• Current Events & Politics
    Welcome Guest
    Please read before posting:
    Forum Guidelines Bluelight Rules
  • Current Events & Politics Moderators: tryptakid | Foreigner

The Voluntary Human Extinction Movement wants you to rethink having children

@Xorkoth: i've thought of that aspect as well and that's the side i'm holding out for. i said i'm curious because i don't know for sure.

just woke up so i'll have to get the rest of the thought out there later. it runs more or less along the lines of if you photo copy one piece of paper over and over again how long does it take before the sheets being printed out become fully covered in black? there are other things to consider like inbreeding and how that affects the gene pool. no one knows how this intermixing of genetic material with all the races on the face of the planet will go, it's never been done before, it's one of the things i hope science is paying attention to right now. some think that given enough time we are all going to be grey in appearance from all the mixing of racial genetics (no, not grey like thealiens. more like mixing black and white or green and red colors), some think we are all going to be the same in appearance and become a-sexual reproducing, some think we will all end up having the same appearance and then over more time we separate out back to the original races again.

these are all just theories and talking with your friends passing thoughts back and forth.... i gotta go. major b.s. just happened and i'm about to flip my wig again. aint life grand.
 
@Xorkoth: no one has yet seen the limitations of DNA. think this is a first i believe, 7.6 billion on the planet all at once. science is paying attention to some of it, not to other parts (they will regret that later) and even though it is a pretty nifty thing capable of doing and understanding a lot more then it use to; science still doesn't know a lot about somethings or everything about anything... yet! so even experts are theorizing with no conclusive answers. that being said:

https://www.goshen.edu/bio/Biol410/BSSpapers99/jeri.html#problems

http://www.debate.org/opinions/designer-genes-should-there-be-limits-on-dna-manipulation

http://www.pnas.org/content/95/8/4315

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayflick_limit

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1280366/

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/are-we-eating-cloned-meat/

https://www.zmescience.com/other/headless-chicken-solution-matrix-farming-420545/

https://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/mutations_01

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutation

http://americanpregnancy.org/birth-defects/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inbreeding

https://www.quora.com/Are-there-any-disadvantages-of-race-mixing

http://theconversation.com/sex-genes-the-y-chromosome-and-the-future-of-men-32893

https://jmg.bmj.com/content/39/3/153

people learn of something and they think they can put it into terms that are easy to understand. a little bit of information can be a dangerous thing whether with the best or worse of intentions. all i'm doing is being opinionated from one end of the table. i much rather be positive but i like seeing the truth of things regardless.

the outcome is combining all of the negative factors linked above, the ones not mentioned or linked plus knowing a few other things that we don't understand yet. like fully understanding the god particle, the big bang and also seeing what the true limitations of DNA are. also what the universe is made up of and what that is made up of. specifically electrons, protons, neutrons and morons... oops, slip of the tongue. what these and other particles are made of, what their limitations are and also remembering that nothing is infinite in this universe; everything dies, everything meets an end so therefor everything is finite. (let's not forget all the imaginary things like god, love, the soul and other things that aren't tangible.)

the breakdown is complicated still but basically if you keep taking from the well then one day it will run dry. duh right?! but why? oceans dry up during ice ages (which happen slowly over thousands of years), changes in the courses of rivers, other biological burdens on that water source and maybe instead of drying up it just becomes unusable like poisoning small ponds to keep dangerous animals away from you herd, house or farm. maybe a virus comes along and it unusable for human consumption.

the short list of above links: human interference, DNA incompatibility, contamination, unknown variables that pop up, life just breaks down, naturally occurring mutations random factor and mother nature finds a way whether for the good or the bad. the links have more heavy topics included but this is the gist without getting off topic or side tracked.

like there never being 7.6 billion people before and all known limitation on DNA not being fully understood yet we also aren't aware of what might be possible in the future to have a dramatic influence on our DNA or very survival; what is referred to as mass extinction stages of the past. and to be honest we don't know what cloning animals and plant life that we eat does to us yet, similar to how corn is just about in everything today from food to gas and plastics to clothing and other materials. it's all relatively new and needs to be given time and accurate methods of detecting and evaluating it's safety to human beings.

i think that's everything. i'm tired, sorry it took so long to respond. i hope your B.S. has passed.
 
