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Media Find 7 Billion Reasons to Panic This Halloween

By Paul Wilson | October 24, 2011 | 08:43

A  A

Halloween is traditionally a night of witches, ghosts, and monsters. But for environmentalists and their media allies, an even bigger scare is coming this Halloween: the birth of Earth's 7 billionth resident.

On Oct. 31, 2011, world population will reach 7 billion, according to the United Nations. For many people, this milestone is a cause for celebration and a human triumph. But for environmentalists on the radical left, the ever-growing legion of consuming humans is a harbinger of impending doom. The Washington Post cautioned that "ecological distortions are becoming more pronounced and widespread." Already the media are warning that population could more than double by 2100, according to a new UN report.

The media have long promoted overpopulation panic rampant among prominent voices in the environmentalist movement. James Lovelock, the founder of Gaia theory, fretted over too much economic success: "there are too many [people], doing too well economically and burning too much oil." American biologist Paul Ehrlich made a series of fantastic predictions, including the claim: "I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000."

(As of 2011, England still exists.) But as recently as 2010, the New York Times quoted Ehrlich as a "population expert." And the Los Angeles Times favorably interviewed Ehrlich in February 2011.

Despite the failed predictions of Ehrlich and others, the phantom of overpopulation still haunts many on the left, and the media are happy to report every new terror. To thwart the environmentalist nightmare of too many people achieving economic success, such anti-population groups as The Population Institute, Population Connection, and Negative Population Growth lobby governments and philanthropic organizations (and more bizarrely, organize "condom campaigns") to implement policies to "stabilize" or even reduce world population.

These groups are terrified by the specter of impending environmental disaster, and loathe humanity because of that fear. Negative Population Growth takes a particularly gloomy view of the human race: "More people means more pollution, more sprawl, less green space, and even more demands on the earth's already overburdened resources."

These groups echo radical environmentalists who see humanity as a plague. Paul Watson, founder of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, declared humans to be the "AIDS of the earth." Yet Watson has his own TV show on Discovery. John Davis, editor of the Earth First! Journal, stated: "Human beings have no more value as species than slugs."

Their fear-mongering is echoed by willing partners in the mainstream media. New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman titled his July 7 column "The Earth is Full." The Los Angeles Times Editorial Board titled a May 15 op-ed "Defusing the Population Bomb." The Los Angeles Times also published a July 21 op-ed coauthored by Mary Ellen Harte and Anne Ehrlich (wife of Paul Ehrlich), which argued that "Perpetual [human population] growth is the creed of a cancer cell, not a sustainable human society."

CNN has proven especially willing to promote overpopulation hysteria. In 2009, CNN's Jack Cafferty warned of an "unsustainable" population of 9 billion and declared that "at some point there's not going to be enough stuff for everybody." Another 2009 CNN report highlighted two studies claiming that "money spent on contraception is about five times more efficient [in protecting the environment] than money spent on clean-energy technologies." In November 2010, Joy Behar concurred with a guest who compared having a large family to "littering."

CNN.com even posted a "Student News Learning Activity" on its website to educate children about the supposed consequences of overpopulation.

CNN's shilling for the anti-population lobby is not surprising, considering CNN founder Ted Turner's unabashed support for the cause of population control. Turner, who has five children, has spoken favorably of China's notorious one-child-per-family policy.

Left-wing media outlets are more hysterical in promoting the anti-population message. Mother Jones' Julia Whitty composed a piece in 2010 with the conspiratorial subheading "What unites the Vatican, lefties, conservatives, environmentalists, and scientists in a conspiracy of silence? Population." In August 2011, Daily Kos blogger Jon Stafford ranted: "This will undoubtedly be met with accusations of callousness, but what we could really use is a global superplague."

Panic over population growth is not a new phenomenon. Anglican clergyman and thinker Thomas Malthus, in 1798, called for extreme measures to reduce human population in his Essay on the Principle of Population (World population was below 1 billion in 1798.): "Instead of recommending cleanliness to the poor, we should encourage contrary habits. In our towns we should make the streets narrower, crowd more people into the houses, and court the return of the plague. In the country, we should build our villages near stagnant pools, and particularly encourage settlements in all marshy and unwholesome situations." American biologist Paul Ehrlich echoed Malthus in his 1968 work The Population Bomb, which warned of mass starvation and environmental catastrophe due to overpopulation. (World population was below 3.6 billion in 1968.)

