Infinite resources
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have that stoopid American Pie version as well. :laugh:
Panic, Chaos, Destruction. My work here is done. or "Drink. Get drunk. Fall over." - P O'H
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have that stoopid American Pie version as well. :laugh:
Panic, Chaos, Destruction. My work here is done. or "Drink. Get drunk. Fall over." - P O'H
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Christian Graus wrote:
1 - our approach to growing food involves providing fertilizer to make up for land that has been worked in an unsustainable way
I don't assume to know if this is true or not; however, I have an option: how about just growing food at your home? A garden? Plus, you could have a chicken coop or something.
Christian Graus wrote:
2 - the run off from that fertilizer is polluting water ways
This is just a pollution problem; not the fact that we're losing water. If you had told me that we don't have enough water for the animal kingdom, I would have had to txt-punch you somehow lol But yeah, what does this have to do with a loss in resources? We just have to de-pollute the water, IMO.
Christian Graus wrote:
3 - in the meantime, the sort of fish we eat is changing simply because the stuff we used to eat, has been fished close to extinction
This is just straight-up survival of the fittest here. If we catch fish, we eat them, usually. But take into account that we're not the only fish eaters. Though I can see that the pollution into the water can cause this as well, so it's just another reason to keep pollution down.
Christian Graus wrote:
4 - the need for more farmland means we're deforesting, and using land that is marginal at best, thus speeding up the erosion process. For example, land in the Amazon is largely not that fertile, although it can support the forest it has indefinitely, deforesting and planting crops destroys that land in a few years, but they just cut down more forest and keep going.
Disagreed. The need for more housing caused this deforesting. But in any case, it's happened. But how does farming the land cause it to be destroyed? Are you saying that farmland is not fertile, for example, the land in Iowa used for corn and other such crops? To me, those trees shouldn't have been destroyed, but it's up to the people who live there, not us.
Christian Graus wrote:
To make 1 lb of beef or lamb takes 4 lb of grain. As most of our meat is grain fed, this means as more and more people eat more and more meat ( I'm not talking about in the West, but even here, our rate of meat eating continues to grow ), we are, in effect, consuming more and more grain, and requiring more and mo
josda1000 wrote:
I don't assume to know if this is true or not; however, I have an option: how about just growing food at your home? A garden? Plus, you could have a chicken coop or something.
Okay. Over 50% of the human population is now urban. There is little to no land for a garden let alone a chicken coup. The garden still needs fertilizer and the chicken coup is a negative production system in every case. Whenever you have a creature that you feed to gain food you lose something from the system. Simple thermodynamics come into effect here. You cannot gain energy in a system, you merely convert it. The chickens have to eat food, that food is produced somewhere and they aren't going to produce eggs or be nummy enough to break even with the resources used to make that food for them.
josda1000 wrote:
This is just a pollution problem; not the fact that we're losing water. If you had told me that we don't have enough water for the animal kingdom, I would have had to txt-punch you somehow lol But yeah, what does this have to do with a loss in resources? We just have to de-pollute the water, IMO.
This is no where near as easy as you make it sound. In this state the water pollution is a major issue. Run off is checked a ton because if it is not stopped the people downstream start having health problems and wildlife is greatly effected. Cleaning the rivers isn't easy nor is it cheap. It is far more cost effective to stop the problem at the source. This means less crops for those farmers as they have to keep certain levels of fertilizers and pesticides and their habits of how they do farm are changed. But the alternative is a very costly clean up. Who pays for this clean up? The tax payers, rarely the farmers doing it unless caught, and even then, barely.
josda1000 wrote:
This is just straight-up survival of the fittest here. If we catch fish, we eat them, usually. But take into account that we're not the only fish eaters. Though I can see that the pollution into the water can cause this as well, so it's just another reason to keep pollution down.
There is no survival of the fittest in a situation where the fish have no survivors. We have the ability to get any fish that exist up to a certain depth and eat them. Add pollution and introducing new species that are harmful to the local environment and we stand to lo
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Christian Graus wrote:
1 - our approach to growing food involves providing fertilizer to make up for land that has been worked in an unsustainable way
I don't assume to know if this is true or not; however, I have an option: how about just growing food at your home? A garden? Plus, you could have a chicken coop or something.
