genetically engineer microalgae to taste like pancake butter. If we half the number of required workers, we’d save a mountain of resources on commute. We could design everything to be recyclable. Wind energy with Kites Power gives us near unlimited energy. Our footprint could be tiny but with the luxury of free time, learning, arts and living in a community and in nature.

      We are nowhere near carrying capacity, we’re just over because we waste so much on consumerism, planned obsolescence, unsustainable crops and artificial scarcity.

      Our civilization is a fucking joke but science treats current conditions as if they were normal and immutable.

      • Doc_Crankenstein@slrpnk.net
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        6 hours ago

        Scientists know we need to change but unfortunately if we don’t present our research in terms of how it will benefit the economy, those who actually control if things will change simply ignore it because their power of authority is based on the strength of the economy.

        It really fucking sucks. I have a degree in conservation science, and we were literally taught to always consider the economic perspective because that’s literally the only part anyone with any power to affect legislation or industry practices will pay attention to it.

  • JcbAzPx@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Our problem is distribution. It’s a hard problem to solve but it’s much better than the easy solution.

    • Kickforce@lemmy.wtf
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      10 hours ago

      The problem stopping distribution to where stuff is needed is money, the people who have it, the people who owe it, the funny patterns it makes on stock markets, in hedge funds etc.

      Money was ok as a means to allow people to exchange their different trades into things they need to live. But it has moved so far beyond that it has become ridiculous.

  • Riskable@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    I’ve seen this before. Last time I looked, it required that everyone live in cities with good public transportation. It also didn’t factor in modern necessities like air conditioning (which will be actually necessary in many more parts of the world due to global warming).

    Basically, for this to work, everyone needs to live in 2-bedroom apartments… Without air conditioning or anything like a desktop PC. You’d have a small refrigerator and heat your food with a microwave (and nothing else because stovetop and ovens use up too much energy).

    It also makes huge assumptions about the availability of food, where it can be grown, and that all the necessary nutrients/fertilizer are already present in the soil and that transporting/processing things like grain is super short distance/cheap.

    Also, communism. It requires functioning communism. That everyone will be ok with it and there will be no wars over resources/land.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Yes this lowest-common-denominator life we’d all be living would save billions suffering through abject poverty but none of those people are here, reading this right now. Everyone reading this would probably see a lifestyle decline. I always have to laugh when anyone in Europe or the US blab as if they are part of the 90%. We are 10%ers every one of us.

      • Doc_Crankenstein@slrpnk.net
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        6 hours ago

        This doesn’t mean we wouldn’t have access to computers. We just wouldn’t individually have personal computers all to ourselves unless you were someone who actually worked in the tech industry and needed constant access to perform your job duties.

    • AlteredEgo@lemmy.ml
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      17 hours ago

      The only problem is really consent and the propaganda against these goals. E.g. Air conditioning or cooking is rather nitpicking, those are not real issues, technological advances and passive house design would easily solve that. With Kite Power you already have unlimited energy.

      And you could build a huge apartment block surrounded by nature, growing food directly around you and sharing infrastructure. Everyone could get a luxurious apartment with high ceilings and a killer view for everyone. If drastically less people need to commute to work, we wouldn’t need to live in a city. You could also have communal kitchens or diners or cafeteria.

      The greatest luxury of all would be to have free time. To enjoy life, to study and learn for free, to raise your children in peace. Not consumerism. Let the masses produce VR games if they have too much free time.

      I also disagree that it requires full on communism, a UBI or expanded bill of rights for the human necessities to reach a decent living standard (DLS) could work too. You’d just heavily regulate, ban industrial meat production, bad advertising to avoid consumerism etc.

      • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        Air conditioning or cooking is rather nitpicking, those are not real issues, technological advances and passive house design would easily solve that.

        The entire world doesn’t have the climate of Japan where it’s possible to live in an apartment without AC and heat. No amount of design can ameliorate 38C high humidity.

        growing food directly around you

        Only a subset of food can be grown locally and that local food is only available seasonally. It’s the system we already have.

        You could also have communal kitchens or diners or cafeteria.

        That’s not a technological solution to cooking. That’s social which is far harder if not impossible to overcome.

        The greatest luxury of all would be to have free time.