The dire warnings of Malthus and Ehrlich were proven spectacularly wrong. The New York Times stated as much in a 2003 editorial, noting that "population growth rates were plummeting." Birthrates are rapidly declining in the United States and throughout the world. And food production has increased dramatically over the past 40 years, as new methods of growing food and using resources are discovered.

But Ehrlich has refused to concede his predictions were wrong, and the media still quotes Ehrlich and raises the ghost of Malthus. On Oct. 17, economist and George Soros friend Jeffrey Sachs invoked Malthus in a piece bemoaning overpopulation on CNN.com. As recently as 2010, the New York Times quoted Ehrlich as a "population expert." And the Los Angeles Times favorably interviewed Ehrlich in February 2011.

Not everyone is as terrified of the overpopulation bogeyman as the media seems to be. Colin Mason, Director of Media for the Population Research Institute, explained to BMI why fears of overpopulation are unfounded: "Historically, as human population has grown and developed technology, the manner in which we use resources has changed. For instance, as human population has grown, we have needed to produce enough food to feed our burgeoning numbers. But as our civilizations have developed, we have also developed ways of increasing crop yield, and of growing crops on previously infertile land." A series of videos produced by PRI illustrate their argument that the earth is not overpopulated.

Attempts to curb population growth carry with them a heavy economic price. Social programs such as Social Security and Medicare depend upon having enough workers to pay into the system. If too few children are born to replace retiring workers, these programs eventually collapse.

The 2008 documentary "Demographic Winter: Decline of the Human Family" detailed numerous negative economic and social consequences for declining populations. Mason concurred, telling BMI: "The negative economic and social consequences of birth control are almost too numerous to mention."

But anti-population journalists and environmentalists ignore these voices, and instead promote radical "solutions" to the "problem" of overpopulation. In 2007, an Australian medical expert called for a tax on people who have more than 2 children. In 2009, Canadian journalist Diane Francis was more draconian; she called for China's one-child-per-family policy to be implemented everywhere.

Others have called for even more radical solutions. Steven Kotler, in a 2009 blog post for Psychology Today, urged all adults to stop having children for 5 years. In 2007, Paul Watson advocated for the Earth's population to be reduced to 1 billion. And in an August 2011 interview with left-wing media outlet Alternet, Lierre Keith, Derrick Jensen, and Aric McBay called for an end to human civilization itself.

The environmentalist worldview is haunted by the terrifying prospect of human achievement. Environmentalists see people as consumers of scarce resources, neglecting the fact that human beings are inventors and producers as well.

But their efforts are hypocritical. Groups and individuals calling for an end to population growth still consume the world's scarce resources and utilize modern technology in their attempts to get others to reduce their population growth.

They want to make sure future generations don't have the opportunity to do the same.

About the Author

Paul Wilson is the Joe and Betty Anderlik Fellow in Culture and Media for the Media Research Center's Culture & Media Institute and Business & Media Institute. Click here to follow Paul Wilson on Twitter.
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Comments

They have to make it a boogeyman

Submitted by merly1 on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 8:54am.

because it throws water all over their AGW hysteria. Mankind and plant life/harvest continue to break
all records in this era of "rising atmospheric CO2." Thus, for the unfortunate MSM--> do we act concerned about it all, or should we give Nobel prizes to those people deemed responsible for alleged AGW/global warming? The MSM is in one tough spot with these continued upward UN population revisions.
Alas, the media has chosen the hysteria angle at a time life is booming! Does anybody else notice the AGW crowd seems to run with the proabortion crowd. They are an anti-life bunch to be sure. Watch or read "The Road" to see what a global cooling phase would mean to all of us.

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"The Road" was a harsh lesson

Submitted by johnsonl on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 9:00am.

in how nature can control populations. An epidemic could achieve the same results. We aren't as invinceable as we think we are. Our population used to be controlled by the weather and the harvest, before the industrial revolution.

