Overpopulation: The Fallacy Behind The Fallacy Of Global Warming

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Guest essay by Dr. Tim Ball

Global Warming was just one issue The Club of Rome (TCOR) targeted in its campaign to reduce world population. In 1993 the Club’s co-founder, Alexander King with Bertrand Schneider wrote The First Global Revolution stating,

“The common enemy of humanity is man. In searching for a new enemy to unite us, we came up with the idea that pollution, the threat of global warming, water shortages, famine and the like would fit the bill. All these dangers are caused by human intervention, and it is only through changed attitudes and behavior that they can be overcome. The real enemy then, is humanity itself.”

They believe all these problems are created by humans but exacerbated by a growing population using technology. Changed attitudes and behavior basically means what it has meant from the time Thomas Malthus raised the idea the world was overpopulated. He believed charity and laws to help the poor were a major cause of the problem and it was necessary to reduce population through rules and regulations. TCOR ideas all ended up in the political activities of the Rio 1992 conference organized by Maurice Strong (a TCOR member) under the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

The assumptions and objectives became the main structure of Agenda 21, the master plan for the 21st Century. The global warming threat was confronted at Rio through the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and creation of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). It was structured to predetermine scientific proof that human CO2 was one contribution of the common enemy.

The IPCC was very successful. Despite all the revelations about corrupted science and their failed predictions (projections) CO2 remains central to global attention about energy and environment. For example, several websites, many provided by government, list CO2 output levels for new and used cars. Automobile companies work to build cars with lower CO2 output and, if for no other reason than to appear green, use it in advertising. The automotive industry, which has the scientists to know better, collectively surrenders to eco-bullying about CO2. They are not alone. They get away with it because they pass on the unnecessary costs to a befuddled “trying to do the right thing” population.

TCOR applied Thomas Malthus’s claim of a race to exhaustion of food to all resources. Both Malthus and COR believe limiting population was mandatory. Darwin took a copy of Malthus’s Essay on Population with him and remarked on its influence on his evolutionary theory in his Beagle journal in September 1838. The seeds of distortion about overpopulation were sown in Darwin’s acceptance of Malthus’s claims.

Paul Johnson’s biography of Charles Darwin comments on the contradiction between Darwin’s scientific methods and his acceptance of their omission in Malthus.

Malthuss aim was to discourage charity and reform the existing poor laws, which, he argued, encourage the destitute to breed and so aggravated the problem. That was not Darwins concern. What struck him was the contrast between geometrical progression (breeding) and arithmetical progression (food supplies). Not being a mathematician he did not check the reasoning and accuracy behind Malthus’s law in fact, Malthus’s law was nonsense. He did not prove it. He stated it. What strikes one reading Malthus is the lack of hard evidence throughout. Why did this not strike Darwin? A mystery. Malthuss only proof was the population expansion of the United States.

There was no point at which Malthuss geometrical/arithmetical rule could be made to square with the known facts. And he had no reason whatsoever to extrapolate from the high American rates to give a doubling effect every 25 years everywhere and in perpetuity.

He swallowed Malthusianism because it fitted his emotional need, he did not apply the tests and deploy the skepticism that a scientist should. It was a rare lapse from the discipline of his profession. But it was an important one.

Darwin’s promotion of Malthus undoubtedly gave the ideas credibility they didn’t deserve. Since then the Malthusian claim has dominated science, social science and latterly environmentalism. Even now many who accept the falsity of global warming due to humans continue to believe overpopulation is a real problem.

Overpopulation was central in all TCOR’s activities. Three books were important to their message, Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb (1968) and Ecoscience: Population, Resources and Environment (1977) co-authored with John Holdren, Obama’s Science Czar, and Meadows et al., Limits to Growth, published in 1972 that anticipated the IPCC approach of computer model predictions (projections). The latter wrote

If the present growth trends in world population, industrialization, pollution, food production, and resource depletion continue unchanged, the limits to growth on this planet will be reached sometime within the next one hundred years.

Here is what the TCOR web site says about the book.

They created a computing model which took into account the relations between various global developments and produced computer simulations for alternative scenarios. Part of the modelling were different amounts of possibly available resources, different levels of agricultural productivity, birth control or environmental protection.