Christian Graus wrote:
2 - the run off from that fertilizer is polluting water ways
This is just a pollution problem; not the fact that we're losing water. If you had told me that we don't have enough water for the animal kingdom, I would have had to txt-punch you somehow lol But yeah, what does this have to do with a loss in resources? We just have to de-pollute the water, IMO.
Christian Graus wrote:
3 - in the meantime, the sort of fish we eat is changing simply because the stuff we used to eat, has been fished close to extinction
This is just straight-up survival of the fittest here. If we catch fish, we eat them, usually. But take into account that we're not the only fish eaters. Though I can see that the pollution into the water can cause this as well, so it's just another reason to keep pollution down.
Christian Graus wrote:
4 - the need for more farmland means we're deforesting, and using land that is marginal at best, thus speeding up the erosion process. For example, land in the Amazon is largely not that fertile, although it can support the forest it has indefinitely, deforesting and planting crops destroys that land in a few years, but they just cut down more forest and keep going.
Disagreed. The need for more housing caused this deforesting. But in any case, it's happened. But how does farming the land cause it to be destroyed? Are you saying that farmland is not fertile, for example, the land in Iowa used for corn and other such crops? To me, those trees shouldn't have been destroyed, but it's up to the people who live there, not us.
Christian Graus wrote:
To make 1 lb of beef or lamb takes 4 lb of grain. As most of our meat is grain fed, this means as more and more people eat more and more meat ( I'm not talking about in the West, but even here, our rate of meat eating continues to grow ), we are, in effect, consuming more and more grain, and requiring more and mo
josda1000 wrote:
I don't assume to know if this is true or not
Try 'The End of Food' as a good first book to read
josda1000 wrote:
: how about just growing food at your home? A garden? Plus, you could have a chicken coop or something.
As I've mentioned before, I grow my own food and have chickens and sheep. That's not the point. Like corn for fuel, or bacteria for fuel, or whatever, the problem with all these solutions is that they do not scale. I could feed my entire family off my land, but I am very much in a minority. What would someone who lives in NYC do ?
josda1000 wrote:
But yeah, what does this have to do with a loss in resources? We just have to de-pollute the water, IMO.
It's not that easy, and in the meantime, we've lost resources in the form of fish life, as well as fresh water. Which IS something that's hitting a crisis point, it's one of the points of weakness in our food system. Water scarcity is very much in the future of the whole human race, at current numbers.
josda1000 wrote:
This is just straight-up survival of the fittest here.
Humans have a history of building unsustainable societies who then starve to death, we're just doing it on a global scale now. Do you know the history of the Mayans ? How about Easter Island ?
josda1000 wrote:
The need for more housing caused this deforesting.
In the Amazon, you are dead wrong. But yes, housing does cause the loss of farm land.
josda1000 wrote:
But how does farming the land cause it to be destroyed?
Trees bind the soil together. So does grass. That's why the dust bowl occured in the 20s, because the grass that had lived there for thousands of years was holding the soil together. Removing it caused erosion. Corn in particular is a gross feeder. It ripens based on hours of sunlight, not on time. It strips all nutrients from soil, i've actually stopped growing it here. But, a traditional farmer would rotate his crops, and grow a cover crop between seasons, something like alfalfa, which would do two things: 1 - bind the soil to stop erosion 2 - alfalfa, beans, peas, etc, bind nitrogen into the soil Rotating plants restores the soil. Having animals on t
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josda1000 wrote:
I don't assume to know if this is true or not; however, I have an option: how about just growing food at your home? A garden? Plus, you could have a chicken coop or something.
Okay. Over 50% of the human population is now urban. There is little to no land for a garden let alone a chicken coup. The garden still needs fertilizer and the chicken coup is a negative production system in every case. Whenever you have a creature that you feed to gain food you lose something from the system. Simple thermodynamics come into effect here. You cannot gain energy in a system, you merely convert it. The chickens have to eat food, that food is produced somewhere and they aren't going to produce eggs or be nummy enough to break even with the resources used to make that food for them.
josda1000 wrote:
This is just a pollution problem; not the fact that we're losing water. If you had told me that we don't have enough water for the animal kingdom, I would have had to txt-punch you somehow lol But yeah, what does this have to do with a loss in resources? We just have to de-pollute the water, IMO.
