• LostXOR
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      131 month ago

      I mean… Castrating 75% of the population would certainly put a damper on our rapid population growth, which would be good for everything except humans.

      • Cyrus Draegur
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        91 month ago

        Human population growth is already plateaued and in the most developed nations it’s already net negative. in order to sustain break-even (human) population levels, there must be no fewer than 2.1 offspring born, on average, per {gestational reproductive caste specimen}<irrespective of masculine or feminine configuration>.

        The human population of South Korea’s last reported birthrate is 0.78.
        In japan, 1.26.
        In the united states, 1.66.

        There will be so few able bodied humans extant to perform basic upkeep in 20 years that fundamental infrastructural systems will not JUST be crumbling to dust from sheer neglect as they are now, but actively self-destructing from sustained systemic cascade failure.

        • LostXOR
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          21 month ago

          Hence, good for everything except humans. And the global population is still rising, though as you said developed countries are responsible for very little of that growth.

        • @blarghly@lemmy.world
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          01 month ago

          There will be so few able bodied humans extant to perform basic upkeep in 20 years that fundamental infrastructural systems will not JUST be crumbling to dust from sheer neglect as they are now, but actively self-destructing from sustained systemic cascade failure.

          Pretty doomerist of you. I’m honestly not concerned about declining populations. Better for the environment, and we’ll figure out the rest through straightforward economics.

          • Barbecue Cowboy
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            11 month ago

            I hope so too. One of the key problems you have is taking care of the elderly and infirm with less and less of the younger generation around. It’s a hard one to solve economically without being like “I guess just let them die”.

            • @blarghly@lemmy.world
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              01 month ago

              As the size of the working population declines, labor will reallocate itself from less necessary positions to more necessary ones. So the proportion of the population that would have worked at McDonalds, for example, would work in nursing homes instead.

              • Barbecue Cowboy
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                11 month ago

                You’re right and that’s exactly where the problem arises. We’re seeing projections in some places where the need for care workers of various types looks like it will be larger than that countries workforce can bear. I.e., at current levels, there wouldn’t be anyone to work at McDonald’s but then also not enough to work in more necessary roles, basic government, infrastructure, etc.

                  • Barbecue Cowboy
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                    11 month ago

                    I could keep talking about this for awhile, you keep touching on good points. One thing that is kinda interesting is that there seems to maybe be a correlation between countries with the lowest birth rates and having a restrictive stance on immigration. Not sure we have actual causation, but we might be relying exclusively on technological improvements and I’m not sure we’re close enough yet for that to work out in time. South Korea might already be fucked.