Originally posted by eek
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Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodeal -
Originally posted by sasguru View PostYou're like a turd that vetran (sic) leaves behind everywhere he goes.Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Comment
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostYou're like a turd that vetran (sic) leaves behind everywhere he goes.
Sums you up in so many little ways.merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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Originally posted by vetran View PostActually Red Sauce quoted 1.3B, I questioned it as low even to what SAS was initially suggesting. SAS then called me a moron and a lowly paid BA who couldn't understand the facts and supported Red Sauces figures.
I think 10Bn is optimistic because its based on experience of a completely different type of country something mentioned in the research, 1.3B growth is laughable but that is what started SAS's attacks so I'm taking that as his base line.
I'm not sure why you think 10.9Bn is so unreasonable. As has been pointed out, the global rate of population growth peaked some time ago and has been declining for 50 years. There is simply no reason whatsoever to think the trend will reverse, and even if you just do the most simplistic thing possible and extrapolate the current rate of decline you find that global population will peak around 2080.
Your thinking seems to be founded entirely on the idea that population will increase exponentially in sub saharan Africa, when all the evidence is that in those countries where the death rate is coming under control a similar demographic transition is happening as has happened or is in progress pretty much everywhere else in the world.
They aren't facts they are projections, based on 60 years of rapid change after centuries of steadily growing population. All it takes is for China to change the 1 child policy or a large LEDC decide they want more children and the projections are blown out of the water.
A sharp fall in birth rates over the 60-100 years or so after a precipitous fall in the death rate has been observed in many countries, it may have first been observed in western countries but the fact is that the same phenomenon has occurred or is occurring in many other countries since then including several in the middle east & Africa as well as most of SE Asia and South America. The FACTS are there to support it.While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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Originally posted by eek View Postso you are happy to insult people but unwilling and unable to accept insults back.
Sums you up in so many little ways.
You called me a cretin I called you a turd. Where's your beef?
But on second thoughts, thick turd is more like it.Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodealComment
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Originally posted by doodab View PostIt would appear he had a point. The 1.3Bn comes from 10.9Bn (2100) minus 9.6Bn (2050), making a growth of 1.3Bn in 50 years. You seem to have got this conflated with the estimates for the total population.
I'm not sure why you think 10.9Bn is so unreasonable. As has been pointed out, the global rate of population growth peaked some time ago and has been declining for 50 years. There is simply no reason whatsoever to think the trend will reverse, and even if you just do the most simplistic thing possible and extrapolate the current rate of decline you find that global population will peak around 2080.
Your thinking seems to be founded entirely on the idea that population will increase exponentially in sub saharan Africa, when all the evidence is that in those countries where the death rate is coming under control a similar demographic transition is happening as has happened or is in progress pretty much everywhere else in the world.
The data 1950-present day is not a projection, it is a FACT. The decline in birth rates and in the rate of population growth since the 60s is not a projection, it is a FACT. The correlation between death and birth rates is a FACT. The falling birth rates for years in many of the countries you seem to think are going to have a population explosion is a FACT.
A sharp fall in birth rates over the 60-100 years or so after a precipitous fall in the death rate has been observed in many countries, it may have first been observed in western countries but the fact is that the same phenomenon has occurred or is occurring in many other countries since then including several in the middle east & Africa as well as most of SE Asia and South America. The FACTS are there to support it.Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodealComment
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Originally posted by doodab View PostIt would appear he had a point. The 1.3Bn comes from 10.9Bn (2100) minus 9.6Bn (2050), making a growth of 1.3Bn in 50 years. You seem to have got this conflated with the estimates for the total population.
I'm not sure why you think 10.9Bn is so unreasonable. As has been pointed out, the global rate of population growth peaked some time ago and has been declining for 50 years. There is simply no reason whatsoever to think the trend will reverse, and even if you just do the most simplistic thing possible and extrapolate the current rate of decline you find that global population will peak around 2080.
Your thinking seems to be founded entirely on the idea that population will increase exponentially in sub saharan Africa, when all the evidence is that in those countries where the death rate is coming under control a similar demographic transition is happening as has happened or is in progress pretty much everywhere else in the world.
The data 1950-present day is not a projection, it is a FACT. The decline in birth rates and in the rate of population growth since the 60s is not a projection, it is a FACT. The correlation between death and birth rates is a FACT. The falling birth rates for years in many of the countries you seem to think are going to have a population explosion is a FACT.
A sharp fall in birth rates over the 60-100 years or so after a precipitous fall in the death rate has been observed in many countries, it may have first been observed in western countries but the fact is that the same phenomenon has occurred or is occurring in many other countries since then including several in the middle east & Africa as well as most of SE Asia and South America. The FACTS are there to support it.
