News about Thomas Malthus

Greens are already alert that the Earth is overcrowded... According to ROSS CLARK, the West's plunging birthrate will usher in a frightening dystopia

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 22, 2024
Imagining the future of our cities. Do you imagine glittering skyscrapers, bullet trains whizzing past green parklands, flying taxis and limitless clean energy? I'm afraid you will be dissatisfied. Swaths of the world's cities are more likely to be abandoned, with small numbers of people clinging to decaying houses on empty, weed-strewn streets, like modern-day Detroit. According to a recent Lancet medical journal article, just six countries could be experiencing children at'replacement rates,' implying that there are enough births to keep their populations stable, not growth.

ROSS CLARK criticizes the hysteria surrounding climate change debates, arguing that they could cause harm

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 21, 2023
You will very quickly dismiss the belief that the planet is in some bizarre transition if you cover every extreme event and then drop the word 'climate change.' And when it emphatically isn't, it isn't. According to a Pentagon study that came to light in 2004, large portions of the Netherlands would be uninhabitable by floods by 2007 and that by 2020 Britain will have a 'Siberian climate.'

Is the global population suffering from the 8 billion herald famine? SANDBROOK QUESTIONS

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 15, 2022
According to UN demographic experts, the world's population is expected to rise in the next two decades, rising to 8.5 billion by 2030 and 9.7 billion by 2050. It is expected that by the 2080s, it would have hit 10.4 billion, where it will remain until the end of the century. So many people! However, if you've ever been stuck for hours on the highway, or have fought for space on a packed commuter train, or have flown home after a break abroad and been surprised how packed everything is, then none of this will come as a surprise, I suspect. Our own population is expected to be around 67 million today. But it isn't really long since it was just half the way long. For example, you would have to subtract one in every two people to imagine Britain in the Victorian heydays.