Going Green through Contraception
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While those in Russia are celebrating Procreation Day, the wonderful folks at Slate have offered up a powerful opportunity for discussion on cutting back kids this week with Daniel Engber’s article titled “Global Swarming.”



We talk about going green, but we often fail to bring population control into the discussion. It’s a topic that carries with it issues of human rights on various fronts, and it’s certainly created conversations about ethical violations in China.

In fact, as Engber describes, the topic is often met with great hostility, as it was when Bill McKibben proposed some measures of control in his book Only One. As a social policy, says Engber, population control can seem like a violation of rights. But he asserts that we shouldn’t throw it out of discussion as a possibility for personal consideration. 

"These days, we tend to think of saving the environment in terms of personal choice, rather than government programs. We're obsessed with our green lifestyles—eating local, driving hybrids, paying off our excess carbon-dioxide emissions. From that perspective, voluntary familial extinction (or at least reduction) might not be such a bad idea. If you want to reduce your carbon footprint, cutting back on kids is the best choice you can possibly make.”

Engber continues the discussion in more profound terms than I can hope to. In case you missed the link, here it is again. Bottom line: this article made me think, and though I’m not positive what my position is, I’d be interested in your thoughts.  


Reader Comments

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The practical effect of this...
By Superduperficial Sep 12th 2007 at 7:06 pm EDT
...is probably a resurgence of theologically-tinged conservatism. If you have a "quiver-full" (Google it if you want a laugh/cry) Bible Belt family going at full capacity on the one hand, and an effete coastal elite family having one kid at age 30 on the other...

We know that religious belief is a heritable trait to a significant degree.

We know that religious belief correlates to political alignment.

The moral questions are greater, and where you come down on those is up to you. But the practical consequences also bear discussion.
  
this article would be funny...
By Jenny Odegard Sep 13th 2007 at 2:13 pm EDT
Hasn't anyone else read A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift?

Swift wrote that in order to solve the Irish Potato famine, people ought to sell their babies for food. This way, families would not only have more to eat (babies), but they would also have one fewer mouth to feed.

This article about global warming containment through eugenics would be funny and clever, except that the author is not kidding.
  
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