Last edited:
Yeah personally I'm gonna just stay out of this argument entirely. It strikes me as an argument that uses "we don't know everything" to discount how everything in the argument contradicts established understanding of the nature of the universe. And then after eliminating any contradictory evidence on the grounds that it hasn't reached an impossible standard of completeness and absolute certainty, immediately goes on to propose a new argument, based on absolutely no evidence at all, that for some reason should be taken as more plausible.

And well, it's just frustrating and pointless to debate.
 
not an argument, at least not to me. i perceive it to be a discussion on opinions and sharing of ideas.

stating we don't know everything: because no one knows the answer yet plus it's hard to discuss something with out empirical data to reach a final outcome. though it's probably a given and could go without saying. (i also specifically say so to not appear as a know it all with end all answers.)

contradicts the nature of the universe, how so?

what contradictory evidence is that? (i ask because i might have missed it)
 
Last edited:
Ultimately, what I'm saying is that there's simply no reason to think that there's some genetic upper limit to our species. No reason to think that us having 7 billion people alive today is any different to having 7 billion come and go over the next hundred or so years. Far more than 7 billion humans have already lived and died.

And then there's the other suggestions you made, like cloning. The idea that a cloned plant would somehow be different in some undescribed metaphysical way from an uncloned plant is simply pointless unfounded speculation. It's on the same level as suggesting maybe our population number or cloning of plants is an affront to an unknown diety. The ability to describe the concept doesn't make the concept not completely at odds with our established and tested understanding of the universe.

Some people think that vitamins synthesized in a lab are somehow different from one's obtained from nature. But they're almost certainly wrong. Our understanding of chemistry and physics, among the brightest human minds, is so vastly superior to those people making that suggestion that they can't even begin to comprehend why it is that what they suggest is so absurd. They're too ignorant to recognize the depth of how much they don't know.

And what we know, what we've tested and seen hold true is all we have worth going on. There is no point in giving any time to speculations that base themselves on nothing more than the ability to be imagined into existence. And from what I've heard, that's all there is to this DNA population limit concept.

There's no science behind it. The science is that there shouldn't be any innate upper limit to how large the population can be for genetic reasons. Both because of our understanding of genetics and existing observations of human existence. So the suggestion is made that these observations aren't complete and comprehensive enough to fully discount the concept, but that logic also fails because you can't logically argue that the contradictory evidence should be ignored because it's not 100% comprehensive and also that the unfounded theory should be given serious consideration when it's substantially less based in evidence and less comprehensive.

Why would DNA molecules just suddenly break down from human population increase? Is this somehow damaging the genetic code? No. Is it somehow breaking the nuclear forces holding them together? No. There's no suggestion I can see for how it would work.

Why would cloned plants be nutritionally or chemically different? Especially when we can analyze them and see their composition is identical. It's totally at odds with everything we know and have consistently observed about how matter and biology work.

The suggestions otherwise are just the kind of handwaved explanation authors use to justify their science fiction writing, where you want the audience to accept it and not have to explain it too hard. Which honestly I think is part of the problem. People are so exposed to fiction doing this and remaining plausible that many people start believing that such suggestions really are plausible. But they aren't. They don't hold up to science. A word that in itself most people don't really understand either. Generally imagining it as this pool of established claims about how the world works. Which is a misunderstanding. Science is just a method of processing information. Our perceptions and our brains way of perceiving and processing the world is highly unreliable. Science is a tried and tested way of getting at the most reliable information in a sea of human mistakes.
 
Last edited:
there is no reason not to believe or think there is an upper limit to our species. having 7 billion people alive all at once increase the likely hood that something is going to go wrong. having 7 billion people alive over the course of thousands of years, because some DNA piggy backs or dies off due to breeding being spaced out, decreases the likely hood. either way having 7 billion people alive today gives us another piece of information to add to this very discussion with more accuracy and less opinions and theorizing.

cloned plant being metaphysically different (and cloned animals and people) is what i poked at with the comment of "(let's not forget all the imaginary things like god, love, the soul and other things that aren't tangible.)". the findings of things that science cannot quantify was not to be made noted of to further elaborate upon as science does not believe in the existence of such things typically. science thinks the human soul weighs 21 grams, basically by measuring a person just before they die and just after. given certain factors a human fart weighs 22 grams. the human body goes through a few processes after it dies, one of those being it evacuates it's bowels shortly after dying. could a human fart, evacuating it's bowels and exhaling after it dies be confused with the weight of a human soul when trying to measure it? how does one weigh something that is almost completely intangible? (if it exists at all?)

