I have two grandchildren and I want them to inherit a stable Earth. But I fear for them.
Humans have overpopulated the Earth and in the process have created an ideal nutritional
substrate on which bacteria and viruses (microbes) will grow and prosper. We are behaving
like bacteria growing on an agar plate, flourishing until natural limits are reached or until
another microbe colonizes and takes over, using them as their resource. In addition to our
extremely high population density, we are social and mobile, exactly the conditions that favor
growth and spread of pathogenic (disease-causing) microbes. I believe it is only a matter of
time until microbes once again assert control over our population, since we are unwilling to
control it ourselves. This idea has been espoused by ecologists for at least four decades and
is nothing new. People just don't want to hear it.
Population crashes caused by disease have happened many times in the past. In the 1330s bubonic
plague killed one third of the people in Europe's crowded cities. Smallpox and measles decimated
Native Americans when Europeans transported them to the new world. HIV is a relatively new disease
wreaking havoc in Africa and Asia. Another population crash is inevitable, but the next one will
probably be world-wide.
People think unrealistically because they have lost touch with the natural world. Many people
today do not really know where and how our food is produced, and on what our life support systems
are based. As we continue paving over natural habitats, many think that we can disrupt and despoil
the environment indefinitely. We have already taken half of this planet's land surface. Per capita
shares of all the things that really matter (air, food, soil, and water) are continuously falling.
Our economic system is based on the principle of a chain letter: growth, growth, and more growth.
Such runaway growth only expands a bubble that cannot be sustained in a finite world. We are
running out of virtually everything from oil, food and land to clean air and water.
Some politicians, economists, and corporations want us to believe that technology will come
to our rescue. But we have a false sense of security if we think that science can respond quickly
enough to minimize threats from emerging diseases. Microbes have such short lifecycles that they
can evolve exceedingly fast, much faster than we can respond to them. Many bacteria have evolved
resistance to most antibiotics, and viruses are resistant to just about anything. Defense always
lags behind offense. So far, modern humans have just been lucky. A reactive approach to problems
isn't enough, we also need to be proactive and anticipate problems before they become too severe
to keep them from getting out of control.Many people believe that Earth and all its resources exist
solely for human benefit and consumption, this is anthropocentrism. We should allow the millions
of other denizens of this Earth some space to live -- they evolved here just as we did and have a
right to this planet, too.
I do not bear any ill will toward humanity. However, I am convinced that the world WOULD clearly
be much better off without so many of us. Simply stopping the destruction of rainforests would help
mediate some current planetary ills, including the release of previously unknown pathogens. The
ancient Chinese curse "may you live in interesting times" comes to mind -- we are living in one of
the most interesting times humans have ever experienced. For example, consider the manifold effects
of global warming. We need to make a transition to a sustainable world. If we don't, nature is going
to do it for us in ways of her own choosing. By definition, these ways will not be ours and they
won't be much fun. Think about that.
If you don't believe me, read Richard Heinberg's "The Party's Over," Sean Nee's one page commentary
"The Great Chain of Being" in Nature (2005, vol.435:page 429), and Jared Diamond's "Guns, Germs, and Steel."
Sean Nee's The Great Chain of Being.
Verlyn Klinkenborg's Depth of Time.
Homer Smith's Cosmic Perspective.
Eric Pianka's views on Space Travel.
David Delaney's Website.
Download text of The Vanishing Book of Life,
the now infamous speech I have given many times (16.8 meg pdf file)