Friday, August 14, 2015

Death rates over birth rates?

A visit this week from a good friend and colleague who is committed to consider population issues raised a delicate conversation here. My friend notes that population campaigners usually focus on finding means of reducing birth rates and that this focus often translates into attacks on people of the global majority (non-whites).

My friend proposes that the focus should therefore switch to death rates in the minority world (white/high consumption) as population pressures arise when the birth rate exceeds the death rate and, as far as he can see, there is no good reason not to think about how he might manage his own death with a view to minimizing his impact on the planet. Older people, he says, commonly soak up vast amounts of resource over a period of years in which they  may well suffer a poor quality of life (he is thinking about dementia) and he has no wish to be one of these.

It is a logic that I can follow especially after my recent reading of Sally Magnusson's compassionate book, When Memories Go - How Dementia Changes Everything

Anyhow, it is clear that this needs to be a personal decision (rather like signing a legal order that stipulates 'do not resusitate' before undergoing risky surgery) and it seems that my friend has made his choice.

It's a hot topic - the recent, self-directed death of Gill Pharoah has highlighted this. 

And, just this morning whilst driving in the wet, I heard a BBC news item on an expert report that wonders how we will cope with the so called food shocks caused by climate change (e.g. the massive shortage of world cereals due to the drought in Russia some years ago) given that population is set to increase by 60% by 2050 ... This seems relevant.

What do you think?





Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Selma


As an imigrant to the USA I am constantly (and delightedly) drawn to check out the history of this fantastic country. I have only the vaguest of details, the kind that slip across the Atlantic and appear in the popular mythology of "America" in the UK. Oh and then there is the understanding (in the UK at least) that the UK and the USA have a " special relationship" - I'll come back to that in a future post.

History in the USA* is complex, of course, and just like everywhere it depends who is telling it. For example the film Selma that is currently in the news seems to repeat the story line, Rosa Parks sat down, Martin Luther Jnr. stood up and then the white folks from the North came down South and sorted things out.

Hmm, I think I need to look a little deeper...

Thanks be then, that Common Dreams has this article posted today - Ten Things You Should Know About Selma Before You See the Film, By Emilye Crosby, professor of history at SUNY Geneseo and editor of Civil Rights History from the Ground Up

The article is also flagged by the Zinn Education Project, another source of deeper USA history that I use.

* I am using USA here, not America or the US as a) my Latin friends tell me that they briddle under the yoke of domination that is embedded in the habit US'ers have of defining themselves as the Americans as if no other Americans exist in the south or the north and b) Mexico is also a united states (Estados Unidos de Mexico) so using US is not specific enough.

Reconnecting with my blog

It's a couple of years since I worked in here and it's well past time to get going again. My motives are to find away around some kind of personal block that interferes with my capacity to get my thinking and the thinking of others whose approach I like (or whose approach stimulates some creative thinking for me) out into the world for comment and consideration.

I am sure other people get stuck with the same issue and, whilst there is a host of information out there on the web about 'how to blog' there is a gap when it comes to finding personal allies.

Anyway, I am dealing with one technical issue - learning to touch type. This skill has eluded me for the past several years even though I have attemtped to learn it several times. Now I am dedicating an hour a day, 5 days a week to practicing with a) Typing Club (the free version) which I like a lot and also with b) Duolingo as I also learn Spanish (another longe term goal.

That's a trip, deciding not to focus on posting content until my skills are up to it ...