mad muffin wrote: » I did say in a different post that mass immigration doesn’t make any sense from an environmental stand point. At a time when eco warrior environmentalists are calling for people not to have children. Then demanding open borders. When you have more people. They use up more resources. They damage the already fragile environment. But they never talk about this.
quokula wrote: » You're aware that people who don't cross borders still exist right? We're not taking in refugees from outer space.
Driven by strong biological urges, some species of lemmings may migrate in large groups when population density becomes too great. They can swim and may choose to cross a body of water in search of a new habitat. In such cases, many drown if the chosen body of water happens to be an ocean, or is in any case so wide as to exceed their physical capabilities.
recedite wrote: » But in an overpopulation scenario, population doesn't keep growing, it crashes due to the onset of starvation and individuals fighting among themselves. Unless migration or contraception are also options...
quokula wrote: » I'm not sure how that relates. I was replying to someone who said that overpopulation contributes to climate change, therefore people moving to Ireland and increasing its population contributes to climate change. The first statement is true, though that doesn't preclude us from looking at changing behaviours and consumption patterns in a way that allows for the current population to be sustainable. The second statement is false however is it ignores the fact that those people exist regardless of which country they are in.
mad muffin wrote: » I never mentioned climate change. I’m talking about the environment we live in. A thousand people in an area are much easier in the environment than ten thousand.
quokula wrote: » people moving to Ireland and increasing its population contributes to climate change. ... is false however is it ignores the fact that those people exist regardless of which country they are in.
people moving to Ireland and increasing its population contributes to climate change.
In Syria, a devastating drought beginning in 2006 forced many farmers to abandon their fields and migrate to urban centers. There’s some evidence that the migration fueled the civil war there, in which 80,000 people have died. “You had a lot of angry, unemployed men helping to trigger a revolution,” Tensions between nations are also high. Since 1975, Turkey’s dam and hydropower construction has cut water flow to Iraq by 80 percent and to Syria by 40 percent. Syria and Iraq have accused Turkey of hoarding water. Hydrologists say that the countries need to find alternatives to sucking the aquifers dry—perhaps recycling wastewater or introducing desalination—and develop equitable ways of sharing their rivers.
Blueshoe wrote: » He might also not be jealous of the attention.
mad muffin wrote: » I know I’m a bit late to the conversation. Was Skype not an option?
recedite wrote: » Syria - population in 1955; 3 million population in 2010; 21 million population now; back down to 17 million The country simply cannot sustain 21 million people. War, famine or mass migration are inevitable at that population level. Check out this article from 2013...
blinding wrote: » They were not doing too bad until somebody wound up one group to go against Assad with terrible consequences .
recedite wrote: » Ireland was doing OK with 8 million people, until the spuds picked up a disease. There's always a tipping point to overpopulation, and when that point is reached, something will always happen.
In light of the above we can now return to our main questions:is there clear and reliable evidence that climate change-related drought in Syria was a contributory factor in the onset of the country's civil war?; and,if and where yes, was it as significant a contributory factor as is claimed in the existing academic and expert literature?On each step of the claimed causal chain, our answers are no. We find that there is no clear and reliable evidence that anthropogenic climate change was a factor in northeast Syria's 2006/07e2008/09 drought;we find that, while the 2006/07e2008/09 drought in northeast Syria will have contributed to migration, this migration was not on the scale claimed in the existing literature, and was, in all probability, more caused by economic liberalisation than drought; and we find that there is no clear and reliable evidence that drought-related migration was a contributory factor in civil war onset. In our assessment, there is thus no good evidence to conclude that global climate change-related drought in Syria was a contributory causal factor in the country's civil war.source
blinding wrote: » There was plenty of food in Ireland to feed the People . It was sent out of the Country .
topper75 wrote: » Are we talking the blight of 1845-47? It is called the GREAT famine for a reason. It differentiates it from the 6 or 7 that Ireland had experienced in that century alone up to that point.I wouldn't share your definition of 'doing OK'.Read Gearóid Ó Tuathaigh's Ireland Before the Famine and you'll probably change your opinion. Ireland was ludicrously overpopulated. We are headed to that figure again but this time it is supported by a massive global food supply network and intensive domestic farming and processing. We are creating a vulnerability though by pushing back over the 8m point.
topper75 wrote: » Are we talking the blight of 1845-47? It is called the GREAT famine for a reason. It differentiates it from the 6 or 7 that Ireland had experienced in that century alone up to that point. I wouldn't share your definition of 'doing OK'. Read Gearóid Ó Tuathaigh's Ireland Before the Famine and you'll probably change your opinion. Ireland was ludicrously overpopulated. We are headed to that figure again but this time it is supported by a massive global food supply network and intensive domestic farming and processing. We are creating a vulnerability though by pushing back over the 8m point.
Pa ElGrande wrote: » Climate change and the Syrian civil war revisited
recedite wrote: » IMO drought was one of the main causal factors in leading to the social unrest, but it was not caused by global warming. It was, and is still, caused by overpopulation in the region. Rivers are being sucked dry, and underground aquifers are slowly drying up. That scholarly article refutes only a strawman argument.
99problems1 wrote: » Where are all these "environmentalists" calling out all the waste left at EP? Would it be the fact it's the same people commenting on Lidl posts asking them to remove plastic for fruit and veg as it is dumping their tents behind them?
is_that_so wrote: » Lidl have a whole plan around sustainability and it's not hard to find.http://www.abettertomorrow-lidl.ie/
99problems1 wrote: » Yeah I know....still doesn't stop the facebookers who comment just so they're seen to really care about the environment (they don't)