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American
10-19-2003, 06:12 PM
Time to tackle huddled masses

As individuals and as a nation, we're defined by the choices we make. And too often, by the tough decisions we avoid.
Most of us have avoided even thinking about how our rapidly growing population is affecting our quality of life and shaping our society.

Our population has more than doubled since World War II, and at this rate, we could be on our way to 1 billion people living in the U.S. by the end of the century. One billion people.

Our population growth, driven in part by unchecked immigration, is already straining our health care and educational systems and, less noticeably but far more important, putting a heavy burden on our land, food production, water supply and the quality of the air we breathe.

All these pressures on our resources will only worsen unless our leaders begin a national dialogue on the future of this country and start making tough choices. Our future will be shaped largely by our trade policies, our environmental and economic policies, and our immigration policies.

Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives, are avoiding debate on these issues because they are the most difficult ones for politicians to confront. In campaign parlance, these are wedge issues. But failure to come to terms with them will drive a wedge between us and a prosperous, healthy future for this country.

The U.S. population is growing by more than 3 million each year and loses 3 million acres of farmland annually. Food and agriculture generate $40 billion a year in export income for the U.S., but at the present rate, we won't be exporting food at all by 2025.

Our water supply is equally at risk. David Pimentel, professor of ecology and agricultural sciences at Cornell University, says, "We're overpumping and overusing our water." If this problem is left unaddressed, droughts could become a way of life in many states.

Our air quality is not improving, ther. Despite legislation and industry regulation, nearly half the people in this country live in counties with dirty air. It is estimated that as many as 50,000 people go to hospitals each year because of air pollution. And environmental regulators say that the smog in Los Angeles is the worst it has been in seven years.

Schools in many cities are severely crowded. California is facing nothing less than a facilities crisis. There are about 6 million students in mostly crowded California public schools. Of that total, about a quarter, or 1.5 million, are students whose primary language is not English.

This crowding is not just an inconvenience but rather a serious dilemma regarding resource distribution. Funding for California students with limited English has tripled since 1986. Federal grants for special-language programs have more than doubled to $460 million in 2002 from $157 million in 1995.

The strains of crowding are equally apparent in our health care system. Hundreds of emergency rooms have closed over the past decade because of budget shortfalls, and the ones that remain open are overburdened. Hospitals also are writing off as much as $2 billion a year in unpaid medical bills to treat illegal aliens, who are ineligible for Medicaid.

Watering down democracy

Our population explosion not only detracts from our quality of life but threatens our liberties and freedom as well. As Cornell's Pimentel puts it, "Back when we had, say, 100 million people in the U.S., when I voted, I was one of 100 million people. Today, I am one of 285 million people, so my vote and impact decreases with the increase in the population."

To even begin coping with our overpopulation crisis, we must first understand that it is often determinant in other critical areas: our schools, hospitals, infrastructure, economy and our very way of life. We must prepare to make very tough choices on all these issues that we've too long ignored.




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Reality
10-19-2003, 06:29 PM
100% correct. However, I think it may be too late to turn back the tide that has engulfed our once great nation. We may be destined to become a third rate country if our spineless representatives don't step up to the plate soon. The signs are very obvious; our economy will never withstand another 10 years of unchecked immigration. Something's going to give, and I fear it is the backbone of our country...the American taxpayers. Good luck, fellow Americans.
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Neuro Axis
10-20-2003, 06:15 PM
Overpopulation and strain on resources is a world problem, not just a US one. And the article's implication that illegal immigration has contributed to overpopulation is rediculous. What has contributed the most to overpopulation is the idea that if someone doesn't have children there is something wrong with them. The "tough choices" the article speaks of should be rewarding people who do not have children, in this time of tremendous overpopulation and strain on resources.

I'm not doubting that all the factual information in the story is correct, but it left out a few important ones, like the fact that the amount of natural resources the US uses is grossly out of proportion with the percentage of world population that is possesses. Or the fact that the US sells banned pesticides like DDT to third-world countries, and then buys produce from those countries and sells it to unsuspecting consumers. Or the fact that the US dumps tons of its garbage and sewage sludge on shores and farmland abroad. Or the fact that US transnational corporations shift thr workforces away from the US and to other countries with weak or no environmental protection laws (not to mention worker protection laws), so they can proceed to demolish that country's environment with no legal repurcussions.
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Justice777
12-27-2003, 04:53 PM
Yes, you said it exactly right. "Death of America". I think we are racing down the tracks heading for a train wreck soon. And many of our countrymen are asleep or just too busy living and working to notice. Our politicians don't care. They only want to be reelected and will do anything to get there, including pandering to corrupt lobby groups. They think this country is so strong that it will run on automatic no matter how much you abuse the system. They think that thr are no limits to the strength of our economy and systems. Wrong, It most definitely can collapse due to excessive strain and abuse as they will find out soon enough. So there you have it End of a once great nation and culture. ....it feels like we are on the Titanic, the so called safest ship ever built, and yet we are sinking fast. And all but a few are ringing the warning bells. And few are listening. Good luck to everyone here. I wish you well but I think the country is about to get a Huge reality check. It will be much worse than the great depression, pearl Harbor, and 9/11 combined. Very sad. I hope it can be turned around but I have my doubts about it. I am sad for my children who will be caught up in this mess created by our generation. We could have done much better. Future generations depended on that. But Political correctness, greed, and stupidity rule now. Even Rome had it's limitations as they found out. I think America is in for a very humbling experience.
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shortwave
12-27-2003, 09:18 PM
America is one of the most spiritually dead nations on the planet. America is a nation of sports fans, drug addicts(this includes psychiatric medication) and consumers of pornography. The nation is bng destroyed by immigrants and greedy corporate ceos. The white middle class flees to NC, foolishly believing that they can run away from the problem. I care more about protecting the little patch of forest in my town from developers than I do about whether or not the yankees win another world series. For many men bng a sports fan is thr religion. Very sick.
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