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tv   [untitled]    December 24, 2013 7:00pm-7:31pm EST

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we. think that's pretty. overplayed if you go did you know the price is the only industry specifically mentioned in the constitution which says that's because a free and open press is critical to our democracy which correct office. will. never go on i'm sorry and on this show we reveal the picture of what's actually going on and we go beyond identifying to try to rational debate a real discussion critical issues facing us to have occurred you know ready to join the movement then welcome to the big picture. first the nice conversations with great minds i'm joined by alan wiseman alan is an
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award winning journalist his reports of a period in a variety of publications including new york times magazine mother jones and it landed a finalist for the national book critics circle award winner of the prize of the national library of china ellen is also the author of several books including the national bestseller the world without us and his latest critically acclaimed countdown our last best hope for a future on earth alan joins me now in the studio alan welcome thanks for thanks for being with us to be here the essential story of countdown is the story of overpopulation it is it's something that i came to unexpectedly at the end of doing my last book the world without us which was really kind of a red herring because it was about how could we have a world with us theoretically wiped everybody off the planet so we could see how beautifully the planet would restore itself. hoping that readers would ask wow how
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do we add ourselves back to that picture of a healthy world only kind of in balance with nature not in combat with it but i discovered that every four and a half days we were adding a million people to the planet and we still are and that didn't seem like a sustainable figure at all so i just raised it at the end of the book and sort of left a day laying there and it became a really important talking point everybody wanted to talk about that's what friendly decided i should investigate it as a journalist and see can we know how many people and what could we do about it if we do and that is first occasion to a cure around the world i was the book is filled with these little vignettes these stories these travelogues that are just brilliant reading and and. you know halfway through the book i mean that you're to the point where there is no way i can deny this is real. you know the pressure of population is destroying
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ecosystems it's destroying quality of human life it's destroying the planet it's on and on it goes how did you come about that what brought you to that as a model for writing the book and what did you learn and what were the stories there were three reasons i had to do all that travel. one is the one that you just said i had a document what's going on out there. is it's not so much to say that. suppose we decide that the world has too many people in it but what can we do about that in the chinese trade the one child policy and everybody finds it a point a lot of chinese find it a poor it and that's not going to fly anywhere else if that's what we decide we need to do so what i was curious about and i had some hints that it might be true that in the liturgies or the histories. or the development of all of the world's cultures really. gins nationalities there is something in there that could embrace
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the idea of so to speak refraining from embracing so much in times of need and. it was important for me to go sort of take the cultural temperature of the world to talk to many many people you know religious leaders. just everyday people and to find out. was there something in their belief system that without having to change them tell me what you believe is wrong something that would actually allow this to. to happen in the overwhelming majority of religions and cultures i found that to be true also i needed to get these great stories you're talking about let's face it population it's sort of an affront just to think about it. like any other organism we do it becomes natural that we make
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copies of ourselves and the idea that we have to put limits on that is reflexively repellant to us so i needed to go out there and not just come up with a book that was full of statistics and adding up all the damage done but to give real human stories of how it works in countries where population runs amok and also the countries that have done. a really good job of managing their populations without doing something as drastic a course of a direct tony and as what china attempted. in the second half of our interview here i want to get into some of those solutions but first some of these stories one of the one of the things that you point out in the book repeatedly is tribe after tribe culture after culture culture religion after religion the people who are around are the people who are the descendants of people who had children during the one. didn't don't have any design it's and. in the early days of many i mean you
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have this population graph in the book where you point out that it took all of human history to reach a billion people around eighteen hundred and then the next billion people was around one hundred thirty years i would call nine hundred thirty the third billion maybe a nine hundred sixty fourth billion one hundred seventy four the fifth billion eighty days if i remember this is the graph that really looks like a hockey stick that's right yeah this should say it's twenty a century and and you could argue i mean you can you can make a and anthropologic case or perhaps a sociologic is. five thousand ten thousand twenty thousand years ago the tribe that had a a cultural or and or religious or both injunction to be fruitful and multiply have many wives or many children would be the tribe that would most likely survive in the you know in the face of tribal competition for territory. tell us about well the fact is that every every tribe has. has had to be fruitful and
