an essay the Sundcay daily by howard kohn and david weir Number 17 Night Editor: Stuart Gannes November 23, 1969 ON THE STORY of Arthur Goodrich began in 1969 with the oil rush to Alaska. A self-made millionaire, Goodrich secured at great expense one of the winning bids in the fall auction. After a number of dry holes. Goodrich struck oil in 1976 and immediately built a pipeline-50 feet in diameter-to Anchorage. When several more wells came in, the pipe was filled to capacity. But early in the winter of 1985, the pipe ruptured. Before his engineers could plug it, billions of gallons of oil flooded the tundra grass across several hundred miles. At first only the caribou, which fed on the tundra grass, suffered. But soon fish and seals in the Bering Straits emigrat- ed. Then, Eskimoes starved. Before the Red Cross and other relief agencies could inter- vene, however, Alaska disappeared into the Pacific Ocean. The the oil had without warning seduced the sun's heat, warming the tundra and melting the perma-frost. A Red Cross plane radioed back it couldn't find a place to land. Alaska was a gigantic mud slick. The shifting tundra had upset the topographic balance and spilled Alaska's main- land into the ocean. This scenario, horrifying in the proportions of Hiroshima, could come true. Although few people care, modern man has charted a course for himself leading inalterably to disaster. Suppose, as scientists are predicting, millions are dying of hunger in 1985. Suppose, as seems probable, the United States is the only decently-fed country in the world in 1985. Titular leaders from the Pope to the Chinese premier would be accusing the U.S. of hoarding food while others starve. But with the Alaskan affair on its conscience, the U.S. could hardly take care of its own, let alone the rest of the world. IMPLICIT IN THESE SUPPOSITIONS is the danger that we may come to accept and anticipate eco-catastrophes as a way of solving the biggest crisis of all - the population problem. If we start from the assumption mass death is required to insure the survival of the planet, then we might mute our horror with the homicidal hope these natural disasters were meant to be. Then the timetable in the middle of this page becomes not only possible but probable. Today, in 1969, even conservative scientists are conceding that a half billion people will die of starvation -if the popula- tion isn't controlled within the next 15 years. Many more will die if we accelerate the birth rate, as we are now doing. Every month a city the size of Chicago is populated. In 6000 B.C. the population was five million. In 1650 A.D. it was 500 million. In 1850 it hit onebillion. In 1930 it made two billion. In 1975 it will be four billion. If nothing interferes with this rate, it would reach 60 million billion by 2400, putting 100 people on every square yard of the earth's surface, land and sea. The point is: something will interfere. If we don't nature will. Our ecosystem can't support our way of life. THE The 1 960's The Florida Everglades are roped by army engineers who dig straight slant canals which carry off the needed reservoir of rain water. Flooding else- where in the park starves rare species. Because of the con- struction of the Aswan Dam, the flow of the Nile is reduced and the Mediterranean floods over 1 million acres of farm- land with saltwater. Smog pre- vents airplanes from landing in Detroit, Washington, Los An- geles and New York City; it is blamed indirectly in several crashes. Lake Erie and 40 U.S. rivers are officially labelled dead. Thousands of Biafrans die of hunger. Oil slick off Santa Barbara blackens beach- es and upsets the marine ec- system. The 1970's Rubbish fills up San Fran- cisco Bay and closes down the harbor. Algae blooms clog Lake Erie, stopping ships on the St. Lawrence Seaway. Smog suffocates 90,000 in Los Angeles and 50,000 in Chi- cago-all in one week. Scien- tists of chemical-biological warfare at Ft. Dietrich discover a virus which can't be cured. Energized plants eliminate all edible fish in the oceans. Famines starve millions in Asia. 1< ' , a i { A ' . . ...e! The 1 980's Rubbish fills up the Grand Canyon and 37 inland lakes. Nuclear plants along the Great Lakes heat lake temperatures to 96.8 degrees F, cooking all animal life, promoting plant growth. Los Angeles, New York City and London are evacuated because of smog. Nuclear wastes deposited on the ocean floor rise to the surface and contaminate the w e s t e r n coastline of North America. Testing in the Aleutian Islands cracks the San Andreas Fault and San Fransciso is destroyed. END ~ famine is inevitable. "There will be major famines in many parts of the world before the 180's," he advises. Those who disagree with him point to the potential "green revolution" - an inspired refinement of CARE packages. The "green revolution" would mean introducing hybrid grains, plus modern farming methods, into underdeveloped countries Im- mediately. One of the things working against it are the underdeveloped people who don't think it will work, and thus won't cooperate. They have been conditioned by past experiments to expect worse instead of better results from Western expertise. In Turkey, for instance, American agricultural advisors recently urged farmers to clean up the stones which were littering the fields so tractors could be used. The younger, progressive farmers did, and their crops fail- ed. The older farmers didn't, and their crops flourished. Only later did the advisors figure out the stones were necessary to conserve moisture from spring rains. Once removed, the fields baked the crops. EVEN THE MOST OPTIMISTIC planners acknowledge part of the "green revolution" could be based on faulty guess- ing. Some of the land intended for it has never been farmed and may be useless. Additionally, people who doubt our ability often mistrust our sincerity. American aid seems directed at countries which offer high returns on the investment. In Iran, where the United States supports the anti-Communist Shah, American oil companies ship out 100 tankers full a month. Jobs with the oil companies are welcome in the capital city of Tehran. But in the villages, herds of people ration their life on meager diets. When the famines reach them, they won't stand a chance. Countries like Iran, Pakistan, Brazil, India and China will need twice as much food by 1985 just to maintain the current brand of high-starch, low-protein menus. Unless they're miraculously pepped up with protein pills, they'll be susceptible to pestilence and plagues of an incom- prehensible magnitude - probably without precedent in medical history. Stacking the odds