Tag Archives: denialism

Paul Ehrlich Was Wrong About Specific Dates, Not Nature’s Physical Limits vs. Growth Addiction

“The majority of economists have never been taught that ecosystems provide humanity with an absolutely indispensable array of services, services that are “free,” but would, of course, be infinitely costly to replace.”The Population Explosion, 1990

It was sad to learn that population biologist Paul Ehrlich died on Friday the 13th in March, 2026, though that’s a fitting day for a “doomer” to exit this troubled world. And it was predictable to see cornucopian imbeciles (a word he used) dismissing his entire body of work, as if all he ever accomplished was worst-case predictions at the height of his fame. When speaking to laymen audiences he resorted to blunt themes, e.g. the Johnny Carson show, but his writings contained a lot of nuance (see Stanford-based articles). Most critics have likely not read his work in much depth, if at all. They see him as ‘that depopulation guy that Alex (Sandy Hook denier) Jones hated.’ Throw in some Bill Gates misquotes and it’s a wrap.

After Ehrlich’s death, hit pieces trivialized his logical math of carrying-capacity overload while harping on specific timing forecasts and dodging his physical limits philosophy, yet these types don’t argue with limiting government budgets. They just seek ruses to detach money from the physical world that makes money possible. Those who think “if a worst-case hasn’t happened yet it may never happen” are lousy planners in any context. If your car’s temperature gauge rises and you crest one hill without overheating, will your engine manage all future grades? Are traffic jams easing with more people jamming roadways? Can a beach or national park ever be too crowded? Why are food prices really rising? Those who laugh off such questions tend to think global warming is a hoax and Peak Oil may never really happen, though it’s closer than ever now. If anything will derail growthist fantasies, it’s unaffordable oil.

Headlines after Ehrlich’s death were predictable. It’s “anti-human” to live within nature’s limits, say growth addicts. Man’s impact on nature and chronic poverty mean nothing.

Wiser people see that Paul Ehrlich was only “wrong” in the sense that a smoker or druggie (overcrowding his system with toxins) luckily outlived one doctor’s dire prediction. The addict didn’t gain immortality by dodging that particular date! But millions of rubes and marketers can’t accept that a rock 7,926 miles in diameter, with economies grown by hydrocarbons & minerals from the crust-equivalent of an apple skin, will never support endless human numbers. Why not plan for what the math says is coming instead of always pushing the envelope?

Growthmaniacs (another Ehrlichism) lament necessary yet painful birthrate declines in modern nations, and try to normalize unnatural debt that demands endless young labor. We have to face fundamental math sooner or later, not just market gambles, as in the bet between Paul Ehrlich and Julian (fuzzy fractal math) Simon. Do Ehrlich’s critics have any concept of the future and diminishing returns? Do they think today’s comforts & health gains are locked in by some innate warranty? Growing homelessness is a highly visible result of overpopulation and societal decline, but people tend to look away and count their own dollars.

Adequate time will confirm Ehrlich’s wisdom if today’s ecological destruction isn’t ample evidence that he’s always been right in principle. Anthropocentric money-grubbers just don’t care about nature itself, seeing it as a separate entity from human progress. You can never quite explain to them that nature was here before Man and the latter can’t exist without the former staying in balance. Glibness toward nature now includes “clean, green” excuses for sprawling “renewables” ruining what’s left of scenic landscapes & oceans.

The gist of Paul Ehrlich’s work was that Man can’t keep chewing up nature like termites eating a house. Many of his critics gladly call a dozen rogue wolves “overpopulated.”

Ehrlich was hardly alone in understanding Earth’s limits, just a famous name in books and TV when environmentalism gained serious traction. This was shortly before the EPA was mandated in 1970 by a Republican President. It took multiple pollution crises to inspire action back then, and ecologists have never been taken seriously by louts who treat nature like a materials warehouse built solely for Man. We now have dummies like Trump scaling back environmental laws that are taken for granted, though he’s at least willing to call wind turbines ugly, unlike neo-environmentalists who play the old growthism game under new branding.

People like Nate Hagens, Chris Martenson and Richard Heinberg are saying many of the same things Ehrlich did for decades, though wary of making timeline predictions, as Paul Ehrlich regretted in hindsight. The late Carl Sagan covered many of the same topics and was generally respected, though mocked for his pronunciation of “billions.” The work of scientists is often barely grasped by the dull-eyed masses unless they invent money-making gadgets or save lives with medical advances. Try to educate them on long term hazards and you’ll get called a doomsayer by shallow optimists. Ironically, many people enjoy watching & reading apocalyptic fiction, but show them real threats like AGW and you get smirking comments about “tax scams.” More than ever, we need unambiguous pundits urging sanity on human overpopulation and avarice.