vitamins synthesized in a lab are different than ones found in nature. you don't walk through this world and find vitamins laying around before humanity hit the scene. i tend to think less about food in that way. there is more of a hierarchy to the effectiveness of getting vitamins in you and how you process them. you start from the source: off the tree, from the dirt or off the vine is best, fresh at your local place you buy them from, then frozen, then canned, then from concentrate. vitamins in efficacy would fall probably somewhere between fresh at your local place and frozen. how our bodies digest, process and distribute them also factors in. when getting those vitamins from food it is not only easier but more efficient to get them from naturally occurring foods for the same reason when you get them from a vitamin it is best you take the vitamin shortly after or during a meal. it stays in your system longer than taking it on an empty stomach and simply passing it out of your system. not to mention binders and other artificial ingredients and human error.

what we know is only so much, we don not fully understand everything yet or everything about anything, also stated in last post. theorizing is partly basing something of using ones creative process, thought process and current understanding of general knowledge to elaborate and pose a question to prove or disprove.

we are discussing whether or not there is a concept of limits to human DNA. the findings are not conclusive yet.

no science behind it?! most of those links are scientific findings. again the science doesn't know everything yet because not everything has happened to be known and draw one conclusive closure to it. what is and what isn't is not as important as to what is being discussed and what is still possible to extrapolate from findings. comprehensive is hard to be conclusive while going through or finding something out, before the experiment is over with because that's being theoretical with no physical proof to substantiate it. kinda like seeing the forest before the trees.

why would DNA molecules just suddenly break down from human population increase?
one of the links provide a source that not all DNA from all races are compatible. it was in response to Xorkoth saying " If anything it would only strengthen our genes, as people mated across more and more cultures, making negative recessive genes less likely"

is this somehow damaging the genetic code?
by introducing failed DNA into the gene pool that somehow manages to survive being totally aborted then it does weaken the code. same source as above. if you make cookies with expired ingredients you get very poor quality in results.

is it somehow breaking the nuclear forces holding them together?
not only do the mutations do this naturally, as well as the cell process of reproducing failing to do so. but also mother nature (not some supreme deity but attributing that there are forces at work in this universe that we still do not fully understand to this day and have an impact on our lives. similar to how the force of gravity was not understood at one time) as well as environmental factors, mass extinction and human experimenting on that DNA can create infertility and other problems in the DNA doing what it has always done. if it's not broke, don't fix it.

"There's no suggestion I can see for how it would work." i'm only responsible for what i say, now how you take it. a person can't make another person think about something in a way they don't, can't, wont or aren't ready to yet and personally i don't want to; something comes from organically talking about things that doesn't from forced sharing of information. " we are not only ourselves you know, when gathered together, we make a person whom none of us knows well enough. perhaps a fourth entity which we should give a name, because he is more than our collective selves. perhaps we must better learn to control him. but destroy him now? no, that we can not do. if we do, we all betray each other."

why would cloned plants be nutritionally or chemically different?

i'm having a hard time locating the info on the net, i learned about it offline. (aside from some relevant info in one of the links) cloned plants actually do not last as long in some cases as the original ones do because of the natural cycle of being dormant, springing forth, bearing fruit to harvest and then going dormant again. specifically this study was with wheat and the root system.

they are designed to produce better "fruits" for us to consume, to be resistant to insects and insecticides and to be more adaptable to harsher or more unfavorable environments. technically speaking they are different from the original but i digress. cloned anything has never existed before aside from a-sexual reproducing cells like bacteria so the outcome is still not fully known.

it is relatively new and we have not given it enough time to let it runs it's course and see what happens, the experiment that is part of science and discovering data to support those theories and to turn them into facts. also if you copy one piece of paper, then take that copy and copy it, and so on and so on; then eventually the product will be a completely black page.