against a miracle will be the death of the oceans sometime in the 1980's. Dr. Paul Erhlich of Stanford University projects oceans without fish, a main source of protein, due to the increase of hydrocarbons from polluted rivers. Perhaps people can adjust to harvesting ocean plants but not before millions of Asians die. THE POLITICAL SPIN-OFF from mass starvation is not nearly as easy to assess. Food riots obviously will be popular, but revolutions may not be. "The trouble with a famine, of course, is that people are starving to death and don't have the strength to beat up their government," Michaels argues. "The likelihood is that the poor, the young, the old and the unproductive will be the first to die ... and the government may therefore become more secure." But at any time fighting over prize farm lands like Vietnam or the Ukraine could erupt in thermonuclear war. die abnormal deaths to reach an equilibrium of one- two billion, which scientists say would give us another 1000 years of grace to consume the rest of our resources. Deporting people to other planets is impossible arith- metically. The only solution appears to be birth control. Male contraceptives and the rhythm method are 75 per cent effective. Female contraceptives, from the loop to chemical foam, are 95 per cent certain. The pills works 99.9 per cent of the time. Legalized abortion would also slow the birth rate as dramatized in Japan. But social and moral taboos make either alternative feebly tenuous on a voluntary basis. Certainly the United States, for all its protests against the birth rate of the colored peoples, has not been pioneering birth control or legalized abortions. A more likely possibility might be democratic sterilization through the water system or through the air. Once everyone is sterile, couples will have to prove their need and ability to have children. Those with an IQ of less than 100, for instance, would pro- bably be denied the right to reproduce. ACCORDING TO ERHLICH, a dictim on sterilization could come from either a benevolent dictatorship or an enlightened public. Since the Western world remains tied to Judeo-Christian ideals, the public seems helplessly shackled. "It is obvious that the Christian idea is the one held by most of us," writes Dr. Ehrlich. "God designed and started the whole business for our benefit. He made the world for us to dominate and exploit." With only a 15-year moratorium, we don't really have time for a socio-political revolution to turn out the Christians in power - at least, not without gambling on thermonuclear war. Instead we may have to outwait the first major die-off in the 1980's. The futurists say we must begin thinking in terms of post- famine plans, because we may have only a few years to enact safety devices in our social system to prevent another population bomb. But we seem assured of doing nothing in the interim to make our chances of survival less precarious. ;;;. , . . -Associated Press In 1850 the waste from our technology was horse manure. which smelled better and decomposed faster than 1969's nuclear and industrial wastes. Water pollution will kill our rivers by 2000. Air pollutiov may change our world. The price we pay for our compulsive- obsessive natures could be damnation. For example, the United States (with "all deliberate speed"' is now trying to ban DDT-once heralded as our savior from crop-destroying insects. DDT breaks down the calcium in animals and presumably in man. The effects of DDT last up to 25 years. Conceivably, if our genealogy survived the shock, DDT could change our bone structure so we become amorphous blobs, fit for an equatic environment. Coincidentally, that's the sort of environment we might have someday. Should smog encircle the earth, covering the two poles, the trapped heat will turn the earth into an oven and melt the ice caps. Besides floods and new salt water rivers, the melting ice would change the climates-turning farmland into marshes, cities into deserts and the arctic lands into tropics. Accordingly one-third the earth's land surface would be under water. EVEN THEN, THE CHANGES MIGHT not stop. If some predictions come true we may have to contend with a new ice age as farmers and hunters rather than as technocrats. Confronted with such absurd anti awful eco-catastrophes, we would hide from the consequences. But we cannot. An anonymous wit recently summed up the crisis: "It is the top of the ninth. Man, always a threat at the plate, has been hitting nature hard. It is important to remember, however, that nature bats last." THE UNITED NATIONS Food and Agricultural Organiza.- tion (FAO) first sounded the alarm of future mass starva- tion in 1965. FAO plotted the lines of the food and population curves to intersect at a famine level by 1980. China and India were pinpointed as the first victims. But in 1967 the curves began looking better. Prof. G. Gre- gory Robinson of the natural resources school, who served two terms in FAO, admits "we have the technology to eliminate the spectre of hunger for a long time." But he hedges, "Only if we can produce food everywhere the way we know how." Most demographic experts think we won't, even if we could. Dr. Donald Michaels of the Institute for Social Research ISR), an internationally-known futurist, believes worldwide .Associated Press The 1990's Rubbish piles into two new mountain ranges, interfering with prevailing winds and transforming New England and Southern California into des- erts. Algae overruns the Great Lakes, the lakes flood part of the Midwest. Pesticides used in the 1 960's cause epidemics of rickets in Asian children. A stockpile of defoliants, being used in Asia to clear the land for farming, is accidentally dumped in the ocean-neu- trolizing all marine life. Smog covers the earth, producing a "green house" effect. Twilight will be permanent because only ultra violet heat rays can pene- trate the screen. Temperatures will rise and the ice caps will begin to melt, flooding coastal cities. Inland, deserts form. Erosion from tropical rains falling on the United States digs canals be- tween highways, which cover one-third of the land area.' The Year 2000 Survivors clump on the South Pole, the only place on earth not covered by glaciers from a new Ice Age or rubbish from the old industrial era. "For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; and there shall be earthquakes in divers places, and there shall be famines and troubles: these are the beginnings of sorrows. Mark 13:8 St James version "While you are reading these words four people will have died from starva- tion. Most of them children." Dr. Paul Erhlimh The Population Bomb