Interesting analogy. Now, if you saw that your neighbor was clearly struggling to make the same amount of progress as you, would you be willing to lend a hand and help him to develop his own property a little more so that the quality of his life would improve, or ignore him so that you could spend more time enjoying yourself? Perhaps even transcend to an entirely separate level of dickery by exploiting his vulnerability and seizing his apples, giving him no choice but to work for you, and then preaching about how much better off he now is?
I don't think it's relevant to the problems me and Bucket have pointed out - I don't see how Guy#1 is OMG MAKING TOO MANY APPLES OH NO WE'RE DOOMED. I hate thieves and robber-barons just as much as the next guy, and it would be great if the first guy could help his neighbour improve his own production. (Assuming the neighbour wants to - how much does the ant owe the grasshopper, and how much should he sacrifice for the fact that he's done well and another has screwed their shit up? How much money do you give the starving druggy, knowing most of it's going to go right to feeding the habit he needs to break in order for us all to actually be better off, instead of just redistributing happiness with less than 100% efficiency)
But LoudWhispers is arguing that he should stop producing so many goddamn apples, and also give his current apples away. As if that will have a
good outcome.
Loud Whispers, I just think you don't really have any understanding of economics, or how it works. There is no money problem (at least in regards to the issues you've raised here). There is no global food shortage. Pretty much every place in the world that's suffering and miserable in poverty and hunger is doing so for reasons completely unrelated to their not being enough food and money to go around. It's a systems problem, a people problem, an organizational problem through and through.
If the US population cut it's food consumption by half,
none of that would change. Those people would still be starving. The two are entirely unrelated. The ONLY outcome would be a huge temporary increase in expenditures by the US government in paying people not to grow food in an attempt to keep the market from crashing below sustainable levels, and/or a whole lot of farmers out of the job and suddenly stricken by poverty themselves - a lot of them in third world countries with no other source of income. We already have the capacity to produce more than enough food to feed the entire world with plenty to spare.
This is not a global resource scarcity problem.
Money, meanwhile, is ferociously difficult to put towards useful ends. Take UNICEF - probably one of the premier charities in people's minds. Do you know their executives make salaries in the several million dollars a year range? That only a small portion of their money goes towards helping anyone?
Do you know that most food and clothes donations enterprises are not only almost strictly for profit, but actually
actively destructive to the society they claim to be helping? Turns out if you give everyone a bunch of fish every day, the fishing-boat-building economy collapses, overall happiness goes down, and everyone gets right fucked if supply gets interrupted. (This is more of a problem with clothes charities, which are terrible fucking things when you consider that textiles manufacture is one of the better paths for third world companies to modernize, and buying and selling locally is a lot better for everyone involved)
I'm all for redistribution of wealth, foreign aid, and a whole bunch of the crap you advocate, but this doesn't make your arguments, that the cause of these problems is somehow, in some specified way, over-consumption, any less bullshit.
The inevitable is not inevitable if people actually want to make the world better, instead of selfishly wasting resources for your own enjoyment. No, over-consumption wouldn't reduce the damage per person, it would reduce the environmental damage too and create a society that isn't so focused no getting rich at the expense of others.
It would reduce the average environmental damage
per person. It would reduce the amount of resources consumed
per person. If we're talking non-repairables, like using up non-renewables, this does not make the outcome it any less inevitable. It just draws it out. If we can't figure out a way to remove CO2 from the atmosphere, for example, we could stop over-consuming, period, today, and it would do jack shit at preventing rising global temperatures.
The solutions to every one of your problems is ultimately completely unrelated to this notion that consumption is the issue -
sustainability is the issue. But all the modest living in the world won't magically make that happen - it just means the environment would be ruined a bit more slowly by a smaller but just as destructive industry.