This is no where near as easy as you make it sound. In this state the water pollution is a major issue. Run off is checked a ton because if it is not stopped the people downstream start having health problems and wildlife is greatly effected. Cleaning the rivers isn't easy nor is it cheap. It is far more cost effective to stop the problem at the source. This means less crops for those farmers as they have to keep certain levels of fertilizers and pesticides and their habits of how they do farm are changed. But the alternative is a very costly clean up. Who pays for this clean up? The tax payers, rarely the farmers doing it unless caught, and even then, barely.
josda1000 wrote:
This is just straight-up survival of the fittest here. If we catch fish, we eat them, usually. But take into account that we're not the only fish eaters. Though I can see that the pollution into the water can cause this as well, so it's just another reason to keep pollution down.
There is no survival of the fittest in a situation where the fish have no survivors. We have the ability to get any fish that exist up to a certain depth and eat them. Add pollution and introducing new species that are harmful to the local environment and we stand to lo
I'd pay money for a 5 right now. I didn't read this until after I replied, but you've said it better than me, esp the analogy at the end. The big issue IMO is that so many people are so disconnected from where food comes from, that they really have no idea what is involved, or what is needed. And certainly people in the West have no idea how the third world is being denuded and exploited to keep us in year round strawberries.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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I'd pay money for a 5 right now. I didn't read this until after I replied, but you've said it better than me, esp the analogy at the end. The big issue IMO is that so many people are so disconnected from where food comes from, that they really have no idea what is involved, or what is needed. And certainly people in the West have no idea how the third world is being denuded and exploited to keep us in year round strawberries.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
Hey, I know EXACTLY how it works! I learn everything I know about agriculture from Tropico 3[^]! See, first you build a farm, and pick what you want to grow... Then in a little while, a bunch of guys drive up in trucks and build it for you for slave wages, driven by teamsters who also get slave wages... Then people start working there, also for slave wages, and eventually food starts coming out of it, which I sell to the world market for drastically-inflated prices. Easy! Anyone can do it! (If anyone takes this post seriously, I invite you to compete in the Darwin Awards)
Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel) -
Hey, I know EXACTLY how it works! I learn everything I know about agriculture from Tropico 3[^]! See, first you build a farm, and pick what you want to grow... Then in a little while, a bunch of guys drive up in trucks and build it for you for slave wages, driven by teamsters who also get slave wages... Then people start working there, also for slave wages, and eventually food starts coming out of it, which I sell to the world market for drastically-inflated prices. Easy! Anyone can do it! (If anyone takes this post seriously, I invite you to compete in the Darwin Awards)
Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)least you didn't use Farmville...
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I'd pay money for a 5 right now. I didn't read this until after I replied, but you've said it better than me, esp the analogy at the end. The big issue IMO is that so many people are so disconnected from where food comes from, that they really have no idea what is involved, or what is needed. And certainly people in the West have no idea how the third world is being denuded and exploited to keep us in year round strawberries.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
I have sat in the corn fields and HEARD the corn growing at night. It's scary when you realize just how much energy is required to do that. You can hear the stalks stretching as they hit the night cycle of photosynthesis and go nuts. The amount of nutrients they leech out of the soil is stupidly bad. Thanks for the comment.
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least you didn't use Farmville...
Actually had to look that up on Wikipedia... I've so far managed to completely avoid the FaceBook fad... I utterly refuse to make an account there, which annoys certain friends and family members to no end... Which in turn amuses me slightly :)
Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel) -
I have sat in the corn fields and HEARD the corn growing at night. It's scary when you realize just how much energy is required to do that. You can hear the stalks stretching as they hit the night cycle of photosynthesis and go nuts. The amount of nutrients they leech out of the soil is stupidly bad. Thanks for the comment.
Yeah, like I said, I don't grow corn anymore. I have a constant source of horse manure to build the soil up, but I don't see any reason to denude it.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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Actually had to look that up on Wikipedia... I've so far managed to completely avoid the FaceBook fad... I utterly refuse to make an account there, which annoys certain friends and family members to no end... Which in turn amuses me slightly :)
Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)I had to turn off farmville posts completely and suddenly it was a lot easier to handle. It's like the thing needs to be split into 2 parts: facebook games (now with credit card scam offers!) and facebook for fun (now with FML posts!) Amazing how many people you can find from your past on there. Which is a double edged sword I suppose.