Monday, July 13, 2026

Unreal - Imagine Another Pro-Natalist Buffoon Thinks We Need More Than 1 Billion Americans

 
                  Isaac Asimov warns of overpopulation in 1976 Barbados lecture


Who are these clueless, detached from reality buffoons, who ceaselessly advocate for  increasing the human population beyond the Earth's support capacity?

This latest buffoon's name is Lyman Stone:   director of the Pronatalism Initiative at the Institute for Family Studies and he now joins another low IQ buffoon - Matthew Yglesias. A grade Z moron who scribbled in a New York magazine piece  ('One Billion Americans') ,  several years ago that the U.S. is "virtually empty" and could easily hold three times as many people (i.e. a billion at least)

Meanwhile, we now have Stoner Stone  the director of research for the oxymoronic consulting firm "Demographic Intelligence"- who tries to make an analogous case for a billion Americans.   According to this overeducated Bozo writing in the NY Times Saturday (The Population Bust Is Coming Sooner Than Anyone Is Prepared For)

"In 1775, a year before the Declaration of Independence was signed, a Harvard professor named Edward Wigglesworth did the math on American population growth and could barely contain his excitement. He had found that the colonists were doubling their numbers every 25 years, mostly through births, and at that pace he projected that by the close of the 20th century there would be “ONE THOUSAND TWO-HUNDRED AND EIGHTY MILLIONS” of us (his capitalization, not mine). A billion Americans, and then some.

Sadly, there are only about 340 million of us today. We should be asking not just why we so badly undershot Wigglesworth’s hopes, but also whether we are about to start counting down instead of up."

Sadly? What are you a certified moron? We 0ught to be thankful there are only 340 m of us today, given millions can't even get a first home, and there isn't the land or resources already to support them. (And AI data centers sucking up ever more of both.) Newsflash, in Wigglesworth's era there were more than ample resources to support that population - of 2.4 million. So this benighted Harvard prof could be somewhat forgiven for letting the paucity of populace in relation to available resources go to his head.  Naturally, the colonists would be 'doubling their numbers' because they also grasped the margin existed to double them without consequence. (Until they began invading native tribes' lands)

Having made his preposterous analogy he goes on to try to show where we - in the current overpopulated world (and nation) - fall short:

"If America’s population does decline, it will strain our entitlements system, damage the economy, reduce innovation and entrepreneurship, and cause serious labor shortages. But the majority point of view — held by major institutions like the Census Bureau, the United Nations and the Social Security trustees — is that the United States probably won’t face population decline until the 2080s, or even beyond 2100.

That forecast is far too optimistic. The more accurate projection, which I outlined in a recent report for my organization, the Institute for Family Studies, sees the American population beginning to shrink in the 2050s. It is a forecast so grim it could upend American budgeting and, thus, American politics."

Look, it doesn't matter what the UN, Census Bureau or Social Security projects or whether "over-optimistic" or not. Because there are already far too many people for the resources that can sustain them - namely water!  Here in the American West the whole Colorado River is drying up thanks to relentless heat and prolonged drought. Vegas is in dire straits literally begging for water from states that have more. Here in Colorado they are already talking about 'toilet to tap' alternatives for when the crunch comes.   Then there is San Diego County which depends on ocean desalination. Even so, it is only able to meet 10 percent of the region's demand but at great cost. Meanwhile, short sighted fools use up what precious water we have on AI data centers, bitcoin 'factories' and fracking.

Know what will "upend American politics"?  Not having enough water to drink in an increasingly hot country, or enough food to eat because the dearth of water for crops makes them impossible to grow or sustain. Upend budgeting? That has already been upended because we are consuming more than we have, what the planet has! The limits of our resources are best  illustrated  in the concept of Earth overshoot, as embodied in the graphic below which shows humans are currently consuming the equivalent resources of 1.6 EARTHS per year, e.g.

The interpretation of the graph (upward) is straightforward. By June, 2030 TWO full Earths - that is, the resources therein - will be needed to support the then population. Already we are at 1.6 Earths. Every year Global Footprint Network raises awareness about global ecological overshoot with its Earth Overshoot Day campaign. Earth Overshoot Day, calculated annually by the Global Footprint Network is the day on the calendar when humanity has used up the resources that it takes the planet the full year to regenerate.  

