I have been harping along for some
time that the single greatest problem facing humanity today is the deliberate
engineering of a population explosion by the rich, in order to drive wages down
for the many and profits up for the few (although deliberate, it is also
largely unconscious: the rich have mostly rationalized that what is good for
them must be good for everyone and they are just advancing their own short-term
interests. They are also using their
power and influence to stifle unwanted attention of their pro-natalist policy,
again, largely unthinkingly as the rich naturally bestow their largess and
connections to those who make them feel good about themselves. But functionally, the same thing. The population explosion has been deliberately
created by the rich).
Now I am open to rational
counter-arguments, but these are sadly in short supply. A typical counter-argument is ‘there you go
again.’ Anyone who stoops to this
argument has admitted that they have no intellectual ammunition. Consider:
‘There you go again, always harping
that 2 + 2 = 4.’
‘There you go again, always harping
that water flows downhill.’
‘There you go again, always harping
that the sun rises in the East.’
Continued repetition in the face of
willful ignorance is not proof of error.
And of course there are the classic
ripostes that I am ‘scapegoating immigrants’ or am ‘racist’ or ‘fascist’ or
‘islamophobic’ – the hollowness of using such unsupported slander instead of
rational argument, I leave to the reader to judge.
Let us consider yet another mindless
jingoism: “There are no simple solutions to complicated problems.” The claim would be that the world is so
complicated that there is nothing to be done but wring our hands over the
injustice of the world, mouth empty platitudes about wanting ‘social justice,’
and maybe – maybe – from time to time we can come up with a few pennies and put
a bandaid on one of the more visible problems.
Anything else is utopian and impractical.
Maybe.
Or maybe not.
Consider what happens when a person is
starving to death. They become
lethargic. They become prone to
infection. They may have poor skin and
thin hair. They may have kidney
problems, and multiple imbalances in electrolytes and blood chemistry. They become sensitive to the cold. They don't heal as well in the face of
injury. In short, the process of
starvation is complicated and exhibits multiple manifestations. So if I told you that the solution to someone
starving to death, is to give them some food, would you just throw up your
hands and say ‘there you go again, always proposing simple solutions for
complex problems’? That would be
ridiculous.
Now I claim that many of the problem
in the world are due to forced population growth. Sustained high fertility rates can and do
wipe out all progress (this is beyond economics: this is basic physics),
leading to mass poverty, social unrest, a weakening of the central state,
endemic corruption and nepotism, environmental despoliation, the spread of
diseases, refugee crises… You may
disagree with me. But you can’t
rationally just chant ‘oh there are no simple solutions to complex problems,’
because many times a simple problem has multiple ramifications. But you really
can fix it with one thing.
In the practice of medicine, there is
no guarantee that a sick patient will have only one underlying problem (‘a
patient can have as many diseases as he or she pleases.’) And yet the standard practice of medicine is
to first see if there is, perhaps, a single underlying pathology that is giving
rise to all of the various symptoms.
This is the basic approach of science:
to first look for simple underlying
principles.
But there is no guarantee that a
simple underlying principle will always exist.
Consider now old age. That also
presents as a complex set of symptom clusters, but as far as we know so far,
there is not a single thing that causes the progressive failing of human health
with age. A thousand different chemical
byproducts build up in a hundred different tissues, non-replaceable cells die,
collagen cross-links and stiffens…
Perhaps someday someone really will find a single simple treatment that,
even if it does not cure old age completely, will ameliorate a large fraction
of the problems. Just because we have
not found such a thing, does not mean that it does not exist, or that we should
stop looking. But right now, old age
really does look like a complex problem that doesn’t have a simple solution.
And here is the problem: determining
whether or not a given complex-seeming problem does or does not have a single
(or at least primary) underlying cause requires thought. Which is hard.
Nevertheless, one thing should be clear. When someone tries to attack an argument by
non-specifically claiming that there are no simple solutions to complex
problems, they are engaging in intellectual dishonesty.
A similar trick is when a politician
tries to push a given change in policy by claiming that ‘we must embrace change’
or ‘we must not be afraid of change.’
This is a transparent attempt to deflect criticism of the specific
attributes of a change in policy by claiming that those opposed are
irrationally opposed to change per se. Any
politician making such an unsupported statement should immediately be assumed
to be acting with bad intent.
So far, so good. We need to think clearly. There is one little problem with that.
There are today so many people
flooding the internet and the airwaves and bookstores etc. with so many
crackpot theories, but we can’t critically evaluate them all. We need the cognitive armor of routinely dismissing
as ‘ridiculous’ or ‘crackpot’ all non-mainstream theories, or we would be
overwhelmed. The problem is Zionists,
the problem is too tight a monetary policy, the problem is too loose a monetary
problem, or too much free trade, or too little free trade, or too much
democracy, or racism, or blacks are stupid, or the CIA is controlling our
thoughts with radio waves…
And so we have a simple and obvious
explanation for much of what ails the world, but it is invisible. It suffers the double-hit of being directly
targeted for burial by the people with money and power, and also being
relegated to the vast forest of (mostly) absurd utopian political and economic
theories that we have made a (necessary) habit of denigrating without thought…
And no, I have no idea how to solve
this issue either. Only to do my best,
and argue my case.
I do point out that a stable or slowly
growing population by itself will not create utopia, nor even paradise. Too-rapid population growth will create
poverty: but allowing populations to stabilize at a moderate level will not
create wealth. A stable or very slowly
growing population creates nothing, but only means that people will have the
chance to slowly accumulate per-capita real physical wealth. And creating significant per-capita wealth,
even if it’s not being wiped out by massive population growth, is indeed hard,
and requires effort and persistence and intelligence. That,
at least, is complicated.
Nevertheless, the record is clear: when people have abundant resources and tools, and modest progress is not wiped out by ever more mouths to feed, they generally do pretty well.
Nevertheless, the record is clear: when people have abundant resources and tools, and modest progress is not wiped out by ever more mouths to feed, they generally do pretty well.
We are probably doomed, but must only
do our best. Regardless, if there is one
take-home message from this, it’s the following: do not accept any unsupported
claims that XYZ is untenable because ‘there are no simple solutions to complex
problems.’ Because yes Virginia,
sometimes, there really are.
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