They estimated the current amount of a resource, determined the rate of consumption, and added an expanding demand because of increasing industrialization and population growth to determine, with simple linear trend analysis, that the world was doomed.

Economist Julian Simon challenged TCOR and Ehrlich’s assumptions.

In response to Ehrlich’s published claim that “If I were a gambler, I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000” – a proposition Simon regarded as too silly to bother with – Simon countered with “a public offer to stake US$10,000 … on my belief that the cost of non-government-controlled raw materials (including grain and oil) will not rise in the long run.

Simon proposed,

You could name your own terms: select any raw material you wanted – copper, tin, whatever – and select any date in the future, “any date more than a year away,” and Simon would bet that the commodity’s price on that date would be lower than what it was at the time of the wager.

John Holdren selected the materials and the time. Simon won the bet.

Global warming used the idea that CO2 would increase to harmful levels because of increasing industrialization and expanding populations. The political manipulation of climate science was linked to development and population control in various ways. Here are comments from a PBS interview with Senator Tim Wirth in response to the question, What was it in the late 80s, do you think, that made the issue [of global warming] take off? He replied,

I think a number of things happened in the late 1980s. First of all, there were the [NASA scientist Jim] Hansen hearings [in 1988]. … We had introduced a major piece of legislation. Amazingly enough, it was an 18-part climate change bill; it had population in it, conservation, and it had nuclear in it. It had everything that we could think of that was related to climate change. … And so we had this set of hearings, and Jim Hansen was the star witness.

Wikipedia says about Wirth,

In the State Department, he worked with Vice President Al Gore on global environmental and population issues, supporting the administration’s views on global warming. A supporter of the proposed Kyoto Protocol Wirth announced the U.S.’s commitment to legally binding limits on greenhouse gas emissions.

Gore chaired the 1988 “Hansen” Senate Hearing and was central to the promotion of population as basic to all other problems. He led the US delegation to the September 1994 International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo Egypt.

That conference emerged from Rio 1992 where they linked population to all other supposed problems.

Explicitly integrating population into economic and development strategies will both speed up the pace of sustainable development and poverty alleviation and contribute to the achievement of population objectives and an improved quality of life of the population.

This theme was central to Rio+20 held in June 2012 and designed to re-emphasize Rio 1992.

The Numbers

The world is not overpopulated. That fallacy is perpetuated in all environmental research, policy and planning including global warming and latterly climate change. So what are the facts about world population?

The US Census Bureau provides a running estimate of world population. It was 6,994,551,619 on February 15, 2012. On October 30, 2011 the UN claimed it passed 7 billion; the difference is 5,448,381. This is more than the population of 129 countries of the 242 listed by Wikipedia. It confirms most statistics are crude estimates, especially those of the UN who rely on individual member countries, yet no accurate census exists for any of them

Population density is a more meaningful measure. Most people are concentrated in coastal flood plains and deltas, which are about 5 percent of the land. Compare Canada, the second largest country in the world with approximately 35.3 million residents estimated in 2013 with California where an estimated 37.3 million people lived in 2010. Some illustrate the insignificance of the density issue by putting everyone in a known region. For example, Texas at 7,438,152,268,800 square feet divided by the 2012 world population 6,994,551,619 yields 1063.4 square feet per person. Fitting all the people in an area is different from them being able to live there. Most of the world is unoccupied by humans.

Population geographers separate ecumene, the inhabited area, from non-ecumene the uninhabited areas. The distribution of each changes over time because of technology, communications and food production capacity. Many of these changes deal with climate controls. Use of fire and clothing allowed survival in colder regions, while irrigation offset droughts and allowed settlement in arid regions. Modern environmentalists would likely oppose all of these touted evolutionary advances.

Ironically The Fallacious Problem is The Solution

It all sounds too familiar in the exploitation of science for a political and personal agenda. But there is an even bigger tragedy because the development the TCOR and IPCC condemn is actually the solution.

All of the population predictions Ehrlich and others made were wrong, but more important and damning was they ignored another pattern that was identified in 1929 and developed over the same period as the Mathusian claims. It is known as the Demographic Transition.

