Melinda Gates (2010) - Vaccination Is The Key For Overpopulation

2 years ago
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Melinda Gates (2010) - Vaccination Is The Key For Overpopulation

Is it that True? Are there too many Humans?

The wife of Bill Gates seems to think that there is too many human beings? So they would like to use vaccines to prevent humans from having children, or maybe just eliminate human beings? Or maybe those areas of the world has precious resources that "some" would love to confiscate?

How much truth is in these fevered claims? It is easy to believe that the world is overpopulated because human beings have always lived in crowded conditions and do so at the present time. We do so not because of lack of space on the planet but because of the need to work together, to buy and sell, to give and receive goods and services from one another. Our cities and towns have always thronged with people and traffic — horses, donkeys, and camels in ages past, motor vehicles today.

Because we crowd together and because the earth is large relative to our needs, we leave most of it unoccupied. Human beings actually use no more than one to three percent of the land area of the earth for their urban areas, roads, railroads, and airports, according to experts such as Julian Simon and others.

All the people of the world could move into the state of Texas and form a giant city with about the same population density as some large cities today (6 billion population divided by 262,000 square miles of land in Texas equals about 23,000 per square mile). Inner London contains 21,000 per square mile and Paris has 50,000, according to Encyclopedia Britannica online.

There was indeed a sudden spurt in world population growth during the 1960s and 1970s. It was the result of an abrupt decline in the world death rate due to the discovery of antibiotics and improved sanitation. The birth rate was actually declining quite markedly but was still greater than the death rate. That relationship is now changing: death rates are now rising in many countries as populations grow older, and birth rates have declined below death rates in many countries.
Birth rates are TOO Low

According to the UN Population Division, 44 percent of the world's population now lives in countries where birth rates are too low to prevent eventual population decline. The United States is one of these countries. Our birth rate fell from 24.3 per thousand population in 1950 — 55 to 14.6 in 1998. Worldwide, the average woman today bears fewer than three children in her lifetime.

This is also the average for Asia and Latin America. In Europe and Japan the one-child family is standard. If present trends continue, there will be 100 million fewer people in Europe fifty years from now than there are today and 21 million fewer in Japan.

https://www.bitchute.com/video/OdI2CRofmgTo/

Population Myths - The Population Research Institute: https://www.pop.org/population-myths-2/

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