Yes 1950 - present day is fact and the fall in birth rate is only a small part of the data that has occurred relatively recently.
World Population Clock: 7 Billion People (2013) - Worldometers
look in the last 200 years population has grown 7 fold, since 1960 it has more than doubled.
Yet you expect it to grow by a 10% between 2050-2100?
Projections 37 years ahead are then used to build projections for 87 years ahead.
These are based on decline of birth rates in a subset of the countries involved. The situation is different in the LEDCs almost anything could cause the population growth to change.
The change in 63 years have been so great nobody expected them. There was 'no reason' to expect 60 years ago population growth would fall, in fact we were expecting to expand to the stars.
If you look at the growth rate charts there was a 1% peak in 1960 - why was that? Could it happen again?
So 1.3B growth in 37- 87 years time is a bit tenuous.It depends a great deal on the population in 37 years time! I personally believe it will be higher and that the adjustments will take longer.
Whether it is in Africa, Pakistan or even Britain (as today's news shows) where figures buck the trends I'm not sure but the risks seem higher in the non democratic LEDCs as some religions encourage large families, though European Catholics seem to have amended their preference for larger families, Islam specifically encourages it and so many LEDCs are heavily Muslim. Note I have avoided specifying countries.
I do believe religion & culture will have a major effect, for instance if the Pope tells the Catholics to breed then a good portion of them will.
I don't blindly accept birth rates will decline in the same way as they are currently in some countries when it has changed so much in the last 87 years. I do accept the decline will be part of the equation.Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Comment
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Originally posted by vetran View PostDoodab appreciate you trying to explain.
Yes 1950 - present day is fact and the fall in birth rate is only a small part of the data that has occurred relatively recently.
World Population Clock: 7 Billion People (2013) - Worldometers
look in the last 200 years population has grown 7 fold, since 1960 it has more than doubled.
Yet you expect it to grow by a 10% between 2050-2100?
Projections 37 years ahead are then used to build projections for 87 years ahead.
These are based on decline of birth rates in a subset of the countries involved. The situation is different in the LEDCs almost anything could cause the population growth to change.
The change in 63 years have been so great nobody expected them. There was 'no reason' to expect 60 years ago population growth would fall, in fact we were expecting to expand to the stars.
If you look at the growth rate charts there was a 1% peak in 1960 - why was that? Could it happen again?
So 1.3B growth in 37- 87 years time is a bit tenuous.It depends a great deal on the population in 37 years time! I personally believe it will be higher and that the adjustments will take longer.
Whether it is in Africa, Pakistan or even Britain (as today's news shows) where figures buck the trends I'm not sure but the risks seem higher in the non democratic LEDCs as some religions encourage large families, though European Catholics seem to have amended their preference for larger families, Islam specifically encourages it and so many LEDCs are heavily Muslim. Note I have avoided specifying countries.
I do believe religion & culture will have a major effect, for instance if the Pope tells the Catholics to breed then a good portion of them will.
I don't blindly accept birth rates will decline in the same way as they are currently in some countries when it has changed so much in the last 87 years. I do accept the decline will be part of the equation.
The UN paper predicts another 4 billion people or so. Most of these are in Africa, where it's predicted the population will more than double in the next 40 years and triple in the next 100, and in undeveloped but populous parts of Asia where they predict India will see another 500 million people by 2050, as well as large growth in Pakistan & Indonesia. It's not like they haven't factored in rapid population growth in all of the places you are talking about.Last edited by doodab; 9 August 2013, 14:22.While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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Originally posted by doodab View PostThis is one of the ramifications of the demographic transition model. When death rates fall you have a 60-100 year window with low death rates & high birth rates that causes a population explosion. It happened here, the population tripled in the UK between 1801 and 1881. It took the next 100 years for it to double again. Asia and South America have been going through this over the last 50 years or so, hence most of the extra 3.5 billion people since 1960 are in Asia, where the population has quadrupled, and Latin America which has seen a large multiplication but from a small base.
The UN paper predicts another 4 billion people or so. Most of these are in Africa, where it's predicted the population will more than double in the next 40 years and triple in the next 100, and in undeveloped but populous parts of Asia where they predict India will see another 500 million people by 2050, as well as large growth in Pakistan & Indonesia. It's not like they haven't factored in rapid population growth in all of the places you are talking about.
Lets meet back in 87 years and reviewAlways forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Comment
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostThere's no point. Vet is just trolling. He knows he's thick, it was pointed out to him at school and nothing's changed.
Oh, and update your sig, you lazy fvcker.Comment
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