and social systems. People don’t need health insurance, for instance: they need affordable healthcare; people don’t need banks: they need secure currency and charitable society. People don’t need anything from leaders but equal consideration and the freedom to grow their own fruit by their own devices.
Social union and disintegration
For what population is: a union of individuals each with unchallengeable rights, we converge to protect ourselves from unbridled passions that attack or restrain integrative pursuits. Population control included: its rhetoric cloaks itself in cooperation but when implemented always targets certain demographics. By converging to resist these racist events, we will control population control ourselves and simultaneously become more aware and more balanced by each other and our environments. In this way, we trade absurd ambitions and short-range pleasures for focused development, grounded not in numbers but in tangible things, such as the arts, community gardening, religion, and sober industrial interests. But when unbridled passions become institutionalized and exercised systemically—like how money represents Congress today and corporations reap citizen rights—peoples are either excluded or eclipsed from essential considerations. Citizens are anxiously zoned and excessively jailed. And society splits apart from the seams of diversity that should bring it together in curiosity and wonder. In a word, certain factions of humanity are considered parasitic, and their natural human qualities—autonomy, inventiveness, and determination—are seen as a threat by hegemonic leaders of hegemonic states. These fragmental attitudes are socially disastrous and morally wasteful. The way these attitudes are brought to national and global levels is by population control rhetoric (and target marketing, for another discussion). But democracy simply cannot survive in such segregative conditions.
Judging the rhetoric
Population control is a tricky subject but one that can be understood through simple analytical meanings. The words ‘control’ and ‘overpopulation’ are informative.