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multiply in its beginning in order to become. the dominant power in its area either religious power or national power and so. let's look at a latter day example the mormons they were polygamists because they needed to produce as big a nation as they possibly could as quickly as possible so people were going to push them around no a lot of people who look at the mormons in this in they find it really weird but look at the genesis i mean that's how all of us started here judeo christian world . all the patriarchs were polygamists they had numerous numerous was until this very interesting you get to joseph and joseph is. i think in the. possibly the first ecologist he must have been extremely observant
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because he realized that we were entering a time of scarcity and he held himself to one wife they only had two children with sons and ultimately console the pharaoh of egypt that in order to get through lean times we have to conserve. who i interviewed in tel aviv said that. the interpretation is that in times of famine you refrain from having children until. times are generous again interest in fact one of the i thought one of the more interesting stories in the book was when you went to salt lake city and sat down with a group and. let me reframe this for years well it was. because there's still a big families yeah but you know i had some concerns because i knew that i was
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going to be talking about this point when when i went there so i like looked into mormon history and i found out that there was a point where like joseph they realize that they had a crisis that they had to deal with it was simply this they had been polygamous for quite a while until the united states if you want to remain in the united states and not do it behind bars you have to be monogamous well the mandate to be fruitful multiply was still inherent in their culture so they kept having babies and suddenly around the turn of the twentieth century there was a crisis many mormon women were dying in childbirth because they were getting pregnant again before their bodies had recover from the last pregnancy fortunately the mormons are very good about stress and importance of education and there was a new generation of mormon doctors who started constantly women that for the good of themselves and for their families and really. for the whole culture because it's
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a very family oriented religion that they had to start spacing their births to get it to say for themselves and when i met with these people this is a few years ago. we talked about well is it possibly a critical time for saving mother nature that maybe births have to be spaced even more and who would be more actually appropriate for leading the way because in the mormons it's a new religion they're not tied so beat deeply to these ancient liturgies that the rest of us are stuck with and they've already gone through this once before tremendous positive reception of them are sold and sign a lot of books that night and this is on two separate occasions. in utah and the people started talking about the same things that i hear everywhere everybody remembers a place where they used to go and it wasn't that far from home where you could sort
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of get away you could you know be out in the woods you could you know you could hug trees you could chop trees if you wanted to cut firewood you know you could listen to birds or shoot birds if that's what you like to do but it's a place you could go get away and now it's gone it's buried underneath condominium or strip malls and nobody likes that in utah they were telling me that now from provo. down the og that this is a continuous strip city for more than one hundred miles and the smog is bad and of course they're in the colorado river basin their water is getting scarce and they're really concerned that they're just getting a little too numerous no i don't know what the mormon temple thinks about this it's just like i went to the vatican for this book and the vatican is kind of painted itself into a corner and they're probably never going to change their mind but it's surrounded by this catholic country called italy where the women know exactly how many children they want and what it takes. expander still affected me i think as the
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highest use of contraception per capita all the euro western european countries. if i think if it's spain isn't too far behind how do you how do you respond to people who say that you know. robert thomas small focus suggested this back three hundred years ago and he was wrong you know that population growth would ultimately destroy the planet or the quality of life for humans and that you're simply you know malthus well first of all i'm man and anything i'm a journalist i talk to people who are called the old bell fusee in the in the in see how they justify it and here's what i learned. this made his famous prediction back in seventy ninety eight the world was not very crowded then and people weren't dying of starvation all that much. but his latter day analogues pollen and the erle who. wrote the population bomb had appeared in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight said the same thing that they saw that the world was now at
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three and a half million and it was getting very crowded and they predicted famines for india for pakistan and other parts of the world because. there is no way that food production could keep up with population growth but then lo and behold what happened actually the air looks said in their preface unless there's some miracle of agriculture and that miracle agriculture which we now call the green revolution took place norman bore log in his center for wheat and corn in mexico and scientists in the philippines at the international race research institute came up with these incredible crossbred strains of grains that would produce. much more food let's let's pick up from that in just a moment more conversations with great minds for alan weisman after the break. i'm
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at. a society that if i'm big corporation kind of can consume can do and the bank had all been all about money and i must bash my pick for politicians writing the laws and recreation tax bankers coming up. there is just too much threat today society. that. i would rather ask questions to people in positions of power instead of speaking on their behalf and that's why you can find my show larry king now right here on r.t. question for.
