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 | | From: | paul_eitchison at yahoo.com | | Subject: | Re: Wild Animal Sales Thrive in Mexico's Black Market | | Date: | 16 Jan 2005 02:28:12 -0800 |
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 | Ulrik Smed wrote: > jay_stutz@yahoo.com wrote: > > > The mestizos swarm across America destroying neighborhood after > > neighborhood even in the midwest. They breed and breed > > stopping only for the nine months gestation period. Mestizos > > are the major factor in population growth. Unchecked you may > > kiss environmental efforts goodbye. > > I've just read the same text in a HerpDigest newsletter. And yesterday read > about how monitor lizards are declining in numbers i Asia and Africa, in a > scientific book about monitor lizards. It stated that the protection and > conservation actions taken to save them are far, far too small and > ineffictive to do more than a tiny bit of help. Every time I read such > things, also about other animals and habitats, it becomes more and more > clear to me that the only really good long-term conservation strategy is to > reverse human population growth, globally. > > Now, take that recent tsunami in Asia. Some 140-150.000 people died. Most of > us take this for an enormously large number and consider it one of modern > time's largest catastrophes. But compared to the population growth, the > number is approximately equal to how much the world's population grows in 24 > hours. > > -- > Ulrik Smed > Aarhus, Denmark
World population control is the ultimate goal. In the meantime each country must protect itself against the swarms who leave overpopulated regions. Each country must become "an island unto itself" protecting it's environment. "Nature" will eventually control the population of those regions who fail to control it themselves. Paul
http://www.deportaliens.com/
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 | | From: | Mike Z. Helm | | Subject: | Re: Wild Animal Sales Thrive in Mexico's Black Market | | Date: | Sun, 16 Jan 2005 10:00:58 -0700 |
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 | On 16 Jan 2005 02:28:12 -0800, paul_eitchison@yahoo.com
>World population control is the ultimate goal. In the meantime each >country must protect itself against the swarms who leave overpopulated >regions. Each country must become "an island unto itself"
Yeah, sure.
> protecting >it's environment. "Nature" will eventually control the population of >those regions who fail to control it themselves. >Paul > >http://www.deportaliens.com/
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