EL PRESIDENTE
Username Retired in Honor of Lanny.
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What is the carbon impact of a child being born?
Every new child, has to be fed, clothed, warmed, buying a new car, etc...and this consumes fossil fuels. Its not enough to have this be voluntary. Forced population control is the answer, if global warming is as bad as people claim it is.
If you have a child, you are killing the earth.
http://articles.latimes.com/2009/aug/07/local/me-greenspace7
Every new child, has to be fed, clothed, warmed, buying a new car, etc...and this consumes fossil fuels. Its not enough to have this be voluntary. Forced population control is the answer, if global warming is as bad as people claim it is.
If you have a child, you are killing the earth.
http://articles.latimes.com/2009/aug/07/local/me-greenspace7
Study finds parents' carbon footprint multiplies 5.7 times per child
Environmentalists tend to avoid the topic of population control. Too touchy. But the politically incorrect issue is becoming unavoidable as the global population lurches toward a predicted 9 billion people by mid-century. Will there be enough food? Enough water? Will planet-heating carbon dioxide gas become ever more uncontrollable?
Now comes a study by statisticians at Oregon State University focusing on the elephant in the room.
The findings: If you are concerned about your carbon footprint, think birth control.
The greenhouse gas effect of a child is almost 20 times more significant than the amount any American would save by such practices as driving a fuel-efficient car, recycling or using energy-efficient lightbulbs and appliances, according to Paul Murtaugh, an Oregon State professor of statistics. Under current U.S. consumption patterns, each child ultimately adds about 9,441 metric tons of CO2 to the carbon legacy of an average parent -- about 5.7 times a person's lifetime emissions, he calculates.
Given the higher per-capita consumption of developed nations, the study found that the impact of a child born in the U.S., along with all his or her descendants, is more than 160 times that of a Bangladeshi child. And the long-term impact of a Chinese child is less than one-fifth the impact of a U.S.-born child. But as China, India and other developing nations hurtle toward prosperity, that is likely to change.