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It shows and statistics confirm, population declines as nations industrialize and the economy grows. It is so dramatic in developed countries that the population pyramid results in insufficient young people to support the massively expensive social programs for the elderly. Some countries offset this with migration, but they are simply creating other problems. Countries that don’t allow or severely limit migration such as Japan face completely different problems. Some countries offer incentives for having more than two children, such as the announcement by Vladimir Putin in Russia. China took draconian, inhuman, steps by limiting families to one child. The irony, although there is nothing funny about it, is they are now the largest producer of CO2 and their economy booms. If they had simply studied the demographic transition and let things take a normal course the tragedies already incurred and yet to unfold could have been avoided.

The world is not overpopulated. Malthus began the idea suggesting the population would outgrow the food supply. Currently food production is believed sufficient to feed 25 billion people and growing. The issue is that in the developing world some 60 percent of production never makes it to the table. Developed nations cut this figure to 30 percent primarily through refrigeration. In their blind zeal those who brought you the IPCC fiasco cut their teeth on the technological solution to this problem – better and cheaper refrigeration. The CFC/ ozone issue was artificially created to ban CFCs and introduce global control through the Montreal Protocol. It, like the Kyoto Protocol was a massive, expensive, unnecessary solution to a non-existent problem.

TCOR and later UNEP’s Agenda 21 adopted and expanded the Malthusian idea of overpopulation to all resources making it the central tenet of all their politics and policies. The IPCC was set up to assign the blame of global warming and latterly climate change on human produced CO2 from an industrialized expanding population. They both developed from false assumptions, used manipulated data and science, which they combined into computer models whose projections were, not surprisingly, wrong. The result is the fallacy of global warming due to human CO2 is a subset built on the fallacy of overpopulation.

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phlogiston
January 5, 2014 7:09 pm

China’s one child policy has some positive consequences:
– The attention that children receive from parents and grandparents is very high – this is good for children’s psychological wellbeing;
– Only the very rich can afford multliple children. This is a kind of eugenics improving the intelligence of the population, even if only slightly. Politically naughty but maybe beneficial.
These factors may explain some of China’s spectacular success in improving its people’s standard of living. Siblings are over-rated.

Barry Cullen
January 5, 2014 7:10 pm

Let the people promoting this over population silliness be the first to go.
All the information needed to see the evolution of improvement of the human condition can be found at gapminder.org (try this one first; http://www.gapminder.org/world/#$majorMode=chart$is;shi=t;ly=2003;lb=f;il=t;fs=11;al=30;stl=t;st=t;nsl=t;se=t$wst;tts=C$ts;sp=6.80645161290323;ti=2011$zpv;v=0$inc_x;mmid=XCOORDS;iid=phAwcNAVuyj1gkNuUEXOGag;by=ind$inc_y;mmid=YCOORDS;iid=0AkBd6lyS3EmpdHo5S0J6ekhVOF9QaVhod05QSGV4T3c;by=ind$inc_s;uniValue=8.21;iid=phAwcNAVuyj0XOoBL_n5tAQ;by=ind$inc_c;uniValue=255;gid=CATID0;by=grp$map_x;scale=log;dataMin=0.0001;dataMax=252$map_y;scale=log;dataMin=55;dataMax=108111$map_s;sma=49;smi=2.65$cd;bd=0$inds= )
I think the info available at gapminder successfully blows both the old and new doomcasters fantasies out of the water.

Robin W.
January 5, 2014 7:14 pm

I am shocked by how few people, including skeptics,know about UN Agenda 21. More exposure is needed about the way it’s sneaking into local councils etc via the excuse of “sustainable development ” ,I shudder every time I see or hear the phrase. Exposure would put all the CAGW nonsense into context for people.
If I mention Agenda 21 to folks I’m regarded as being nuts because they think that surely the UN wouldn’t propose such things…would they?

Berényi Péter
January 5, 2014 7:16 pm

DirkH says:
January 5, 2014 at 7:02 pm
You mean the NSA will cease to exist?

It depends on you, guys. I am certainly on the opinion that all secret services should be abolished ASAP. They are good for nothing except circumventing the law, erasing freedom &. making trouble. A well regulated police force subject to constitutional control can do a much better job.

Mike
January 5, 2014 7:16 pm

Bob Greene said:
“Population control to reduce poverty? How would you do it? I believe we’ve had enough failed eugenics policies over the past century or so.”
Where is the ‘like’ button!