"consistently observed about how matter and biology work" - again, we don't know everything yet. we must leave room for the possiblity of learning something new otherwise we allow ourselves and science to grow stagnant because science does not exist without humans. science is the observation of the known universe around us and extrapolating theories off of those observations to manipulate matter to improve our way of life and understanding of the universe around us to increase our conveniences, progressive knowledge and odds of surviving. these workings of the universe would still go on even if human beings were no longer around to observe them.

truth is sometimes stranger than fiction, especially hard to accept sometimes. life imitates art and vice versa. <-- these are small factors in the equation of thinking about something but they are relevant in how we perceive things and the affect on how we think, they are influential and passed down as generally true from years and years of experience from those who came before us.

also there is nothing that science has ever made that is a true creation out of nothing and without some outside influence. the phone you are using to read this comes from land lines, that came from letters, that came from verbal communication and that comes from a need to connect with what is outside of us. one of the only things that human beings truly create that is original is another human being. that precious life is derived from our DNA, messing around with it in any fashion is along the lines of playing god, for good or bad. doesn't mean i don't agree in some cases of tampering with it, just stating an opinion some have that i tend to lean towards.

generally imagining things has led to some developments most people are not aware of. isaac asimov is not only a well known science fiction writer but also has consulted with nasa on several occasions for space exploration or theories. he managed to balance out fiction and reality, truth and theory.

there's that phrase again, contradictory evidence. i am asking again to see the contradictory evidence please?

some brains are more unreliable than others, some are not. the human brain is also evolving. we are going through the next step in human evolution today and one part of that is how our brains work so be careful with how you would handle yours (you being any one in general).

science is not the only tool we have utilized to understand the universe around us. much like religion of the past it is the new craze and go to for everyone even though they don't understand most of it. being of a scientific mind is a good thing, putting blind faith in it is akin to disasters like trump being in office. we have utilized religion, science, society and experience to do so as well as our brains and 5 senses. this new step in evolution we are going through is not only of the mind and practical things in life but of the body, soul, emotions, sixth sense and a collective understanding on how things work so we can accomplish something as a whole or in larger groups. science will fail in these new understandings if it is utilized alone. leading to more of that general we don't understand everything yet but your right...

even though sometimes in threads they are side tracked or derailed they produce something beneficial to the original topic or something new that might over shadow the original topic or not. i think in this case i have derailed it, not produced anything new and overshadowed the original topic.

@swilow: my apologies for getting too far off topic. i think les knight has the right idea at heart but his vision is clouded and he is going about it the wrong way. i still agree with JessFR in post #2 from this thread and still think it was very well said.
 
Last edited:
I have a theory on diseases like cancer and why more and more people are getting sick, It's population control. on a biological level I think are bodies know when there are too many and it kills off the weak. are Ego makes us think we are important but its just consciousness. if you plant too many trees in one place they die why are we any different.

Birth is going to have to be controlled at the rate we are moving but nature always wins you cant fight it and maybe nature will work out how to reduce the population on its terms.
 
Birth is going to have to be controlled at the rate we are moving but nature always wins you cant fight it and maybe nature will work out how to reduce the population on its terms.
Birth rates in the United States have fallen to a 30 year low, and other first world democracies (Japan and Italy come immediately to mind) are facing crises as their birth rates continue to drop and their population ages. Even in third world Asia (notably Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia and China) birth rates have fallen below 2 births per woman. The location that seems to be the epicenter of a population crisis would be Sub-Saharan Africa.
 
I have a theory on diseases like cancer and why more and more people are getting sick, It's population control. on a biological level I think are bodies know when there are too many and it kills off the weak. are Ego makes us think we are important but its just consciousness. if you plant too many trees in one place they die why are we any different.

Birth is going to have to be controlled at the rate we are moving but nature always wins you cant fight it and maybe nature will work out how to reduce the population on its terms.

This is al predicated on the belief that more people are getting cancer than in the past. But I've seen no evidence that this is even true.
 
@swilow: not trying to deter or bring up the same discussion that i left before. just want to share accurate info as is a vice of mine.

@Xorkoth: any time i have a discussion of late you do not get the best of me, no one does. by that i mean you do not get everything i have to offer and like i said, passing along info not for the sake of discussing DNA being "watered down" again but i did not think of it at the time (memory problems, gotta love that poison) and would like to pass it along in case it becomes relevant to something else you talk about in the future, to add to your collective info or if your just a curious person. i learned of these two points of interest off line and i've been trying to hunt down links to provide as credible proof for you.