What is all of this telling us?  Easy!  We do not NEED (and Earth can't support) any more people on this planet! Or...in the US of A.

Our illustrious 'populace popularizer' continues with more twaddle:

"Wigglesworth saw exponential growth as the mark of a heroic country. For the first century of our country’s life together, we stayed on that trajectory. Then we spent the last 150 years proving him too optimistic. "

Correction: The last 150 years we proved him not REALISTIC enough. Not realistic enough to factor in resource availability to population growth. Wigglesworth in 1775 could afford to entertain exponential growth because for a limited time - there was enough sustainable margin for it. That no longer exists. That margin is gone as in vamanosed.

He adds, again oblivious to facts:

"The question for our country’s 250th birthday is how many more birthdays we want it to have, both for its babies and as a country."

The answer to the question inheres within the answer Isaac Asimov (see top) gave for the planet's carrying capacity.  Asimov defined carrying capacity thusly: 

(Usable land resources, water + food + fuel) / (individual food, fuel + water)

If the numerator is    11.4 x 10 9  hectares of usable aggregate equivalent land-water resource base and if 4 hectares is the ideal "mean individual requirement" over a lifetime (e.g. to meet all basic needs and have a few private luxuries) that means:

CC = (11.4 x 10 9   hectares) / 4 hectares/person  »  2.85  billion

That is a figure we are now on the verge of surpassing by a factor of four.   

As for the U.S. carrying capacity this can be estimated given the current global population is » 8.3 billion (for simplicity). Then:

U.S. (x)/ 340 m  =  2.85 b/ 8.3 b = 0.34

U.S. (x) =  340 m (0.34) =  115.6 m

So the U.S. given Asimov's carrying capacity computations should have no more than 115.6 million people.

A useful metaphor that Asimov used to illustrate carrying capacity has since become known as "the bathroom metaphor" and it works to get people to understand the debilitating, disastrous effects of too many people in a space with limited resources. 

As Asimov noted, if two people live in an apartment, and it comes with two bathrooms, they have a comfortable life. Either one can use the bathroom anytime he or she wants and can remain in there as long as they desire, even reading while doing business.

One can say, that for the purpose of "Bathroom freedom" - 2 is the carrying capacity for a two -person apartment. Now, let there be twenty people occupying the same apartment, and what happens? Bathroom freedom evaporates. Visits now must be regulated by the clock, and no one may stay in for too long. Indeed, a timetable likely has to be set up for each person's bathroom use. (Don't laugh too hard at the improbability of this example, since we now know of numerous cases where immigrants have been found crammed into such conditions - but usually in a house)

The point is, that the liberating (and convenient) use of a bathroom which held for two persons, no longer applies with twenty, and probably evaporated by the time there were five or six occupants of the apartment. (And we won't even go into where each - unrelated- person sleeps, if there are only two bedrooms).

Stone then cites two two major pieces of wishful thinking" that he thinks  would not solve the problem:

1- More immigration to compensate. Which he claims won't work. 

2- Women are merely delaying having children rather than forgoing it entirely.

No.1 fails because, according to Stone:

birthrates are collapsing across the entire planet, not just here at home. The supply of would-be migrants will shrink as more countries run out of young people

No. 2 fails because;

"Research shows that delays in childbearing are usually not made up, and, anyway, estimates that take deferred childbearing into account have fallen by just as much as the headline fertility rate.

What is this Bozo’s solution?

It will take serious money aimed at the people doing the work of raising the next generation of Americans, an end to the marriage penalties woven through our tax and welfare codes, a surge in building family-size houses on par with the one during the last baby boom, and a culture that treats children as a future worth having rather than a lifestyle expense. Those are big asks, but they are things Americans can achieve if they set their mind to it.”

Justifying the question: What planet is he living on? Not this one! Because this 'pronatalist' hasn't the foggiest notion about the planet's inherent support limits. Among the most critical is the access to fresh, potable water.  Look for example at Capetown, S. Africa, narrowly avoiding "Day Zero" in 2018 but at the cost of 40 percent of the country's water intensive crops.  Without freshwater resources, the whole 'enchilada' goes south, from crops to public health.  It's a no brainer, given we are seeing the exhaustion of stores of fresh water globally. 