William Astley
January 5, 2014 7:18 pm

In reply to:
DirkH says:
January 5, 2014 at 6:40 pm
Dirk says: If there were less people there would be less demand for work. Your argument doesn’t hold.
William: Why? Provide logic to back up your point. Are you asserting that when the population increases there are more jobs? You are confusing consumption and demand with the number of people in a country. Spain has unemployment of 40%. Are saying the solution to the Spanish unemployment problem is an increase in population? More immigrants from Africa? Clearly that would only increase the number of people on welfare in Spain. Unemployment occurs when there are too many people looking for too few jobs.
Dirk says: Unemployment is not caused by a specific level of technology – though technological improvements enforce change that causes suffering for those who are made redundant. See the Luddites. Unemployment is mostly caused by policies that make being unemployed attractive. See Sweden before they reformed their welfare state somewhat. (Currently they are importing and nurturing a new unemployment problem; but that is in the nature of Social Democrats)
William: I do not disagree that technology can improve living standards. The problem is the high paying US and developed country jobs are moving to Asia, as there are very qualified Asians who will do the same job for less money. Supply and demand. We are having a race to the bottom.
The US has lost 33% of our manufacturing jobs. Now software and engineering jobs are moving to Asia. What is left?
There is a second problem. Balance of trade and tax revenue. The US and the other developed countries are losing the battle. The money is running out. All with the jobs that have been lost we have lost the tax revenue. The problem is not that there are not enough people in the US.
P.S. Yes I agree people must work. We must either compete with Asia or face economic collapse. There is no other options. A significantly higher minimum wage in Asia would help to create a level playing field and forced balanced trade.

January 5, 2014 7:20 pm

Steve B, letting some land lie fallow is the system Holland and England abandoned in favor of crop rotation. Crop rotation uses all the fields all the time, with different crops rotating through them. Hence the name: crop rotation.

mortis88
January 5, 2014 7:36 pm

Not to seem insensitive, but this is a quote from your link
Although the potato crop failed, the country was still producing and exporting more than enough grain crops to feed the population. Records show during the period Ireland was exporting approximately thirty to fifty shiploads per day of food produce. As a consequence of these exports and a number other factors such as land acquisition, absentee landlords and the effect of the 1690 penal laws, the Great Famine today is viewed by a number of historical academics as a form of either direct or indirect genocide.[8]

January 5, 2014 7:46 pm

bones, when I was a chem grad student I attended a seminar given by an oil geologist, who described current and coming technology. He ended on a bleak note, warning we were running out of oil. He hoped that the faculty had good ideas for energy production because otherwise, in 10-15 years, we’d be in big trouble.
That seminar was quite a long while ago. Proven gas reserves are up two-fold since 1980. Our known oil reserves are about 2.5x higher now than they were then. Here’s a Julian Simon-like suggestion: oil will never become expensive. Neither will energy. Unless ideologues manage to squelch technology by deliberately regulating it into oblivion.

Phil
January 5, 2014 7:48 pm

Great article I’ve always been interested in world population and spent much of the past two decades involved in development and relief work in developing countries.
Some interesting things I’ve read.
1 Any country that ensures the majority of its women are educated untill the age of 15 ( ie 2-3 years of high school) with recuce it’s fertility rate to 2.4. (Ie close to parity)
2 The world population growth rate peaked in 1965/66 around 2.2% it is now down to aprox 1% with no signs or that turning around.
3. UN population figures I last checked (2012) had the world peaking at aprox 9.5 – 11.0 billion around 2090 – 2110 and then tapering off.
I wish rather than feeding peoples fears on this subject, the protagonists would realise that we have made huge improvements in peoples lives and while much more needs to be done we know what to do and need to just get on and do it!
Clean water, toilets, eduction, fighting malaria, it’s not rocket science but it has and will change the world.

Roger Dewhurst
January 5, 2014 7:50 pm

Put your brains into gear, all of you. The duty of a government is to obtain the best standard of living, on averge, inter alia, for its population. That means a balance between the productive capacity and the population leaving aside the fair distribution of wealth. The income distribution curve tends to be peaked without long tails in either direction. The standard of living means much more than the gross product per capita. It included crime, corruption or the absence thereof, individual freedom among many other things. When there are more jobs than people pay is good, crime is low and the standard of living tends to be high. When there are more people than jobs pay tends to be low and the income distribution curve has a long tail at the high end. Breeding to maximise population favours the wealthy but that is all. Eventually however the hoy polloi will rebel and slaughter the wealthy.