        That doesn’t follow. The same work needs to be done, if not more because reducing energy means reducing automation so people have to work to make up the difference.

      • merc@sh.itjust.works
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        19 hours ago

        Not only that, but all 8.5 billion would also need to be willing to stop any “lifestyle inflation”. It’s not just about accepting it for a day, it’s about adjusting to that being the norm for themselves and for their kids into the foreseeable future.

        • EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com
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          19 hours ago

          A question that I frequently ask when presented this is “what would you personally be willing to give up?” Of course it is important to realize that some of it is systemic and not within the average person’s control (e.g. car-centric infrastructure)

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            19 hours ago

            Right. I think there are a lot of people who would be happy to give up something, but would need big societal changes first. Like, giving up driving a car, but would need cities to be designed more like Europe where it’s possible to get by without a car. Or, living in a more efficient high-rise apartment building vs. a less efficient detached house, but would need building codes and standards to be better so they weren’t constantly being annoyed by a noisy neighbour, or having to put up with smells from other apartments.

            • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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              15 hours ago

              This is the answer. I have a nonstandard sleep cycle (I worked nights for a decade) and that alone keeps me out of apartments. I refuse to subject a downstairs neighbor to me being most awake at 1am, and I likewise can’t sleep when my neighbors are awake.

              • merc@sh.itjust.works
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                14 hours ago

                Yeah, I have a different sleep schedule too. But, it doesn’t mean that I can’t live in apartment. It just means I can’t live in a poorly built apartment with bad sound isolation between floors.

                I’ve been in high quality apartments where you could never hear the neighbours at all. The problem is, there’s no requirement to build them like that, and it’s much cheaper not to, so they don’t tend to do it. If I could be guaranteed not to be disturbed, I’d probably prefer a high-rise. But, I’ve had too many bad experiences with loud neighbours, or with air leakage so I could smell it when my neighbours were smoking.

                • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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                  13 hours ago

                  Technically, I could live in an apartment. But I can’t afford a nice one, so I can’t live in an apartment, haha.

    • Carmakazi@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      Kind of what I was getting at with my comments. The median standard of living doesn’t have to be bad or even particularly uncomfortable, but it would require everyone who lives above that median to be knocked down to it and be okay with that. Which they won’t. Meaning it will require force.

    • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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      23 hours ago

      Thats the part that sucks. For super poor people this is great. For those of us already in a decent house, it would be a lot worse. I For one cant live in apartments, unless I was absolutely close to homeless.

      Although, if we took the billionaires down a notch I bet a lot more people could also have houses.

      • Match!!@pawb.social
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        21 hours ago

        would you not accept going from a house to something less decent if it came with the likelihood that everyone in the world would have housing, food, and security?

        • brown567@sh.itjust.works
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          21 hours ago

          But when the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful: for he had great possessions. (Matt 19:22)

          It’d definitely be a tough choice, but I hope I’d be able to make it

        • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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          21 hours ago

          Thats a good question, but let me also ask this: is every single human equal? I hate to break it to you, but there are people providing a lot more value to the world than a taco bell worker. So yes, I think the taco bell worker deserves a surviveable wage while they study to be greater and have social safety nets in place to assist. However if they only aspire to stay at taco bell, smoke weed and play cod all night after work, that is fine, but to be fair to others who aspired to be greater, the taco bell worker doesn’t deserve as much as them.

          Before you call me an old boomer-i actually know people who live the above life and im sorry, they don’t deserve to have more than a small apartment. Which maybe is fine with them ! But no, im not going to give up my place to benefit those who aren’t attributing as much. Notice, I didn’t say they aren’t deserving of fair and affordable housing and safety nets.

          • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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            18 hours ago

            I used to work in contract law at an insurance company (not a lawyer), and I was paid well to do highly specialized work. I now work behind the counter at a bakery and I get to help people feed their families. I unquestionably provide more actual value to the world through my current job than my previous one.

            • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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              17 hours ago

              Id agree with you there! But youre actively bettering the community and improving quality of life, you deserve to have a comfortable living situation for that. You can’t just give houses and money to lazy or addicted people, that doesnt solve the issue is what im saying.

          • cinnabarfaun@lemmy.world
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            19 hours ago

            Do you like taco bell? Do you see value in fast food existing as a convenience?

