• @[email protected]
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    196 months ago

    Yeah, having kids probably reduced my household resource consumption, compared to the dual income no kid lifestyle that my wife and I had before kids.

    Population growth is so far disconnected from resource consumption, because people’s resource consumption does not resemble a bell curve. A private jet produces more CO2 in an hour (about 2 tonnes) than the average Indian produces in a year (about 1.9 tonnes).

    The poor people having children aren’t destroying the planet. Rich people, childless or not, are. (And yes, I acknowledge that I fall under the “rich” category here.)

    • @FantasmaNaCasca
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      66 months ago

      I don’t know you, but you probably don’t fall on the category of “rich” in my mind.

      Richer than an Indian farmer. Ok. I’m also rich then. I live in a house (not mine) and don’t go hungry.

      I don’t even consider billionaires on the scale…that is just an afront on humanity and shouldn’t exist.

      • @[email protected]
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        66 months ago

        I think my personal resource consumption, if scaled up to the world population, would be devastating. That’s what I mean by categorizing myself in the “rich.” I might not be a billionaire, but I’m far, far above the global average, and still significantly above the national average for my nation.

        • @regdog
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          6 months ago

          Points to you, for self-awareness.