Bob
January 5, 2014 8:07 pm

I wonder if this man would have joined TCOR.

mortis88
January 5, 2014 8:10 pm

I wonder if this man would have joined TCOR.
I think you have it backwards.

MattS
January 5, 2014 8:11 pm

dbstealey,
“The ‘problem’ is that people want to live in choice places, and since there are not enough choice places, those places get crowded. But we live on a big, big planet, and we can easily produce enough food to feed everyone. Therefore, “overpopulation” is an invented non-problem. Want to avoid overpopulation? Then move to the boonies, and away from everyone. ‘Problem’ solved. But of course, new problems will appear.”
But what do you do when you move out to the boonies and away from everyone then find 10 years down the line that your isolated out of the way spot is now one of the choice places?

mortis88
January 5, 2014 8:13 pm

Apologies for the incomplete post
Josef Raddy says:
January 5, 2014 at 4:10 pm
There was no Great Famine ?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_famines
Not to seem insensitive, but this is a quote from your link
Although the potato crop failed, the country was still producing and exporting more than enough grain crops to feed the population. Records show during the period Ireland was exporting approximately thirty to fifty shiploads per day of food produce. As a consequence of these exports and a number other factors such as land acquisition, absentee landlords and the effect of the 1690 penal laws, the Great Famine today is viewed by a number of historical academics as a form of either direct or indirect genocide.[8]

michael hart
January 5, 2014 8:14 pm

Put some simple mathematics in a verbal argument, like Malthus did, and it somehow becomes more valid in many peoples mind. I think it is due to fear of mathematics. This opens the door to enslavement by other people with computer models. Frank Herbert understood this. Perhaps we are exceptional because computing power first became widely available in our lifetimes, but the problem needs addressing.

January 5, 2014 8:16 pm

There is a fallacy very well described by Dr. Tim Ball that man alone can not self-regulate the population, and there is the need to impose another family planning.
Just to confirm the arguments of Dr. Tim will put Brazil’s example that through urbanization and education, universal health program in five decades passed the fertility rate of 6.3 children per women in 1960 to 1.7 in 2013. At no time was taken a government family planning campaign, simply because the Catholic Church, very strong in Brazil, prevented the institutionalization of this type of public policy, couples itself adopted their own successful family planning.

Rud Istvan
January 5, 2014 8:27 pm

Dr. Ball, please familiarize yourself with the idea of carrying capacity. Then apply to the globally dominant species homo sapiens in all environments/ecosystems. Then apply inevitable resource limitations. I suggest using liquid transportation fuels as the limiting constraint.
You will find in the hard geophysical data a rather conclusive refutation of this Pollyanna post.
The issue to be engaged is not CAGW, nor even AGW. It is simply that we as an exploitative species soon loose the ability to annually produce enough fossil fuel to continue as before.

pwl
January 5, 2014 8:38 pm

If one thinks the planet is over populated please start the depopulation with yourself. Thanks for giving the rest of us who want to live the consideration of your going first to set the example.
#AfterYou

Berényi Péter
January 5, 2014 8:55 pm

Rud Istvan says:
January 5, 2014 at 8:27 pm
It is simply that we as an exploitative species soon loose the ability to annually produce enough fossil fuel to continue as before.

As an exploitative species we have lost the ability to put ever more horses on the streets of our cities as before. So what?
How Much Horse Manure Was Deposited on the Streets of New York City Before the Advent of the Automobile, and What Happened to It?
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dt0mk1b09NM&w=640&h=360]