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I fully agree.

Submitted by merly1 on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 9:21am.

The next prolonged Global cooling phase will likely cause worldwide unrest, especially in a nuclear weapon age. That is what we should fear......
This faux concern about the warming of recent millenia is baffling, ie truly more people, each living far longer lives-- at least in industrialized countries, with better standard of livings. The MSM pushing the fear of alleged AGW would be similar to push MSM pushing fear of Salk and the polio vaccine, or Jobs and the computer revolution. And the media wonders in their cartoon bubble--"why dont the masses share our concern."
They really are dense.

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Here's an idea.

Submitted by johnsonl on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 8:57am.

We could stop feeding the third world and let the population shrink back to a level that the available arable land will support.
Perhaps then the third world could concentrate on elevating themselves to our level.
Or, they could remain as they are, should they choose to do so.
We need to start looking to our own needs as a nation.
We must have energy independence.
We must seal our borders, put a moratorium on new immigration, eject illegal aliens and deport those who would harm us.
We must not allow any religion that advocates or accepts violence against another religion. That means Islam.
Internationally, we must reward our friends, keep our enemies at bay and take a hard look at foreign aid. All foreign aid should be suspended and reviewed.

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How can we have 7 billion

Submitted by motherbelt on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 8:58am.

How can we have 7 billion people???

Weren't we supposed to lose half the world's population to starvation by 2000?

And yes, in spite of being wrong, Paul (The Population Bomb) Ehrlich is sill at it. 

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The Self-serving Left

Submitted by scottyusmc on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 8:59am.

Of course, the left is concerned. They are the first to realize that the world cannot sustain a carbon footprint the size of Al Gore's times 7-billion. The liberal elites want a few (the likes of Gore, Soros, etc.) to live in opulent consumption on the backs of the rest of us while also sustaining their pristine earthly playground. Just look at how many places around the world are restricted to only the ultra-rich from politicians to their court-jesters and useful idiots in the celebrity community.

However, it is possible for 7-billion people to live in comfort on this planet, if we are allowed to continue to develop the resources provided by the earth to support human life…

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Don't worry. Progressive economic policy will solve this.

Submitted by JohnMcGrew on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 9:00am.

Most of the population growth is occurring in the non-affluent nations which are subsidized by the affluent western nations through subsidized food and technology transfers. As the Progressive/socialist AGW agenda mainly targets the western nations, eventually out affluence will decline to the point to where we will no longer feel as though we live in surplus, and we will only be able/willing to feed ourselves.

It will not be pretty.

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No, it will not.

Submitted by johnsonl on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 9:02am.

Had we the foresight to do so, we would not have become the world's bread basket.

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But when we no longer make enough bread...

Submitted by JohnMcGrew on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 10:13am.

...either because of environmental policy makes doing so impossible or economic policy which makes doing so undesirable, people here will no longer give a damn about starving people elsewhere.

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...and rightly so.

Submitted by johnsonl on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 1:46pm.

As noted below, everyone who is concerned with feeding everyone else before them can contribute their life first. I'll keep mine. Had anyone bothered to ask me before sending food to other countries, my answer would have been "no".

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In America

Submitted by misterbee241 on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 9:00am.

since 1973 we have killed something like 50 million people by abortion. what's the problem - we're not moving fast enough for the enviro-wackos?

If you're not getting flak, you're not over the target.
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Feeding seven billon people

Submitted by LAM SON 719 on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 10:27am.

Feeding seven billon people is far too large an undertaking for governments, private industry or charities, only the OWS central committee is up the challenge.
Step forth I say and utilize the power of your $5500 Mac to its fullest and feed the world.

Non, je ne regrette rien. "You aren't angry because I might be a racist, you're angry because you know I'm right".
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Lam Son, you forgot,

Submitted by UpNorth on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 11:04am.

it's a stolen $5500 Mac.

And, I agree, only the brilliant minds at OWS Central can figure out how to feed that many people.

