Yeah but think what it would do to house prices.Having a few million, and even hundreds of millions of people would suck too.
Yeah but think what it would do to house prices.Having a few million, and even hundreds of millions of people would suck too.
...Ok, I want you to stop for a minute and make sure that you actually understand what those terms mean, because it looks very much like you don't fully grasp the scope or practical implications.I don't care if they are white or not, I want the human species to not go extinct. If we ever hit below 2.1 children per couple in terms of Earth's population, we are screwed. As Hawki mentioned.
If the human race is going to go extinct in a few hundred to thousand years why work, do your best at work, create, innovate, and etc.
Honestly, we'll probably be able to grow babies in artificial wombs in a few decades: there have already been notable successes with animals. That might increase the birth rate simply by saving women from having to go through pregnancy.I don't care if they are white or not, I want the human species to not go extinct. If we ever hit below 2.1 children per couple in terms of Earth's population, we are screwed. As Hawki mentioned.
1) Absolutely not. Of course conservatives would want (and easily succeed) to freak you out with that, because natalism is that the core of their religious/political/warmongering values (tribe big tribe strong wargh). The Earth is insanely populated, so if birth rates went below 2.1, population would simply slowly decrease, which would not be a bad thing. And it would decrease so slowly that there would be a lot of time for birth rates to vary again, many times, both ways. As birth rates do. We're far from THAT danger. It's like being in a burning building and freaking out because someone aims a glass of water at the fire and OH NOES WE WILL ALL DROWN SOMEOBODY STOP HIM.I don't care if they are white or not, I want the human species to not go extinct. If we ever hit below 2.1 children per couple in terms of Earth's population, we are screwed. As Hawki mentioned.
I agree, which is why I don't think sub-replacement levels can be attributed to a "lack of security." If anything, more security means fewer children.This will sometimes have an element of tradition, which may stem from high childhood mortality (got to keep banging them out because half won't make it). Children in these countries may be more economically useful, because they provide labour for the family. Also, low educational standards and relatively poor access to contraception. As these are steadily resolved, birth rates start falling.
I don't know where the line for "really tried" is when millions have been spent in some cases (see Hungary for instance). There's been individual cases of raising the TFR within a country, but there's never been a case (to my knowledge) when the TFR has dipped beneath 2.1, and subsequently returned to it.No-one's really tried to get the birth rate up in the West. Arguably, there's been little need when immigration is available and cheaper: why invest $$$ developing an adult when someone else can do it for you, and the finished article just turns up on the border? But it's also an issue of policy.
You're comparing the possibilty of going extinct in hundreds of years to the very real existential threats that face us RIGHT NOW.I don't care if they are white or not, I want the human species to not go extinct. If we ever hit below 2.1 children per couple in terms of Earth's population, we are screwed. As Hawki mentioned.
If the human race is going to go extinct in a few hundred to thousand years why work, do your best at work, create, innovate, and etc.
We may have gotten as low as ten thousand.Humans have been around for 200-300,000 years, we existed for 90% of that time with a population below 1 billion, let alone the 8 billion we have now.
The human race will go extinct no matter what we do. All species go extinct.If the human race is going to go extinct in a few hundred to thousand years why work, do your best at work, create, innovate, and etc.
As a fat bastard par excellence, I’m with you.The Limits of Self Love
Scholars and activists in the field of fat studies do not believe that there is an obesity-related health crisis at all.quillette.com
Is it that hard to agree that overweight/obese people should be treated with dignity, while also agreeing that excessive body fat is dangerous for health? Anyone?
Apparently not.
Nobody is saying that, just pointing out stuff like "In 1998, the National Institutes of Health lowered the overweight threshold from 27.8 to 25—branding roughly 29 million Americans as fat overnight" that's curiously missing from that Quillette article written by the National Review guyThe Limits of Self Love
Scholars and activists in the field of fat studies do not believe that there is an obesity-related health crisis at all.quillette.com
Is it that hard to agree that overweight/obese people should be treated with dignity, while also agreeing that excessive body fat is dangerous for health? Anyone?
Apparently not.