            If you think that fast food jobs shouldn’t exist at all (and everyone should have the means and the free time to make food at home, with accommodations for those who physically can’t cook for themselves), I have more sympathy with your position (even though I still disagree with some of your opinions). But if you want fast food, retail, or any similar services to keep existing, someone will always have to work in those poorly-valued jobs. And I don’t think they deserve less than the rest of us.

            Tbh I think the average fast food employee works a hell of a lot harder during their shift than I do at mine. I’m sitting at my desk typing on social media right now; the guy at the taco bell next door is standing in a hot kitchen, pumping out quesadillas for hours. Sure, my job requires more specific skills, but now that I already have those skills, I’m not laboring more strenuously to use them. If my education had been free, and I didn’t need a higher wage to pay off my student debt/catch up for the years I hadn’t spent working? I don’t think I’d “deserve” more than the taco bell guy.

            • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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              12 hours ago

              And I don’t think they deserve less than the rest of us.

              So the Doctor that studied for 16 hours a day while I played video games and then worked 16 hour shifts at the hospital during residency for 5 years while I worked 7 hours shifts at Taco Bell should be paid the same as me?

              Capitalism has perverse unjust rewards but that doesn’t make the opposite just either.

            • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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              17 hours ago

              I do like it on occasion yes, and those workers deserve a living wage. They don’t deserve the luxuries of life that a doctor has, however.

              Id agree the “hardness” of a job is difficult to quantify. A job where you sit at a computer all day but talk to people and run large projects to build houses or factories or anything like that, will pay more than a fast food person. They both are working, but it’s different. Could the fast food employee design an electrical system for a food facility ? No. Could the electrical engineer work fast food? Almost definitely yes.

              • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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                5 hours ago

                They don’t deserve the luxuries of life that a doctor has, however.

                I see your position, but respectfully disagree. I appreciate that we may want to incentivize people to be doctors, but the gifts of civilization have been hard won by the labour of all workers over the years, and IMHO on paper should be available to all. It’s not about deserving.

                Now, in practice is a good doctor more likely to enjoy the charity of the community, and occupy a special status because of their critical role? Undoubtedly. IMHO in a world where creature comforts are guaranteed, these specials perks would be a huge boon.

                And besides, I think most people only want lots of money because it helps insulate them from the ravages of our current system when they’re old and unable to work. If we didn’t have to worry about how to survive after our working years I think collecting excess wealth would have a lot less appeal.

                PS. Personally I think there are enough people drawn to medicine that it wouldn’t be hard to fill those spots with free education. But we may have to really incentivize people to work dirty jobs like sewage.

                PPS. for incentives, maybe it’s something like fewer weekly hours, or your time counts 1.5 to double towards your pension, so you can retire earlier.

            • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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              17 hours ago

              Good argument. Your statement solves all our issues. How can people not see this isn’t a black and white issue? It can however be put simply:

              Billionaires shouldn’t exist.

              Everyone deserves a living wage (NOT access to all life’s luxuries)

              If you feel like busting your ass working or saving money, you should be ABLE to afford the luxuries you want.

          • 5too@lemmy.world
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            18 hours ago

            let me also ask this: is every single human equal?

            Yes. Why is this even a question?

            • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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              17 hours ago

              Interesting take. I don’t believe it’s an all or nothing question. But I think we can all agree that a lazy-by-choice person doesnt deserve as much as someone who went to school for 6 years to be a doctor. Now.the lazy person doesn’t deserve prison or to be homeless. But if you think both people need to live in a 1 bedroom apartment for things to be equal, thats actually oppression, not equality.

              • 5too@lemmy.world
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                17 hours ago

                My main disagreement with your point is the word “deserve”. I don’t actually have a problem with an economic system that rewards some activities more than others, as long as there’s a humane baseline for everyone. But I think that’s absolutely an economic choice, and not the only reasonable one.

                “Deserve” implies to me that there’s a moral system judging one activity as more worthy, or better, than another; rather than simply being more valuable to a particular economic model. It seems like a short step from that to deciding some people are more worthy than others.

                • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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                  12 hours ago

                  “Deserve” implies to me

                  That’s only semantics. You agree with the OP, you only don’t like the wording.