R.I.P. Paul R. Ehrlich.

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CO2 Initiates “Less Warming” Contract (plus Trump’s “worthless fish”)

Satire: The ancient atmospheric gas, CO2, recently got fed up with anti-conservation “conservatives” who claim it doesn’t trap excessive heat due to people burning formerly buried carbon 24/7, raising levels from 280 ppm to over 420 ppm now. Rube scholars insist that the species carving up vast tracts of land and polluting oceans could never alter the skies above, except for “them chemtrails.”

It looks like CO2 finally decided to assuage their ignorance by offering to change the very laws of physics! Who knew that gas molecules were even aware of Man’s existence, much less the bloated global economy? If thermodynamics isn’t actually rigid, what other cosmic shifts can we expect? Would this be Intelligent Design at work?

January 20, 2025

Attention Earth's human inhabitants:

We, the CO2 molecules in your atmosphere, hereby declare that we'll try to curtail our triatomic vibrations that trap infrared heat. The year 2026 is a possible starting point but it won‘t be simple.

We're trying this experiment because millions of self-described experts resent the short-term costs of trying to prevent further anthropogenic warming and its long-term (far costlier) impacts, which they ignore to get along with peers.

These people resist external requests for personal restraint, like not buying oversized trucks they rarely haul cargo with, or using their heaters & air-conditioners frugally (R.I.P. Jimmy Carter).

Simpleminded populist leaders tell them to squander finite oil and many other resources until the son of a deity returns, per the the ideology of James, as in Watt & Inhofe.

We'll have to confer with the whole Universe to attempt this stunt, so be patient while we ask the ancient laws of physics to change. Be aware that this involves a Faustian bargain; the usual penalty for willful ignorance.

Sincerely, CO2 (one carbon & two oxygen atoms)

If the physical laws of infrared absorption and re-emission magically change in 2026, will Trump & Co. admit that AGW was always real, since direct human blame would be lessened? Even if that supernatural event happens, there’s still the looming problem of Peak (shale) Oil, after which carbon emissions will decline automatically, but so will the global economy.


The above contract is fittingly dated for Donald Trump’s second inauguration day, preparing us for another stubborn round of global warming denial in America’s highest office (high intelligence optional). Before taking over, Trump ignored any connection between drought-desiccated chaparral, extreme Santa Ana winds and unstoppable flames in the Los Angeles area. Extreme loss of homes in the Palisades Fire made headlines but it had common roots with other recent, record fires. The firefighting effort was partly hampered by an offline reservoir & staff shortages, but DEI should stand for Dangerous Environmental Ignorance (of climate change), not just the Left promoting unqualified people.

As an ideological context-ignorer, Trump tried to blame a “worthless fish,” the distant delta smelt, often targeted when water in arid California is discussed by “conservative” resource gluttons. The excellent Cadillac Desert covers the context of California’s water history, which human overpopulation (not a nearly extinct fish) keeps straining. Anti-regulation zealots ignore how salt water intrudes into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta ecosystem when too much fresh water is diverted to farms, or drought further reduces pushback into S.F. Bay estuaries (salinity maps). Excessive salt ruins soils and farming, so it’s mindless to frame this as only about fish, even if you’re evil enough to encourage extinctions.

Map of variable salinity in the San Francisco Bay and Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. This is a screen-capture from the link at lower right in image, circa 1981 but even more relevant as California's human population exceeds carrying-capacity.

Trump’s cash-slinging ally, Elon Musk, once seen as a climate-realist, also dismisses environmental concerns. He mocked routine studies to protect marine life from his rocket/space obsession, and doesn’t care that he’s ruining night skies & astronomy with Starlink satellites. He also creates large debris fields on Earth, e.g. the 1/17/25 Starship explosion with countless parts raining down. He’s also an overpopulation-denier, dwelling on falling birthrates in modern nations while ignoring total net gains and global demand for finite resources.

It’s all part of the GOP’s cavalier/Creationist attitude toward nature, but also seen in Democrats’ tribal support for “clean energy” landscape desecration, and using “social justice” to trivialize the population component of I = PAT. Wind & solar sprawl is often physically built by rural conservatives and welcomed for landowner royalties, if they aren’t bribed. No mainstream ideology is really defending nature’s balance at this point.

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