Ah, but see, China and India are trying to copy a lot of American's way of life, are they not? If we started doing it more over here in North America, and it became popular, would they not follow suit? Admittedly, maybe too late by that point, given how long it's taken them to start the "everyone owns a car!" policy. BUT, China has also done a great number of tree-planting in comparison to the rest of the world. I don't have a source for that, unfortunately, aside from this website that showed how large a country would be depending on its population per density, use of power, amount of tree-cutting (Canada, sadly, nearly took up the whole planet in that comparison). You say that we have this insatiable hunger for power, which I agree, but technology is growing. I wouldn't be surprised if there weren't windows that were also solar panels or at least being worked on. Imagine those tall skyscrapers with windows galore, all sucking in solar energy? As I said, it wouldn't do away with fossil fuels entirely, but
surely they would reduce our need for them. Heck, just earlier this year (or was it last year? Anyway...), my old town of Summerside, PEI (admittedly, a small town) was powered entirely for a few hours on
just wind power. The capability
is there.
I'm sorry to hear that about Coloardo Springs. Certainly, living in a densely populated spot like Toronto helps, especially given that I live relatively close to downtown. Maybe that says more about how widely spaced out society has become? More and more people live further away from where they have to go on a regular basis, partly because of living costs being cheaper, or wanting to live in a residential area for their kids. I think that's why there's a growing promotion for living locally, such as buying foods grown locally, etc. Bringing things back to home. As far as transportation goes, unfortunately, you're right. It doesn't work for
everyone. But, again, I'm not talking about everyone doing it, but at least some, to reduce the costs. Then, maybe with those reduced costs, maybe the streets could be narrowed to
promote bike lanes. Then, with that reduction in street costs, maybe something like a light transit system could be put in place. As you said, C.S. doesn't have a rail system, but that doesn't mean it
couldn't. Believe me, coming from Fredericton, New Brunswick, where our bus system stinks as well, I wonder if a streetcar system (even just one major set that goes from one end of town through to the other) would help.
As far as the DDT and malaria is concerned, you're referring to the lack of food to feed a population...I think? Again, green roofs. A matter of having local harvests done right on rooftops cuts the costs of manufacturers transporting it across borders and brings the food right to the mouths of the local population. Plus, less processed foods means less chemicals that go into the waters or our own bodies. Healthier water, healthier people. Everyone wins, right?
EDIT: Also, I want to say thank you. If you responded more like that than, say,
this, I'd likely visit this subforum more.