#7 el problema es que Contra los mosquito puedes hacer una guerra y ganarla. No importa que sean millones de individuos o miles de millones, sólo hay que echar mas y más pesticida.
Un pesticida no puedes hacer prácticamente nada, x que es producto de una empresa muy importante
Hay una película de 2014 que se llama el lobo en la que se insinúa que era importante para el gobierno de la transición que ETA no desapareciera. para así evitar que la izquierda tuviera mucho margen de negociación en el nuevo Establishment que estaban construyendo
Unless It Changes, Capitalism Will Starve Humanity By 2050
Capitalism has generated massive wealth for some, but it’s devastated the planet and has failed to improve human well-being at scale.
Species are going extinct at a rate 1,000 times faster than that of the natural rate over the previous 65 million years (see Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School).
Since 2000, 6 million hectares of primary forest have been lost each year. That’s 14,826,322 acres, or just less than the entire state of West Virginia (see the 2010 assessment by the Food and Agricultural Organization of the UN).
Even in the U.S., 15% of the population lives below the poverty line. For children under the age of 18, that number increases to 20% (see U.S. Census).
The world’s population is expected to reach 10 billion by 2050 (see United Nations’ projections)
Capitalism is unsustainable in its current form (Credit: ZINIYANGE AUNTONY/AFP/Getty Images)
How do we expect to feed that many people while we exhaust the resources that remain?
Human activities are behind the extinction crisis. Commercial agriculture, timber extraction, and infrastructure development are causing habitat loss and our reliance on fossil fuels is a major contributor to climate change.
Public corporations are responding to consumer demand and pressure from Wall Street. Professors Christopher Wright and Daniel Nyberg published Climate Change, Capitalism and Corporations last fall, arguing that businesses are locked in a cycle of exploiting the world’s resources in ever more creative ways.
“Our book shows how large corporations are able to continue engaging in increasingly environmentally exploitative behaviour by obscuring the link between endless economic growth and worsening environmental destruction,” they wrote.
Yale sociologist Justin Farrell studied 20 years of corporate funding and found that “corporations have used their wealth to… » ver todo el comentario