To re-elect Obama would be like the Titanic backing up and hitting the iceberg again.
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As of today, OWS has a half a million dollars.

Submitted by johnsonl on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 1:50pm.

The contributions continue to pour in as we speak and guess what? IT'S NOT BEING REDISTRIBUTED TO THE PEOPLE WHO NEED IT, NAMELY THE PROTESTORS!

Where have we seen this before? Capitalism, perhaps? Has OWS become what they protesteth too much?

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Feed 'em and then watch 'em

Submitted by ant on Wed, 10/26/2011 - 1:25am.

Feed 'em and then watch 'em die from food-borne illnesses. Hippies aren't too good with that sanitary food prep thingy. Checked out some info once on a "Rainbow Gathering" that took place in Mexico, didn't sound like much fun, especially when your bathroom is a communal trench.

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The flow of oil and electrons, support most of the population.

Submitted by upcountrywater on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 11:06am.

Unless some serous energy production increases occur, no way will the population will double, by 2100.
iran will send a rusty ship on a one way trip loaded with an air-burst A-bomb and reduce American population, and the lefties will cheer.

You Didn't Build That.

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These people are psychotic!

Submitted by CobraMan on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 1:08pm.

These people are psychotic! They all want to maximize the population of ever species on earth, except their own! Save the Spotted Owl, kill the humans!

Hay, idiots, there's no such thing as "over population." When any species becomes as successful as our own, the entire exosphere benefits, as geological history has shown time and time again. This is because when a single species become this successful, is able to take advantage of just about every climate and environment on earth, many other species will evolve to take advantage of that success. Eventually every species will benefit, all thanks to the success of one single species. That's how evolution works, remember?

That one single species of fish crawled out of the ocean and "over populated" the barren land and, because of that, here we are today. I would think that "environmentalists" would understand that basic principle of life. But, no, they don't understand, at all. Thank "Gaia" that those original fish didn't have the equivalent of our "environmentalists," for, if they had, reptiles and mammals would have never existed.

The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States. The US Constitution

Unless you're a fetus. The US Supreme Court

Or Anwar al-Awlaki.

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Actually the Earth could hold a TRILLION people

Submitted by gopcongress on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 1:22pm.

Actually, the Earth could support a trillion people. Keep in mind that it seems as if the earth is crowded, but here is some basic math.

Let's take Texas. It has 268,820 square miles. Taking out water area (2.5%), then dividing by the world population of 7 billion, there is about 1,040 square feet per person. A decent sized suburban home (one story) would be about 1,600 square feet, with about 2,300 square feet of landscaping. (My house is actually very close to that, with ground floor square footage of 1,580 and landscape area of 2,100 sf).

So at 4 people per house, you can stick the entire world in the state of Texas. That includes the population of every country, every city, every nook and cranny of this planet.

Of course, adding in roads, infrastructure, etc, you can add the area of Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Nebraska, and Colorado. But the bottom line is that the entire planet could be human-free other than those few states, and everyone lives as comfortable as they do in a normal American suburban city.

So the planet is not getting too crowded. I just used Texas and normal suburban house sizes to give the stark, basic math about world population.

"The news and truth are not the same thing." -Walter Lippmann (1889-1974) FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER

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Then kill yourselves

Submitted by Model850 on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 1:36pm.

To all those fretting about the number of humans on the planet and advocating a reduction in population, please lead by example.

Go kill yourself and start the ball rolling.

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You first!

Submitted by johnsonl on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 1:52pm.

Set the example!

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Like the many feckless

Submitted by ThePickle on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 2:02pm.

Like the many feckless Liberal Millionaires and Billionaires that constantly beg the Government to tax Millionaires and Billionaires more, its is understood that they mean THE OTHER Millionaires and Billionaires should be taxed more NOT them.

And when these histrionic twits talk about humans dieing in plagues and through starvation they also mean THE OTHER humans on the planet NOT them.

They believe with all their hearts that THEY are the best and brightest so ANY plan to reduce the population with as a matter of course NOT include them.

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Ooh, what if

Submitted by panzerakc on Tue, 10/25/2011 - 1:10am.

that seven billionth birth is triplets?

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