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John Lennon was right about overpopulation
LifeSiteNews ^ | 7/1/15 | John Stonestreet

Posted on 07/02/2015 7:39:48 AM PDT by wagglebee

(Breakpoint) - In a 1971 appearance on the Dick Cavett Show, John Lennon and wife Yoko Ono gave their take on the big scare of the day: overpopulation.

“I don't really believe it,” Lennon said in his Beatle-esque Liverpool accent. “I think whatever happens will balance itself out...It's alright for us all living to say, 'Well, there's enough of us [people] so we won't have any more...I don't believe in that.”

It was a counter-cultural statement—even for the voice of the counterculture. Back then, all of the experts were warning that our planet couldn't take much more. And no one sounded that alarm more loudly than Dr. Paul Ehrlich, the Stanford biologist behind the explosive bestseller, “The Population Bomb.”

“The battle to feed all of humanity is over,” Ehrlich announced on the opening page of his book, forecasting “an utter breakdown in the capacity of the planet to support humanity,” resulting in starvation for hundreds of millions. Half of Americans would die by the end of the eighties, he said; India and China would self-destruct, and by the year 2000, England wouldn't exist. “Sometime in the next 15 years,” Ehrlich confidently predicted the year before Lennon's Dick Cavett appearance, “the end will come.”

Well it’s forty-five years later, and we have twice the number of people Ehrlich said would exceed the earth's carrying capacity. The end has not come, and England mysteriously still exists.

In a surprising and honest move, the New York Times ran a piece this month debunking the horrors of overpopulation. A video attached with the article features Stewart Brand, a former disciple of Ehrlich's who’s now a critic, and who helped popularize his theory and played a major role in pushing for population control in the sixties and seventies.

In the video, Brand acknowledges that “The concerns about population became misanthropic.” He pointed out that people took Ehrlich seriously when he suggested lacing public water with anti-fertility drugs.

Along with Ehrlich, Brand led a movement of Americans who took to heart his call for “a system of incentives and penalties,” to reduce childbearing, even “by compulsion if voluntary methods fail.” Ehrlich and his followers proposed “responsibility prizes” for childless marriages, a steep tax on families with more than three children, even a “blacklist of people, companies, and organizations impeding population control.”

But it was in other parts of the world where the idea behind Ehrlich's book really took root. Throughout the 70s, the Indian government undertook a program of population control that saw more than eight million women surgically sterilized. Untold numbers of these procedures were forced, and many resulted in death. The patients, in the words of one Indian family-planning official, “were treated like cattle.” And China, with its infamous One Child Policy, took even more drastic measures.

None of this defused the population bomb, though. What did, argues Brand, were advances in agriculture and economics in developing nations—advances Ehrlich could have never foreseen, and which his worldview precluded. And so today, despite an increase of four billion people, fewer people today suffer from extreme poverty or hunger than when Ehrlich wrote the book.

Explaining Ehrlich's failed prediction, Indian Economist Gita Sen told The Times, “There's a tendency to apply to human beings the same sort of models that may apply for the insect world.” The difference? We’re not insects. “[H]uman beings are conscious beings, and we do all kinds of things to change our destiny.”

Of course, what Sen calls “destiny,” we Christians would call providence. And part of God’s control is exhibited in the creativity and innovation humans are just so good at—and which can be used for evil, but can also be used for good. In short, Christians see human beings as image bearers, not insects. And ironically, sometimes it takes the voice of a Beatle to remind us of that.

Reprinted with permission from Breakpoint


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: eugenics; johnlennon; moralabsolutes; populationcontrol; prolife
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To: Mase
All these years later, society - thanks to our failed system of public education - is familiar with the likes of Paul Ehrlich and Rachel Carson, but knows little about capitalism, and nothing about men like Norman Borlaug.

People may be familiar with Rachel Carson, but few realize that her bogus research (which even National Geographic has disavowed) has resulted in nearly 100 million deaths and growing each year.

61 posted on 07/02/2015 11:05:53 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: Bob434
Did you bother to actually read what Lennon said about overpopulation?
62 posted on 07/02/2015 11:06:39 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee

did you bother to read my replys to people who pointed out he was against the idea of overpopulation? I explained I was mistaken- please read my previous statements


63 posted on 07/02/2015 11:12:15 AM PDT by Bob434
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To: wagglebee
Wow Alex, I almost never get a compliment from you!

And ironically, I'm unable to use the word "almost" with regards to your own posts.

64 posted on 07/02/2015 11:13:56 AM PDT by Alex Murphy ("the defacto Leader of the FR Calvinist Protestant Brigades")
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To: Bob434
I see them now, I hadn't gone to the second page yet.
65 posted on 07/02/2015 11:14:18 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: Alex Murphy
Please explain...
66 posted on 07/02/2015 11:15:26 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee
A video attached with the article features Stewart Brand, a former disciple of Ehrlich's who’s now a critic,

What? Stewart Brand is still alive?

67 posted on 07/02/2015 12:49:49 PM PDT by Albion Wilde ("We've seen this before. There's a master race. Now there's a master faith." Benjamin Netanyahu)
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To: BeadCounter
The unfortunate thing is that Paul Ehrlich has been around since the ‘60s saying these things, a Stanford Professor, I’d think the University shares some blame for keeping this hack.

Totally agree. I am sure that he has been tenured forever but they could push him towards retirement. Has any prominent individual every been more consistently wrong in his public predictions?

68 posted on 07/02/2015 3:25:26 PM PDT by CommerceComet (Ignore the GOP-e. Cruz to victory in 2016.)
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