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welcome back to conversations with great minds with alan wiseman alan is an award winning journalist as reports of her period have appeared in a variety of publications including new york times magazine mother jones the atlantic and he's also the author of several books including the national bestseller the world without us and his latest critically acclaimed countdown our
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last best hope for a future on earth and let's get back to it you were you were saying that the early expec in sixty eight in the population said that famines and disasters are coming we're three and a half billion people unless there is a revolution in agriculture and then you start telling us how that little the revolution actually happened through some really brilliant cross-breeding of plants that ultimately could produce much more grain per plant and these improved strays literally were airlifted to india and pakistan and in the latter half of the nineteen sixty's and they saved those places from famine. that was the good. will. even though everybody started saying well look this disproves memphis. when norman borlaug won the nobel peace
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prize for this he was credited with having saved more lives than anybody in history . he didn't gloat what he said is it's. the speech was we've bought some time for the world unless the. population problem is handled in conjunction with the food production problem we're never going to be able to feed everybody and disaster will eventually strike because there are limits to how much we can possibly produce and. we're coming to those limits when i went to india and pakistan i found that we're reaching some of those limits india is about to surpass china now as the most populous nation on earth pakistan is one of the fastest growing and it's a country that's just frankly out of control it's it's a dangerous country there was a lot of mayhem when i was there some of the people i needed to interview i didn't get to because they were floating tortured in the karate lagoon and this is
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a daily occurrence there and when you've got a whole population. filled with unemployed young men because there's just not enough jobs to go around things get to stabilize and we're talking about a nuclear power we're talking about a country that this by twenty thirty is going to more people in the today's united states it's the size of texas. so what is the carrying capacity in your opinion of the earth. in terms of it seems to be less then what we are right now again as a journalist i don't know pine in these things i try to talk to the experts and one way of looking at it is let's look at some of the reasons why our population increase there's really two medical improvements in food technology we just talked about part of it the other part probably the most important invention in history
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was the invention of artificial nitrogen fertilizer. which just put it this way forty percent of us would not be on this planet without it. because we now can create much more plant life than nature was able to create. there were only a few plants really that could fix nitrogen in the soil before but now. we can do it almost infinitely except it's made out of fossil fuels takes fossil fuels to make the. for the energy to make it and there's a downside to fertilise eating oil a process emitting carbon dioxide yeah we all know that it's so. at a certain point we run into these limits and. it proved to me like the mouth is actually wrong possibly they didn't get the timing of it right now we're in a situation where the world seems to be bursting that it seems toward the end of
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the book you suggest after they go by going to the authors. that if the entire world were to go to a one child policy that within a human lifetime for generations roughly eighty to one hundred years ago. that we would have a population of a little over one i think you said one point seven billion and one point six which is what the population was in one thousand nine hundred before these medical advances in food technology advances made this double and then double again now i don't think a one child policy is acceptable to most people even though a lot but what is acceptable to most people is being able to choose the number that they want one of the countries big surprised american audiences that has had the one of the most successful family planning programs in history is iran and they did it completely voluntarily i had an amazing time over there talking to the o.b.-g.y.n. . that instituted the program there was
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a if you if wisdom dictates that you have the number of children you can. take care of in a tubal ligation or a set to me is permissible they made contraceptives free and available to everybody and most important they encourage women to study a woman who goes to the university or just goes to school period uses it to have children until she's out of it because she wants to finish your education and she's got something interesting and useful to do for her family and for society so you can do that with seven kids saying that they're apron strings sixty percent of the women sixty percent of the university students in iran today are female and they brought. their population growth rate down to replacement meaning male two people male and female have two children replacing themselves they did it a year faster than china no coercion and they did it basically by the empowerment
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of women would it not be. would it not be an exaggeration to say that worldwide one of the most important things we must be doing is educating and empowering it's the best of all. every country i went to everybody that i talk to about this they say you get a girl in high school the chances are on the average she's going to have two children or less that's what she's going to decide to do and even in pakistan i saw places where girls are being permitted to go to school because it's a rough situation lots and that's what the girls were aspiring to do because they all wanted to be like their teachers will they had to. in japan they're actually their population is declining and. i've debated on this program. typically catholic conservatives although not always who are pretty hysterical about this you know all my god what are we going to do you know the b.