One notable ‘State of the World’ report (2000, pp. 46-47), warned that the ever increasing water deficits will likely spark “water wars".  Even now, 1 billion-plus  people live in water-stressed conditions, meaning that renewable water supplies have dropped below 1,700 cubic meters per capita, a critical survival threshold. As observed (p. 47):


When a country’s renewable water supplies drop below 1,700 cubic meters per capita (what some analysts call the water stress level) it becomes difficult for the country to mobilize enough water to satisfy all the food, household, and industrial needs of its population.”

Where is the additional water going to come from to support Stone's hyper GENEROUS population fairy tale? Desalination plants for his additional billions? Who is going to pay for them?

One NY Times commenter, as I expected, mustered a rejoinder to this bunkum that is well worth repeating:

"The carrying capacity of planet earth has been calculated at 500 million to 2 billion, total. If we conserve resources carefully, avoid contaminating and degrading our environment, and preserve, permanently, massive undisturbed natural areas of the continents and oceans.

This sustainable threshold was passed in the early 1970's. And in the meantime we have despoiled the entire planet. Which only a coordinated global effort of humanity to restrain and actively undo our abuses can undo. Or several ten's of thousands of years, or possibly hundreds of thousands of years, without the presence of humans, for Gaia to heal herself. The only sustainable solution is a steady state economy. All opinions to the contrary are theistic cornucopian fantasies. Those alive today may or may not see this eventuality. It can certainly be seen on the horizon, one only needs to look. No matter how much one believes it is not so, how much one believes that someone will come down and and save us before it's too late, we cannot change the laws of physics or bend the laws of thermodynamics. Every bit of objective science we have tells us that we are bound to and by the environment we live in. It us up to us to save ourselves. Mathematics, physics, environmental science, and human physiology, tells us that anything more or less that 2.1 children per family is unsustainable. This is an unavoidable truth. I think Malthus is more instructive."

That merits a read and re-read, not the fatuous fabulism this pronatalist moron has pumped out.

See Also:


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Friday, July 10, 2026

D.E. Littlewood's Elegant Introduction To Non-Commutative Algebras (Pt. 2)

 Continuing on from  D.E. Littlewood's Chapter XIII, (p. 101, Algebras) in his monograph  The Skeleton Key Of Mathematics'  we learn the existence of a non-commutative algebra in higher than 3 dimensions.   Enter Grassmann algebra, also known as Exterior algebra, an algebraic system created by 19th-century mathematician Hermann Grassmann. It concerns vector products but is applicable to any number of dimensions whereas quaternions (Part 1) are confined to 3 dimensions.

It also extends vector algebra to include geometric objects like directed planes and volumes. Its fundamental feature is the exterior product, which is anti-symmetric, meaning reversing the order of the terms flips the sign, e.g.

e ij  =  - e ji

As Littlewood notes (p. 103):

"In Grassman's space analysis a vector with components:

x 1,  x 2,......  x n

is associated with:

e 1x 1  +  e 2  x 2,.....+     e x n

where the quantities:

e 1,  e 2,......  e n

Satisfy the following:

     e i 2    =   0,    e ij  =  - e ji

In other words, displays the anti-symmetric feature. (e ij  =  - e ji  )

In three dimensions a vector would be of the form:

ae  be 2  ce 3

An element of area would take the form:

ae  e 3   + bee1  +  cee 2

And would thus be distinguishable from the vector with which it would be identified in quaternions. An element of volume would have the single component: k ee 2  e 3

For:

 e1 e 2  e 3  =  ee 3  e 1   =   e 3  e 1  e2 =  -  ee 3 e 2    = - e 2   ee 3

=   -  e 3  e2  e 1

The algebra immediately yields the formula for the area of a triangle as half of the product of the two sides.  Or for the formula of a tetrahedron as one-sixth of the product of three concurrent edges.

Littlewood goes on (p. 104) to make a number of key distinctions to the previous algebra (for quaternions):

- With quaternion algebra there are no factors of zero, i.e. =xy =  0 

IFF  x= 0 or y = 0

- In Grassman algebra some power of every element is equal to zero.