1. there have been cases where people have been wrongly accused of a crime based on their fingerprints being taken at a crime scene they were never near. one of the biggest myths today is that these forensic shows give the people the wrong impression. it takes longer than a few hours to run DNA scans, it takes more like a few weeks when ordered as a rush job. aside from how it is portrayed on media fingerprints have a lot of factors that can be overlooked such as age, how the same fingerprint taken when a person is arrested can be taken again a few hours later and there appear to be slight differences, human error in examining the print itself and a few other things that can throw off precise deductions from them.

people on one continent have been accused of committing crimes on another even though they never left the continent just because their print was found at a scene. i'm having a hard time finding a credible scientific source for it to link you too but if i do i will PM you it. point is fingerprints are becoming not so unique. as the number of people grows so does the possibility of replicating other traits such as fingerprints randomly through out the world.

2. the link provided is the closest one i can find for DNA and someone having your exact DNA or pretty much very close to it. there are many variables and outcomes to consider on how this would prove the limits of DNA but like i said, just trying to pass accurate info along. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2585748/
 
Last edited:
This is al predicated on the belief that more people are getting cancer than in the past. But I've seen no evidence that this is even true.

With people living longer cancer is more of a cause of death than it has ever been IMOm obviously its hard to prove since we have little data to compare.
 
cancer is more widespread? possible. cancer - the new plague.

nice tree analogy btw.

think it's too early to tell. mother nature definitely nudged us, we might nudge back. it's one of those things you don't want to be right on cause we all lose.

many different threads unraveling from the tapestry of our fate and hard to guestimate which ones are going to be the forerunners, could be a combination of some or all of them. one thing is possible, if we're not careful Les Knight might get impatient and jump start the apocalypse. mother nature and our own ignorance might not be moving quick enough for him.

if he does, that's going to suck so bad. can't kill off everyone but he can take out a large number if he puts his back into it. even 10,000 people is too many to satisfy some whacky idea of "thinning the herd".

basically there are better ways to achieve the end result and who knows, we might gain new ideas or tech from it if we try.
 
With people living longer cancer is more of a cause of death than it has ever been IMOm obviously its hard to prove since we have little data to compare.

Yeah but more people living longer, and thus being more likely to get cancer and die of cancer, doesn't mean there's been any increase in the actual fundamental prevalence of cancer. The suggestion was that more people are getting cancer as a population control measure. But more people getting cancer because they're living long enough to inevitably wind up dying of it doesn't provide any evidence that more people are getting cancer than you'd statistically expect. Let alone providing evidence that the reason for it is intentional.
 
@JessFR: ah! and here i was thinking confusion laid with more people get cancer today compared to the sum of all who got it in the past. i'm an idiot. :\

i could believe there are more people alive today with cancer than there has been in any given period of human history. very hard to prove this and know as a fact.

trying to figure out and provide proof of mother nature and her mysterious ways is difficult in a very extreme best case scenario. maybe in the future we will have some means of measuring or understanding her after enough experience and time goes by but for now it's a learning process.

Les Knight brings up a good point but killing off humanity even with the best of intentions seems too far out there to be considered humane. a death is a death and seems to be one of the only things all of humanity agrees upon as being bad. even though some perform such heinous acts they still fear it or find it unpalatable when it happens to those close to them or a beloved t.v./movie character. i don't want to see anything in this universe die off due to human carelessness (poor dodo bird). i don't want humanity to go extinct either. these ups and downs of human civilization have happened in history when societies get too ahead of themselves, and it's for a number of reasons if not a combination of them. more of a learning process.

i can understand his end goal though. she's a great mom, been with us since the beginning and has her role in this universe as well as other life she supports. (on the topic of mom's, that's pretty messed up to say. "don't congratulate her" even though she just did something sacred and awe inspiring. dad's not ignoring you, just keeping with the topic here.) it spits in the face of what it means to have a new life created. forget about adding another mouth to feed. (apparently with people that comes as an after thought and i can agree with him on that) it's just that one statement though. discourage one life, you discourage life in all it's forms. there is a balance but new life must be maintained.

what is implied and yet not specifically said in that article (i have not put in the work to verify this anywhere else either), is this guy ready to commit suicide in order to see his idea through to the end?

where are my manners. congratulations on becoming a mod Jess.
 
Only having one child works as well. If more people did this, it would the slow growth curve into a sustainable decline.


Birth is going to have to be controlled at the rate we are moving but nature always wins you cant fight it and maybe nature will work out how to reduce the population on its terms.



China says hello. Asks when everyone will catch up to their 2013 policy.
 
If every couple has one child, the population will reduce over time. Seems like a great idea to me. Even at 2, the population wouldn't grow.
 
Top