Nezaros
Highly Irregular
- Local time
- Yesterday 9:30 PM
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2012
- Messages
- 594
- Location
- Returning some videotapes
Death is a necessity. It controls population, an essential part of any biological community. First we had competition and disease. But as science improves we no longer need to fight over a scarce quantity of resources, and modern medicine gradually makes disease less and less prevalent. However, we still compete for resources, not for the purpose of survival, but for quality of life. We compete with each other for jobs, and jobs are needed for money, which is needed for food and living space and all the other things that once were limited.
But as science fights back the external factors, it causes to expand the internal factor. Humanity's greatest predator is now, and likely will forever remain, itself. Technology continually grants us more and more efficient methods of killing ourselves. I don't solely mean weapons and warfare, but also the side effects of a "civilized" lifestyle. Diseases which have been created unwittingly. Cancers arising from environmental carcinogens and cardiovascular diseases from our food consumption, as well as car accidents and the like. And of course, slightly overlapping with the aforementioned, the stresses of living in a structured society, which cause both murders and suicides, and, on a larger scale, instigate wars.
I am not saying that technology is bad in contributing to these deaths, nor am I saying that it is good, and that we ought to put more funding into medical research. But where the external influence of nature cannot work to control the human population, it works internally. Its power over our physiological health wanes, and now takes over our psychological health.
And this, I say, is a good thing. Population needs to be controlled; indeed, the very size of the human populace is a significant contributing factor to these stressors. We could very well stand to increase the death rate; such would only improve global happiness by lessening the competition for abstract resources such as jobs. Nature has the right of it. People need to die.
But as science fights back the external factors, it causes to expand the internal factor. Humanity's greatest predator is now, and likely will forever remain, itself. Technology continually grants us more and more efficient methods of killing ourselves. I don't solely mean weapons and warfare, but also the side effects of a "civilized" lifestyle. Diseases which have been created unwittingly. Cancers arising from environmental carcinogens and cardiovascular diseases from our food consumption, as well as car accidents and the like. And of course, slightly overlapping with the aforementioned, the stresses of living in a structured society, which cause both murders and suicides, and, on a larger scale, instigate wars.
I am not saying that technology is bad in contributing to these deaths, nor am I saying that it is good, and that we ought to put more funding into medical research. But where the external influence of nature cannot work to control the human population, it works internally. Its power over our physiological health wanes, and now takes over our psychological health.
And this, I say, is a good thing. Population needs to be controlled; indeed, the very size of the human populace is a significant contributing factor to these stressors. We could very well stand to increase the death rate; such would only improve global happiness by lessening the competition for abstract resources such as jobs. Nature has the right of it. People need to die.