- The square of a vector is zero but the square of every element of the algebra is not zero, i.e.

e1 e 2    +   ee 4 ) 2  =   2 e1 e e3 e 4

Addendum note:

In Grassman algebra the fundamental volume element V  is represented by the wedge product of three basis vectors, i.e.:  

 ee 2   e 3  


Where   is the symbol for the wedge product. (But not used in Littlewood's text.)


Suggested Problems for budding mathematicians:

1) Consider the parallelopipped  below spanned by the vectors u, v and w in 3-space.

Find the volume of this solid given that:

u = (1, 1, 3)

v = (1, 2, -1)

w = (1, 4, 1)

2)Show how the Grassman algebra formula for a single component of volume element  k e1 e 2  e 3  can be used to find the volume of a tetrahedron.

Find that volume for this tetrahedron, given the concurrent vectors are:

a = (3, 0, 0)

b = (1, 4, 0)

= (2, 1, 5)


See Also:

Fundamentals of Grassmann Algebra

Thursday, July 9, 2026

BIS ('Bank of all Central Banks') Connects Dots To Show Proximity Of Global Financial Crash Linked To AI Boom

 


Amidst increasing signs of unchecked AI debt and a mounting bubble, the 'banker of banks' has now weighed in ('An AI Bust's Effects n Global Economy Detailed', WSJ, July 1, p. B12).  That bank of banks would be the Bank of International Settlements or BIS.  According to the WSJ piece:

 "If you're anxious about the AI-impending bubble and its global economic risks maybe don't read the latest annual report from  the Bank of International Settlements. The report released on Monday, lays out in unsettling detail how an artificial intelligence bust could throw the global financial system into disorder.

It comes from an institution that has a good track record of predicting problems, including the 2008 financial crisis.

 So what has the BIS so concerned?  Basically, the ongoing, excessive investment in AI infrastructure from the tech company moguls - to the tune of hundreds of billions. (Open AI plans to spend $600 billion more on AI infrastructure by 2030 despite generating only $2b/ month in revenue - according to WSJ, July 7, p. A14)

Given that up to now the products are not measuring up to the outlays a pullback in financing (and with it lower stock prices) will ensue.   In many ways this is reminiscent of the overselling of the notorious investment trusts in the 1920s - especially with the bankers lending money to those who couldn't afford them to buy them. Hence, a whole vast house of cards was created mostly using money the average person didn't have. A bubble was the result, and a very unstable one. As Andrew Ross Sorkin put it in a May, 60 Minutes interview:

"In good times if stock went  up, it was free money. In bad times, you're on the hook in a very bad way."

As the WSJ article goes on to point out:  

"There's nothing especially new about those concerns, but the BIS connects some other dots. For example, drawing lines between an AI bust and the unusually vulnerable state of consumers, governments and the global economy. U.S. households are significantly more exposed to stocks than in the past couple of decades, both relative to their wealth and their income."

Hence, any significant AI bubble bursting - especially if based on debt, could crater that paper wealth as well as real income. Apart from which those still rising (and already overpriced) U.S. stock prices during this AI boom could risk a major global erosion of wealth in the event of a U.S. tech-focused bust.

The further bad news is that these overspending tech companies are only the "tip of the iceberg", in the take of the BIS.  Basically, if the tech honchos slow the pace of their inordinate capital spending it will spell contractions across a wide front.  Specifically, construction contractors (building the AI data centers) with relatively weak balance sheets, would feel the pain quickly.  This among other financial dominoes, all ready to fall.

The fact that - as in 1929 - debt has come to increasingly fuel investments (in this case for AI), means that there exists an even greater potential for destruction. Why? The BIS notes that government budgets in advanced economies are stretched as it is (especially with Trump's Iran war and reckless tariffs) which means any capacity to reinvigorate these economies via spending is severely limited.   As the WSJ piece points out:

 "Persistent elevated inflation and geopolitical uncertainty  caused by the Iran war make it trickier to find a good response to disruption. These warnings are worth listening to because of where they come from."

