MANAGING SIX-BILLION PEOPLE
April 22, 2004
If you happened to observe a couple with four or five children having some difficulty (financially and personally), you would very likely be tempted to suggest that they had too many children. But if they were getting along splendidly, you would be less likely to say such a thing. In the same way, if the world were getting along splendidly, you would not likely even think of the population issue. (The world’s population, by the way, is currently over six billion.)
Now, I don’t know about you, but from what I’m seeing and hearing lately, the world is not getting along so splendidly. You think maybe the population crunch is rearing its ugly head? How much different do you think the world would be if its human population were only three billion, one-half its current number? Do you think we’d feel a little less crowded and breathe a little easier and be a lot less stressed? And not be entangled in so much haggling (i.e., warfare) over the resources, especially oil?
The problem is not the sheer number of people, but managing them (and the resources they need). If we could do that properly, we wouldn’t be saying that there are too many.
And the fact that we are saying it should only be viewed as an indication that we desperately need to improve our people skills. We need to learn how to manage six billion people. But how could we ever do that? It’s an awful lot of mouths to feed.
Indeed it is, and there is only one way that such a large number of human beings could ever be managed properly: with a single sovereign government, as opposed to a multiplex of them. As long as we insist on maintaining our national identities, we will continue to wallow in all the distinctions - and prejudices - associated with such identities. Nationalism fosters separatism. I am an American; I’m French; I’m German. And so on.
I know that it surely rankles anyone who is proud of their national heritage to hear this kind of talk, but ask yourself a simple question: which is more important, to be American, French or German, or to be a human being? Which is primary? We are, after all, human beings first, citizens second. You have to be a living breathing human being before you can be placed into some kind of nationalistic niche. Since our basic humanity is the fundamentally important thing, it seems the wiser course of action to start paying more attention to that than the national history that frames our psyche.