  • xxce2AAb@feddit.dk
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    1 day ago

    Well, yes. But that’d require fair, sensible distribution and use of available resources, and then how would we be able to support the ability of a handful of billionaires to subvert our democracies for their own gain? /s

  • Troy@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    How does that quote go? Something like: the future is here, it’s just unevenly distributed.

  • samus12345@sh.itjust.works
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    24 hours ago

    “I have a magical reality-changing glove. Should I change the nature of beings to want to share for the benefit of all? Nah, I’m gonna remove a random half of them from existence. It’s clearly the ONLY thing I could possibly do to solve the problem! I’m so smart and awesome!”

  • Jhogenbaum@leminal.space
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    18 hours ago

    It is definitely possible a “decent” living standard is lower in their minds then mine or yours or ours. I am very curious

  • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Resources aren’t evenly distributed naturally, some area may not have enough resources.

    It takes more resources to get more resources, we may be measuring 30% of total resources, but not 30% of resource capacity.

    I’m fine with population control, but it should be implemented willingly at an individual level, and pushed via education and community acceptance. I catch a small amount of flak for not having kids, but wife catches a lot more.

    • AlteredEgo@lemmy.ml
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      18 hours ago

      Not sure what you’re trying to say, but the paper assumes current population trends and means 30% of currently available resources in 2025 would be enough to give everyone a decent living standard (DLS) in 2050. We have everything we need to do this right now.

    • Samskara@sh.itjust.works
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      19 hours ago

      A replacement birthrate leads to a more stable society. The elderly who are unable to work and ill need to be cared for. If ever fewer young and able people have to take care of ever more elderly, it won’t have a good outcome. Not having children of your own is being a burden on society.

      • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        If ever fewer young and able people have to take care of ever more elderly, it won’t have a good outcome.

        It takes fewer resources to care for elderly than raise children. Not raising a child means there’s a surplus to care for the elderly. Then the elderly die leaving more surplus behind. It’s not only a theoretical based on money but we have all of history that shows this truth. For example WW2 killed the most productive members of society leaving only the elderly to be cared for. The result was a global economic boom.

      • i_ben_fine@midwest.social
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        19 hours ago

        Not having children of your own is being a burden on society.

        damn, don’t replace anti-natalism with forced natalism. Thanks.

      • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        A replacement birthrate leads to a more stable society

        Only if you assume that the amount of production for a hour of labor stays the same. Workers today accomplish much more in a given time period than workers 65 years ago. The problem is that value is horded instead of being made available to the people that created it.

        • Samskara@sh.itjust.works
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          19 hours ago

          Feeding an elderly person, washing them, changing their diapers takes the same amount of time as it did 150 years ago. Due to better health care and longer lives, the total cost of elderly health care and pensions eat up a lot of that productivity gain.

          • Tad Lispy@europe.pub
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            19 hours ago

            That’s certainly not true. We now have washing machines, dishwashers, refrigerators, kitchen machines, gas or electric stoves, food delivery services etc. All this makes carrying for others easier. Plus being more efficient at paid work could be translated into less working hours, thus more time to care for others instead of more money captured by capitalists.

          • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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            19 hours ago

            Nope. Absolutely wrong. You can cook food faster than you could 150 years ago using microwaves, induction cook tops, non-stick pan and other advancements in kitchen tech. Modern care aids reduce the time it takes to wash a person, and allows them to wash themselves much later in life before they need partial or full assistance. Modern adult diapers come off easier, seal better, and absorb more, so they have fewer blow-outs and it takes fewer wipes to clean up a person.

            Edit: let’s also add that better productivity in other areas enables fewer people do more work, which (should) free up a larger portion of the population for elder-care.

          • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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            15 hours ago

            You realize 150 years ago was the year before the telephone was invented, right? Most houses didn’t even have electricity back then.

            I was an in-home caregiver before COVID, and we certainly didn’t have to warm water on a wood fired stove to bathe the clients with. I didn’t have to scrub the laundry with a washboard, we had a laundry machine. I could call 911 without interrupting CPR, which wouldn’t have been possible even 50 years ago.

  • Carmakazi@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    What are “Decent Living Standards?”

    I’d bet that they’re at least one step down from what the usual Westerner is accustomed to.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I bet you are basing your concept of the “usual” Westerner on your own experience, and you might be surprised at how the actual average person lives even in the “West”.