Again, reminding readers the same BIS  - a 'Swiss-based consortium for global central banks" - was instrumental in giving advance warning about the 2008 credit collapse.  This was put out in a paper entitled 'Prime or Not so Prime':

Prime or not so prime? An exploration of US housing finance in the new century - BIS Quarterly Review, part 6, March 2006

Which detailed the risks posed by the securitization of subprime loans in the U.S. housing markets. The warning turned out to be prescient and let's just say the BIS could be prescient again in its AI bust warning.

See Also:

‘GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRASH’: Central Bank Issues DIRE WARNING About NEW GREAT DEPRESSION!! |

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Wednesday, July 8, 2026

All Experts Redux: Constellation Patterns in the Sky Random Or Real?

                        Some Fall constellations in Constellation Finder program


Question: Looking at the night sky and using my Constellation Finder, I am absolutely amazed at the degree of similarity between the star patterns and the objects they represent. I mean, the Big Dipper clearly looks like a dipper, no?  Isn't there more here than just random patterns?

Answer: I will give you that the Big Dipper really does have the shape and appearance of a dipper, but this is merely an optical illusion.


What you’re actually seeing is separate stars at wildly different distances simply appearing as one ensemble or pattern by coincidence of time and location. At vastly different epochs the appearance will change, i.e.  100,000 yrs. from now.

Further, the Big Dipper is not actually an official constellation; it is an asterism (a recognizable star pattern) within the larger constellation Ursa Major (the Great Bear).



If you look closely you can see the Big Dipper planted in the Bear's 'tail' at the left end.

My general point here is that any and all such projections and patterns in the end amount to purely imaginary extrapolations from random groups of stars. No actual or absolute pattern conforming to any 'Big Dipper' (or Ursa Major) exists, only as it appears to a certain sub-group of humans at a given time. Indeed, the ancient Chinese saw no 'dipper' at all - but rather a cart to carry their bureaucrats!

You can think of any or all of these as a kind of cosmic 'Rorschach' - the sort of ink blot that psychologists used to show their patients to see if they "perceived" any evident patterns. The blots were such that no two people were likely to see the exact same pattern, since each person came to the observation with a different background, perceptual selection bias and so forth.

 In the end, humans just have a penchant - in their brains – to create or impose patterns. They can see "faces" in the clouds in the sky, or figures of mythological beings in the stars- and project their own meaning and interpretations onto them.

This has nothing to do with any objective findings or facts that reside in the objects themselves. Which is to say that it's no more likely plausible an actual 'Big Dipper' exists in the night sky as a Big Bear. In the end, yes we are talking about nothing more than random patterns.


Tuesday, July 7, 2026

'Little' Holman Jenkins Jr. Cracks Up - Confusing Comcast-MSNOW With FOX News

 


"Little" (in mind) Holman Jenkins Jr. (he whose bellowing twaddle dwarfs his actual mental range), again can't help himself as he bellows in his barks in his latest WSJ op-ed screed (Happy Days Again For TV News?) that:

"Comcast did one shrewd thing. In previously getting rid of CNBC and MSNBC, it wisely stripped the NBC brand from the disreputable liberal propaganda channel (renamed MSNOW) while leaving its name on the business channel."

Adding:

"Of course, in better days Comcast never would have let its brand be devalued by MSNBC in the first place."

Seriously, you demented twit? How about FOX News, currently gaslighting Americans before their very eyes, i.e. regarding the 'pristine' reflecting pool, and Trump never falling asleep on the job despite all the evidence, i.e.



But this is all part of little Holman's shtick which he's now been doing so often he can no longer distinguish reality from psychotic fantasy even when he isn't binging on magic mushrooms.   And as for stark, open propaganda Holman himself takes the cake. Among the most grievous deliberately denying in one nutso column from 2020 ('Disinfecting Journalistic Ethics', WSJ, May 6, p. A13)  that Dotard ever stated people ought to consider 'disinfectant' (injecting it) to cure Covid. Holman yapped:

It was a reporter in the audience who asked an accompanying official, 'The President mentioned the idea of cleaners, like bleach and isopropyl alcohol.  There's no scenario then that that could be injected into a person is there?

