Already have one-where have you been Mars?
We can't take care of the people we have
2006-07-24 14:30:05
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answer #1
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answered by *** The Earth has Hadenough*** 7
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We have a population crisis already - the manufacturing jobs went to NAFTA, the engineering, customer service, and white collar jobs went to outsourcing, and the menial, blue collar, restaurant, hotel, low level management, and construction went to illegals - and now the truck drivers of the future will come on visas from India since they opened a school for it there - and asian travel agencies make itineraries so their kids can be born here - the list never stops -
What are we supposed to do for a good job now, benefits, insurance premiums, access to education, and all the other 'I sacrifice so my kids can have a better life' cycle events that have been declared null and void by La Raza with Bush and Clinton?
And you think this will hold the country together with the population we have already?
When there is more than one law, more than one constitution, more than one population, that is when sparks fly like the have always in the past...
2006-07-24 21:51:17
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answer #2
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answered by yars232c 6
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yes!
At a whopping 36 million on its way to 56 million people in the next 30 years, California leads the nation in the next national crisis. Colorado, also in the arid West, with four million speeds toward eight million people using water at ever-increasing rates of speed. Arizona is the state that is so hot, its slogan is, "I'm so dry I can't spit." Not to be out done, the arid State of Utah exploding with a rising immigrant population cooks in the desert. For the rest of us, "Buddy can you spare me a drink of water?" will be THE new slogan in the coming years.
What is SO infuriating stems from the evidence that no one at the national level will deal with this ominous water scarcity in America's future. It's like the House, Senate and Executive branches would rather pretend they are 'Curly, Moe and Larry' while the rest of us careen toward the oncoming train. Once we hit the train there will be no solutions other than wallowing in crisis, i.e., that's how Third World countries deal with their problems--ignore them until they can't be solved--then simply suffer.
In a recent documentary, “THIRST,” by Deborah Kaufman and Alan Snitow, the film makers explain how scarce supplies will cause water to rival oil prices as global corporations take over public resources. “Doubtful,” you say? It’s already happening in Sandy Valley, California where residents contest Vidler Water Company over water rights. In Colorado, already under restrictions from several drought years, knowledgeable Front Range residents wonder where future generations will find water as the state doubles its population from four to eight million people in 50 years. Arizona draws water from underground aquifers as if tomorrow will never arrive. That ‘Hot State’ expects a doubling in population by mid-century.
On the international scene, a full 35 percent of human beings on the planet do not have access to clean, safe drinking water. If one looks at the current 6.2 billion humans, and then sees the projection for world population reaching as high as 9.8 billion by 2050, one might realize humanity is in for an escalating crisis.
Next to India, what nation is going to see its population rise faster than any other industrialized nation? If you answered China, you're wrong - it's the United States. According to the annual study by the Population Reference Bureau, the world's population will increase nearly 50% by mid-century. The numbers show India's population rising almost 50%, that of the U.S. increasing 43% and China growing at 10%. Japan will lose 20% of its population in the next 45 years and Russia, Germany and Italy will also see major declines. Sadly, the numbers are different for some of the world's poorest countries. Nigeria's population is expected to nearly triple in size, while Bangladesh will nearly double. The population projections were based on data from foreign governments, the United Nations and the U.S. Census Bureau.
THREE MILLION ILLEGALS IN ONE YEAR! that was 2004 estimation
"It is fair to estimate, based on a TIME investigation,
that the number of illegal aliens flooding into the U.S.
this year will total 3 million - enough to fill 22,000
Boeing 737-700 aircraft, or 60 flights everyday for a
year."
"Who Left the Door Open", TIME
Magazine, September 20, 2004
to think we can keep adding millions of people legal and millions illegally and expect no social , population, economic , ramifications is stupid!
2006-07-24 21:25:40
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answer #3
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answered by hayleylov 6
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No.
The population of the US is around 300 million campared to over a Billion each for China and India.
America has plenty of room, plenty of resources and the technical knowhow to make it work.
Feel sorry for the third world crowded countries without any money or space or education to deal with their crises.
No one starves to death in America unless they want to.
2006-07-24 21:00:07
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answer #4
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answered by aka DarthDad 5
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I wish I had the web site for "gumballs" which will lay it all out for you! The illegals will cause our country to run out of resources in 50 years if they aren't all deported now! We hare having just enough kids to replace the diciest, but they are mass producing!
2006-07-24 20:46:11
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answer #5
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answered by tripledigit67 3
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no, we dont have a population crisis per se. we have an epidemic, however. there arer too many people here that arent working and should be.
2006-07-24 20:42:45
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answer #6
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answered by Spellcaster97 2
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Uh, no.
2006-07-24 21:06:23
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answer #7
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answered by Golosa 3
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