January 5, 2014 8:55 pm

MattS says:
“But what do you do when you move out to the boonies and away from everyone then find 10 years down the line that your isolated out of the way spot is now one of the choice places?”
That’s one of the new problems, isn’t it? I guess then you will sell out the land you bought extremely cheaply because no one wanted it, and pocket $millions. Then move to the next out of the way place.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Rud Istvan says:
“The issue to be engaged is not CAGW, nor even AGW. It is simply that we as an exploitative species soon loose the ability to annually produce enough fossil fuel to continue as before.”
I generally agree with your posts, Rud, but that particular comment sounds very Malthusian.
Humans always manage. When the talk was ratcheting up about the end of fossil fuels, what happened? Fracking provided huge new sources of fossil fuels — so much so that the cost plunged. There are no shortages, and in fact, now the talk is about the US supplanting Saudi Arabia as the world’s top producer.
Here is how it works in the real world: we do not suddenly run out of fossil fuels. The supply slowly dwindles, and as it does, the price gradually rises. As the price rises, other alternative energy sources become cost competitive and begin to take the place of fossil fuels.
There is available energy, and there always will be. Also, the global population is forecasted to peak by around 2050, and gradually decline after that. There really is no emergency, so long as governments allow the free market to work.
But of course, there are forces in government that would prefer to constrain the availability of cheap energy, since that would cause the populace to squeal. Then the government — the original cause of the shortage — will step in, and proclaim that it is the savior, thus entrenching its bureaucrats in their job security. It is already happening: witness Obama’s promise to make energy prices skyrocket. There is no legitimate reason for that. But that is not to say there are not very self-serving reasons for the shortages that he, through his EPA, is causing.

n.n
January 5, 2014 9:03 pm

The world is not overpopulated, but it is underutilized.
That said, the population control protocols, especially elective abortion through lethal injection or dismemberment, represents an unprecedented denial of our inalienable right to life. There has never been a period in history where as many human lives were callously terminated and for nothing more than sex, money, ego, or convenience. Modern men and women are not only selfish but they are actual ghouls.
Oh, well. Whether it is devaluation of capital and labor through printed wealth in bubble economics, or devaluation of human life through classifying it as interchangeable and disposable throughout its evolution from conception to death in planned parenthood, we have embraced the Dodo Dynasty with a remarkable vigor.

January 5, 2014 9:08 pm

n.n,
That’s a fact, isn’t it? It is hard to believe how low our society has descended in a very short time. Truly, the most helpless creatures of all — those who depend on us completely to take care of them — are destroyed in the most vile ways imaginable. I still shudder to think about the Planned Parenthood doctor who killed thousands with his bare hands by literally twisting their heads off while they were alive. And he was just one out of thousands.
I sincerely hope that at some point there will be no-holds-barred retribution.

January 5, 2014 9:13 pm

Thanks Dr. Ball. This a very interesting article.
A couple of years ago I attended a lecture by a professor at Florida International University where he presented two other college professors from California that not only professed CAGW but overpopulation catastrophe and peak-oil, peak-food, peak-everything.
Afterwards, when I came out of the lecture hall I invited the two professors to kill themselves.
They would not oblige. I did not go back to FIU.

January 5, 2014 9:15 pm

Several points:
“Are you asserting that when the population increases there are more jobs? ”
I don’t know if he is, but I am. The model “fixed number of jobs, variable number of people, unemployment rate determined by the difference,” which you seem to have in the back of your mind, is wildly inconsistent with casual observation. From the American Revolution to the present, population has increased by about two orders of magnitude, from a bit under three million to a bit over 300 million. Yet during that period, the unemployment rate has been above ten percent for only about one year out of ten, always under unusual economic conditions. Can you seriously interpret that as two independent variables that just happen to move almost perfectly in sync for two hundred years?
So far as the claim that overpopulation is the cause of poverty, it doesn’t fit observation. Forty or fifty years ago, when population played the same role in public discourse that warming does now, I calculated population density by country to see what countries were most densely populated. The five top ones were two rich European countries (Belgium and the Netherlands) and three Asian countries in the process of becoming rich (Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore). Hong Kong, which didn’t make the list because it wasn’t a country, had about ten times the population density of Singapore, the densest on my list–and between then and now its per capita income passed that of the U.K. India and China had big populations but were also very large countries so did not have extraordinarily high density..
I should probably add that I’ve been part of this argument for a very long time. You can find a piece of mine from 1972 criticizing the then orthodox view that increased population was clearly a bad thing webbed at:
http://www.daviddfriedman.com/Academic/Laissez-Faire_In_Popn/L_F_in_Population.html
And I should probably add that I think Malthus is falsely claimed by the people who believe in the population problem and falsely attacked by those who don’t, neither of which seem to have read him. He made a prediction and it turned out to be wrong, but it wasn’t a prediction of catastrophic overpopulation.

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