But the little liar probably never counted on savvy readers going back and checking the actual news segments, e.g.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M9kWsUwTcj8


How many different ways can that be interpreted anyway?  Is a "reporter" asking a leading question or is Trump popping off on his own?  Oh wait, it gets even more choice. To further obscure the issue Jenkins writes:

"The Poynter Institute's PolitiFact website kindly summarized:  'The briefing transcript shows that Trump did not say people should inject themselves with bleach or alcohol. He was asking officials whether they could be used in potential cures."

But this deliberate shading of language is all part of Holman's  time -tested gaslighting shtick: to shave words and meanings around the edge to make the lies appear to be facts. Then assume few of his readers will check his trwaddle. He also did it when he claimed in a Mar. 22-23 WSJ column ( 'CBS Kicks The UFO Habit', p. A13)  the Nimitz pilots were actually chasing actually chasing a 46' Chinese drone, not a genuine UFO (seen by Cmdr. David Frav0r as an incredibly high velocity craft), e.g. his House testimony  - given under oath (unlike Jenkins' blabbery):

Video Navy commander David Fravor gives detailed description of his encounter with a UAP

Jenkins Jr. then claimed the 60 Minutes original report on the Nimitz UAP sightings, i.e.

Navy pilots describe encounters with UFOs

 was "retracted" by CBS’  60 Minutes correspondent Bill Whitaker:

 “who states plainly the Pentagon did little to dispel speculation these images taken with night vision equipment were not UFOs but ship’s log identification as drones. At the time and the Navy suspected they came from a Hong Kong flagged freighter sailing nearby."

All of which blather was totally exploded when Ret. Cmdr. David Fravor testified about the incident before Congress (and under oath) in July, 2023. Proving again Jenkins is a consummate liar, spinner and troll.

 We may never know what brand of MJ munchies Holman was snacking on when he wrote this drivel, or indeed what Jenkins insists about the ship’s logs being changed has any valence in the real of non-FOX reality.  We do know Holman is an intentional falsifier and twister of facts almost as bad as his master Trump.  

My point is this his referring to MSNOW as a  "disreputable liberal propaganda channel" is so far in the pot-kettle -black domain that it essentially loses aby meaning without his own and FOX News propaganda volume - which is about 1 million times as large. 

 At least on MSNOW one can get cold hard facts such as:

- The frequency and locations of Trump's proposed ICE detention centers

- The facts surrounding the cold-blooded ICE killings of both   Alex Pretti and Renee earlier this year. I.e. the slaying of Pretti,


All of this was covered up by FOX News and sanitized almost to the point of non-existence by Jenkins Jr. and his WSJ op-ed trolls (Kim Strassel, Dan Henninger)

- The actual size of the 'No Kings protests that were mis represented by FOX.

- The actual facts of how Trump's tampering with the D.C. Reflecting pool led to the algae infestation, not "vandals".

No, if one is looking for shameless and disreputable propagandists and gaslight fiends, one need look no further than Holman Jenkins Jr. and the cabal of paid liars at FOX News.

See Also:


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by Thom Hartmann | June 18, 2024 - 5:42am | permalink

— from The Hartmann Report

Hitler’s brilliant propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, famously told the Fuhrer, “Repeat a lie often enough and it becomes the truth.” Donald Trump and the MAGA faction of the Republican Party have taken Goebbels’ advice to heart, and it’s going to make this fall’s election one like we’ve never seen before.

Already they’ve been lying so often and so effectively that nearly all Republicans, and majorities or near-majorities of Americans, believe:

— the GOP lie that we’re in a recession (we’re in better shape, in most ways, than any time since the 1960s and inflation last month was zero while Ronald Reagan never got it below 4.1% in his entire eight years);
— Republican lies about crime being up (it’s down dramatically since Trump);
— their lies that “Democrats want elective abortion up to the moment of birth” (none have ever said that);
— Trump’s lie that the 2020 election was “stolen” from Trump by “voter fraud”;
— GOP lies that the southern border is “wide open”;
— the Republican lie that Social Security is on the verge of bankruptcy and must be saved by privatization or benefits cuts;
— their vicious lie that queer people are pedophiles targeting America’s schoolchildren; and
— their NRA lie that more and more deadly guns will keep our kids safe.

» article continues...


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WSJ's Holman Jenkins Jr. Tries To Blame "FBI Charlie Kirk Sideshow" On Dems? WTF Is This Loon Smoking?