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and then you get into the whole the whole. the right wing commentary thing about you know the. white people in america are declined you know this sort of thing and it's like where how do you respond how do you how do you respond to people who say either a country's demographics changing is going to somehow harm that country i guess that's probably more of a side argument or the larger argument of just the core population the total population of the country declining is a bad thing it seems to me like it's a good thing if you look at what happened after the black plague produced the renaissance or the the you know the yeah the renaissance. i'm going to respond to the first part very quickly. i'm the son of an immigrant. america is a nation of immigrants and that's what has made this country rich and great rich in all senses of the word and immigration just keeps enriching in the pot as far as
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i'm concerned i think we need to just kind of ridicule at the cannes it will be in terms of. the. whole problem of declining population in china japan has a declining population now because they had to cut off their baby boom at the end of world war two because they had lost their economy was in ruins they had people were starving and so they gave women the need the means to terminate pregnancies as an emergency move and women who didn't want to have watch more raby starved if it took advantage of that so now as the older baby boom generation is dying off it was a large generation suddenly it's sort of what populations go off the cliff. a lot of japanese economists are freaked out about this but i met a very visionary one who's with a major policy policy institute who sees as a great opportunity this is something that inevitably happen because the island has
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limits the japanese archipelago has limits in fact the world has limits. and he sees them getting away as the population naturally shrinks from heavy industries and concentration of big port cities to spreading out across the countryside more light industries it's going to be great for laborers because there are fewer of them their wages are going to drop but because demand will be lower our people have more leisure time in a less populated world and they'll be more world out there to enjoy it right now in japan if people go to work at seven am they come back at ten pm to what's to earn money to have a few consumer toys that they don't have enough hours to play with if something isn't in fact or a fairly simple math about that that as the population declines ratio of natural world per person increases. you know natural resources wealth everything else it
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seems like a declining population we have a net positive thing don't you know a huge part of this book that we haven't talked about is all the time that it's been with the colleges trying to figure out how much nature do we need to ensure our survival you know where mammals were part of this ecosystem and there's no question that we have been pushing more and more species off this planet at accelerating rate. to try to determine which species are essential to our survival and nobody really knows for sure until we push one off that sweet should accept that one but we'll only know when it's too late it's probably a good idea to stop doing that like like i'm already discovered at seventeen hundreds of years ago also that we're eating rats. start eating people start each other in the in the minute we have left what what do you think what was the biggest lesson for you alan wiseman writing that this is something that we can do right now
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that could have probably the fastest most efficient and most significant impact on helping our environment we're not. very good at controlling consumption. we're not really adept at renewable cheap totally pollution free energy. but we can control the number of consumers with the technology that we already have it's fairly benign technology and it's getting even better because there are some really benign male contraceptives that are about to become available. this would have an enormous impact do you combine that with education for women and we could have a much better social world in a much better natural world it's an extraordinary vision and you've done an absolutely brilliant job will fly in and out and count down alan was they sank you so much for this pleasure because our.
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last time was a new alert and of patients scare me a little bit. there is breaking news tonight and we are continuing to follow the breaking news. alexander's family cry tears of joy at it great things out there that have read in a court of law found online this is a story. playing out in real life. it was a terrible day and i'm very sorry to take up. once again on here. that you never had sex with the earthquake there's no.
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it was. only. one of the beauty of the political. the internet is green report we're all paying a heavy price for the carbon pollution that's filling our skies and driving global climate change but that price doesn't just include more extreme weather events in summer like temperatures in the winter driving global hunger and water shortages to
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eating up our tax dollars carbon pollution is having a major effect on just about every aspect of our lives so what can be done to combat carbon pollution and save our planet to a good first step would be to introduce a carbon tax and force companies to pay for the carbon that they're dumping into our skies all debate washington over national carbon taxes gone nowhere across the globe other countries are realize the environmental and economic benefits of a carbon tax one of those countries is ireland and joining me now from dublin to talk more about ireland's experience with a carbon tax is a man ryan former minister of energy and communications of ireland and now the head of the green party ireland mr ryan welcome. thank you very much indeed good to talk to you thanks for joining us what motivated carbon to create a carbon tax and how did you go about doing it. it took a long time i guess we were looking at it from the late ninety's and you took.

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