It literally quotes in the article itself the claim that weight stigma is the true cause of poor health for obese people, not the obesity itself.Nobody is saying that,
Which is a red herring. We can debate the limitations of BMI all we want, that isn't the crux of the argument. The crux of the argument is that obesity isn't really an issue, which, if true, would go against the consensus of scientific data.just pointing out stuff like "In 1998, the National Institutes of Health lowered the overweight threshold from 27.8 to 25—branding roughly 29 million Americans as fat overnight" that's curiously missing from that Quillette article written by the National Review guy
I don't know what conference you'r taking about. Here's the actual quotes:But it's mostly just whining about a conference that *did* talk about exercise and such, just not to that idiot's standards.
Why BMI is a big fat scam
Body mass index is used to sell weight loss drugs, set insurance premiums, and counsel patients. There's just one little problem.www.motherjones.com
Since you clearly don't know what the world "intersectional" means, let me help you out.So basically, more intersectional nonsense, where fat people are an "oppressed group." Supposedly the status of one's oppression differs as to whether one is fat or not.
My partner has likely ADHD (undiagnosed and taking ages to get anywhere with it) and I wasn't aware of that aspect of it, so thanks. I've never understood how into nice food they are, because it's just food.How about another one. According to a pilot study at one weight management clinic, 30% of the people being treated for chronic obesity also had symptoms consistent with (typically undiagnosed) adult ADHD. People with ADHD don't produce enough of the neurotransmitter dopamine, and one way to get your brain to release dopamine is to eat, especially energy-rich food like carbohydrates.
It literally quotes in the article itself the claim that weight stigma is the true cause of poor health for obese people, not the obesity itself.
Which is a red herring. We can debate the limitations of BMI all we want, that isn't the crux of the argument. The crux of the argument is that obesity isn't really an issue, which, if true, would go against the consensus of scientific data.
I don't know what conference you'r taking about. Here's the actual quotes:
Fat activism can be traced back to at least 1969, when Bill Fabrey founded the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance (NAAFA). In 1973, Judy Freespirit and “Aldebaran” of the Fat Underground published their “Fat Liberation Manifesto.” In language evoking the spirit of the Civil Rights movement, they describe their movement as “allied with the struggles of other oppressed groups against classism, racism, sexism, ageism, financial exploitation, imperialism and the like,” and demand “equal rights for fat people in all aspects of life, as promised in the Constitution of the United States” and “an end to discrimination against us in the areas of employment, education, public facilities and health services.” The document cheekily concludes, pace Marx, “FAT PEOPLE OF THE WORLD, UNITE! YOU HAVE NOTHING TO LOSE.” It took some time for this movement to spawn an academic field. The first fat studies conference was held at Smith College in 2006.
The contents of the Journal of Fat Studies reveal the discipline’s affinity with other critical theory influenced fields. The contributions bear such titles as: “Fat as a neoliberal epidemic: Analyzing fat bodies through the lens of political epidemiology”; “Fat politics as a constituent of intersecting intimacies”; and “Toward a Fat Pedagogy: A study of pedagogical approaches aimed at challenging obesity discourse in post-secondary education.” Unsurprisingly, given the logic of intersectionality, which posits oppressions as an interlocking matrix, many articles connect fatphobia with other forms of bigotry. For example, in an article by gender studies and sociology professor Bek Orr entitled “Trans/fat: an autoethnographic exploration of becoming at the intersection of trans and fat,” the writer argues that “Being fat and/or transgender makes one an object to be acted upon … To live at the intersection of fat and transgender is to experience a specific form of intersectional objectification.”
Many of the core concepts of recent left-wing academia—a belief in structural oppression, the denial of individual agency and the simultaneous belief in the power of affirmations to increase self-esteem—combine to militate in favor of a depiction of fat people as completely powerless to reduce their weight. In this view, fatness is largely caused by societal factors like poverty, and people remain fat for societal reasons: discrimination by the medical establishment, lack of suitable workout clothes, an unwelcoming atmosphere in gyms. While it is undoubtedly difficult to lose weight, such rhetoric makes it seem impossible—and not only impossible, but not even desirable. The wish to lose weight, according to philosophy professor Kate Manne, is “internalized fatphobia,” caused by oppressive patriarchal forces, “the forces that tell girls and women … to be small, meek, slight, slim and quiet.”
