Physically there is enough room for humans...that is providing they don't use any resources or eat any food( Vegetable or Animal) Overpopulation is not a myth. If it were a myth...there would be no starving children. Its a matter of population outstripping the resources of an area. As for land use, that is an entirely different proposition. People and animals are displaced by, mining,forestry, farming, manufacturing and many other industries and activities we choose to participate in on this planet.
Lets go back to grade school and look at what happens with the population of lynx and hares. We know that as the population of linx rises the population of hares decrease and vice versa.Now add simple introduction of farmers who shoot the hares, keeping the hare population down. What lynx survive, usually end up moving out of the area to find alternate food sources. As people move, pushing the lynx further into areas that already have diminishing resources, their population decreases.This is fine with a relatively small animal. Have you noticed the increase in cougar and bear attacks recently.
Lets look at an animal that is an herbivore. Take the caribou. We want to drill for oil in places that this animal migrates through for eons. We are disrupting the flow of their life, decimating their herds becasue of attitudes like...There is no over population problem on this planet.
You want a highly visible example of how little space we have on this planet. Drive down any major ( or not so major) highway and count the deer carcasses. Don't want to do that ...talk to people in the suburbs of any city or town. ask them about the deer rifling through their gardens.
Let's take a more recent example... horses did not exist on this continent until Europeans settled here. Over the years a number of mustangs got loose and began to form herds. Horse tend to be a migratory animal as well. so they began to do what comes naturally to them and began to migrate in the areas the buffalo used to. Now five centuries later, the wild mustangs are about to be corralled off and sent to the dog food factories.
Let's take a succesful story, the timber wolf,finally after years of careful management, was reintroduced to Yellowstone Park.After a few years, they are now considering opening up a bounty on them. Why because they are killing farmers stock near the park. Why ...because the wolves have a limited number of food sources in the park.
These are but a few of thousands of examples I can bring to the front of this argument.
So, don't feed me this line about how ovepopulation is a myth.
Some parents may indeed get rid of their pets, others would actually consult a doctor and get a prescription for their child.
I still maintain, I would first save the one that affords you the most opportunity to save both. If it were my pet I would place next priority on saving it.
Let me ask you a question... If you had the opportunity to save both of them...and it meant you had to save the animal first....would you save the animal first? Or would you just save the child and let the animal perish?
Lets go back to grade school and look at what happens with the population of lynx and hares. We know that as the population of linx rises the population of hares decrease and vice versa.Now add simple introduction of farmers who shoot the hares, keeping the hare population down. What lynx survive, usually end up moving out of the area to find alternate food sources. As people move, pushing the lynx further into areas that already have diminishing resources, their population decreases.This is fine with a relatively small animal. Have you noticed the increase in cougar and bear attacks recently.
Lets look at an animal that is an herbivore. Take the caribou. We want to drill for oil in places that this animal migrates through for eons. We are disrupting the flow of their life, decimating their herds becasue of attitudes like...There is no over population problem on this planet.
You want a highly visible example of how little space we have on this planet. Drive down any major ( or not so major) highway and count the deer carcasses. Don't want to do that ...talk to people in the suburbs of any city or town. ask them about the deer rifling through their gardens.
Let's take a more recent example... horses did not exist on this continent until Europeans settled here. Over the years a number of mustangs got loose and began to form herds. Horse tend to be a migratory animal as well. so they began to do what comes naturally to them and began to migrate in the areas the buffalo used to. Now five centuries later, the wild mustangs are about to be corralled off and sent to the dog food factories.
Let's take a succesful story, the timber wolf,finally after years of careful management, was reintroduced to Yellowstone Park.After a few years, they are now considering opening up a bounty on them. Why because they are killing farmers stock near the park. Why ...because the wolves have a limited number of food sources in the park.
These are but a few of thousands of examples I can bring to the front of this argument.
So, don't feed me this line about how ovepopulation is a myth.
Some parents may indeed get rid of their pets, others would actually consult a doctor and get a prescription for their child.
I still maintain, I would first save the one that affords you the most opportunity to save both. If it were my pet I would place next priority on saving it.
Let me ask you a question... If you had the opportunity to save both of them...and it meant you had to save the animal first....would you save the animal first? Or would you just save the child and let the animal perish?