      But to answer your question, the article defines decent living standards as:

      nutritious food, modern housing, healthcare, education, electricity, clean-cooking stoves, sanitation systems, clothing, washing machines, refrigeration, heating/cooling, computers, mobile phones, internet, transit, etc.

      Nutritious food is unavailable to an alarming number of Americans, transit is a mess and almost exclusively car-centered, healthcare and education are severely stratified along economic conditions, and almost everything on that list is a commodity. The USA has sanitation systems almost everywhere, but that’s just because rich poop and poor poop all smells like poop. Wherever the wealthy can isolate their own sanitation, they do.

      • doingthestuff@lemy.lol
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        1 day ago

        Out of that the US lacks health care for all, and it lacks transit pretty much everywhere outside of the large cities. Even the cities pretty much have nothing that reaches all the way out to the suburbs.

        Where I live, you have to have a car to have a decent quality of life. People give up their homes before they give up their cars. So transportation needs to be addressed in order to have the quality of life promised. Most of the places that are food insecure are all about politics and bad people blocking food resources rather than the food not being available.

    • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      That’s exactly what the article proposed:

      'Drawing on recent empirical evidence, we show that ending poverty and ensuring decent living standards (DLS) for all, with a full range of necessary goods and services (a standard that approximately 80% of the world population presently does not achieve) can be provisioned for a projected population of 8.5 billion people in 2050 with around 30% of existing productive capacity, depending on our assumptions about distribution and technological deployment. "

      So if you and everyone are willing to live on 30% less “money”, worldwide poverty would be eliminated.

      • brian@lemmy.ca
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        23 hours ago

        That is definitely not what is presented in what you quoted.

        Out of our current productive capabilities (how much money is “created” if you want), we would only need 30% of it to get 8.5 billion people to a “decent living standard”.

        That isnt a 30% reduction, it’s only needing to make 30% of what we already are doing.

        • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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          22 hours ago

          That’s the same thing. The paper is arguing against the need to increase production vs redistribution of what is currently produced.

          That isnt a 30% reduction, it’s only needing to make 30% of what we already are doing.

          Where does that 30% come from? They are explicitly saying that their analysis isn’t about increasing production of anything. Redistribution means taking away from the rich developed population to give to the poor. They said take 30% and redistribute it. If you are on Lemmy, that includes you.

          • brian@lemmy.ca
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            14 hours ago

            That is not my interpretation on the paper. It’s not taking 30% and spreading it. It’s we only ever needed to be making 30% of our total being reasonably distributed for everyone to reach those standards.

            “Provisioning decent living standards (DLS) for 8.5 billion people would require only 30% of current global resource and energy use, leaving a substantial surplus for additional consumption, public luxury, scientific advancement, and other social investments.

            • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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              12 hours ago

              It’s not taking 30% and spreading it. It’s we only ever needed to be making 30% of our total being reasonably distributed for everyone to reach those standards.

              I don’t understand what you mean by those two sentences. They seem to be in conflict with each other.

              You have 100 coins. To say we need to be making 30% of our total being reasonably distributed means you now have only 70 coins.

              "leaving a substantial surplus for additional consumption, public luxury, scientific advancement, and other social investments.”

              You had 100 coins and now you have 70. You can still buy luxuries but 30% less than what you had before it was redistributed.

    • SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Jesus christ dude give it a rest.

      Easterners have running water, they have cell phones, they make trash that goes to landfills, they also have A/C systems, they drive cars

      • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        When I read “West”, I read “developed world”.

        Japan, South Korea, Tawain, etc, are as developed as the West. Most of China is now too, but there are billions more that aren’t developed.

      • Carmakazi@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Westerners eat meat everyday, nearly everyone drives cars everywhere, they buy heaps of cheap clothes and electronics made by slave or near-slave labor, they drink coffee and eat chocolate grown by the same. They go on expensive, polluting and disruptive globetrotting vacations. You think all that and more will stick around in a more equitable society?

        I’m sorry I wasn’t inclusive enough in my chastising, Commissar. It’ll be the same story for them, too.

    • brown_guy45@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      If we take all the type of living standards into consideration from all over the world

      Then I guess the median living standards would be the living standards of the middle class people of countries like Indian, Brazil and all (the developing countries basically)