One of the most prominent popularizers of such ideas is Lindo Bacon, whose 2008 book, Health at Every Size, was frequently referenced at BodCon3. “Life expectancy [among Americans] has increased dramatically during the time period in which weight rose,” she blithely asserts—an assertion that, if true at the time of the book’s writing, is no longer true. She also claims that “there is great controversy as to whether weight loss is necessary or even desirable for improved health.” But most of that controversy centers on the utility of BMI as a measure. Some bodybuilders count as obese according to that metric. However, when corrected to account for muscle mass, this discrepancy largely disappears, according to a 2020 study. Excess weight is not necessarily associated with worse health outcomes—but excess body fat is.
It would be misleading to attribute the entirety of the rise in obesity rates to left-wing academic theories and their fat activist proselytizers. But they surely play some role—and it can’t be a healthy one.
So basically, more intersectional nonsense, where fat people are an "oppressed group." Supposedly the status of one's oppression differs as to whether one is fat or not.
So do you agree that fat people should be treated with dignity/not discriminated against or not?The Limits of Self Love
Scholars and activists in the field of fat studies do not believe that there is an obesity-related health crisis at all.quillette.com
Is it that hard to agree that overweight/obese people should be treated with dignity, while also agreeing that excessive body fat is dangerous for health? Anyone?
Apparently not.
I think they are correct about that discrimination generally, but on the gyms I think there's a degree of self-conscious paranoia to it that is self-defeating. I don't doubt for a moment there are some real dickheads in gyms but my personal experience of going to the gym is that most people there want the best for themselves and the others there - they are generally pleased that people of all stripes have made the effort (and it does take a lot of effort sometimes) to go. Like, we know how hard going to the gym is because we're there all the time whether we want to go or not.And those fat advocates are 100% right about discrimination around gyms and exercise clothes: just fucking looks at what happens when Nike advertises workout clothes for fat people
Shouldn't be.So do you agree that fat people should be treated with dignity/not discriminated against or not?
No, they're not, and if you think that, you either lack reading comprehension skills, or you're trolling.Because all of those quotes you helpfully provided are about *that*.
Re-read the article, that isn't said at all.Hell, your dude talks about a speech at the conference about how you should exercise and thinks it isn't good enough because the conference isn't actually about weight loss.
That's not what the "fat people" are saying. Again, to quote the article:He correctly says that most health problems come from excess fat but not actually weight, and then complains that fat people are saying it's about health and not actually weight. Pick a fucking argument and stick to it
No, but if your advocacy is making claims that obesity/excess fat doesn't affect your health, or when people like Rebel Wilson are shamed for LOSING weight, then your credibility is taking a nosedive.What, do fat advocates have to constantly flagelate themselves for being fat before they ask to be taken seriously?
That's one hell of a projection.Fact of the matter is that chode just hates seeing fat people who aren't ashamed. He'd go back to the '90s if he could
And those fat advocates are 100% right about discrimination around gyms and exercise clothes: just fucking looks at what happens when Nike advertises workout clothes for fat people
It's extremely rich for you to ask what does and doesn't exist when you're the one making claims about stuff existing that definitely doesn't.Hell, that discussion has gone to very stupid places on this very forum. Probably this very thread. And you're telling me it, what, doesn't exist?
That's fair, I just hate his face to the point I never click the little triangle that animates it and makes sound come out.Seeing Bill Maher used as a credible opinion makes me wanna eat a whole cheesecake.
Seeing his face alone makes me hear the sounds in my head... which I then have to drown out with cheesecake.That's fair, I just hate his face to the point I never click the little triangle that animates it and makes sound come out.
Just as a point of scientific pedantry, it's more that their neurones don't respond to dopamine strongly enough rather than not having enough dopamine. Or as it could be put, not having enough dopaminergic activity.People with ADHD don't produce enough of the neurotransmitter dopamine,