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Thread: sad milestone

  1. #1

    sad milestone

    Mayday 23: World Population Becomes More Urban Than Rural

    There’s no big countdown billboard or sign in Times Square to denote it, but Wednesday, May 23, 2007, represents a major demographic shift, according to scientists from North Carolina State University and the University of Georgia: For the first time in human history, the earth’s population will be more urban than rural.

    Working with United Nations estimates that predict the world will be 51.3 percent urban by 2010, the researchers projected the May 23, 2007, transition day based on the average daily rural and urban population increases from 2005 to 2010. On that day, a predicted global urban population of 3,303,992,253 will exceed that of 3,303,866,404 rural people.

    Though the date is highly symbolic, the researchers – Dr. Ron Wimberley, Distinguished Professor of Sociology at NC State; Dr. Libby Morris, director of the Institute of Higher Education at the University of Georgia; and Dr. Gregory Fulkerson, a sociologist at NC State – advise avoiding the urge to interpret this demographic transition to mean that the urban population has greater importance than the rural.

    Urban and rural populations, they say, rely heavily on each other.

    Cities refine and process rural goods for urban and rural consumers. But if either cities or rural areas had to sustain themselves without the other, Wimberley says, few would bet on the cities.

    “As long as cities exist, they will need rural resources – including the rural people and communities that help provide urban necessities,” he said. “Clean air, water, food, fiber, forest products and minerals all have their sources in rural areas. Cities cannot stand alone; rural natural resources can. Cities must depend on rural resources.”

    In the United States, the tipping point from a majority rural to a majority urban population came early in the late 1910s, the researchers say. Today, 21 percent of our country is rural although some states – Maine, Mississippi, Vermont, and West Virginia – are still majority rural. In North Carolina, a rural majority held until the late 1980s.

    Although rural natural and social resources are necessary for urban people and places, the researchers say rural people do not fare well relative to their urban counterparts. Maps of U.S. quality-of-life conditions show that poverty and low education attainment are concentrated in rural areas – especially the rural South – where the nation’s food, water and forest resources exist.

    Over much of the globe, rural poverty is much worse than in the United States. Findings by the International Fund for Agricultural Development show that 1.2 billion of the world’s people live on less than what a dollar a day can buy. Globally, three-fourths of these poor people live in rural areas.

    The researchers add that, in addition to having a highly disproportionate share of the world’s poverty, rural areas also get the urban garbage. In exchange for useable natural resources produced by rural people for urban dwellers, rural places receive the waste products – polluted air, contaminated water, and solid and hazardous wastes – discharged by those in cities.

    Wimberley says that May 23, 2007, marks a “mayday” call for all concerned citizens of the world.

    “So far, cities are getting whatever resource needs that can be had from rural areas,” he said. “But given global rural impoverishment, the rural-urban question for the future is not just what rural people and places can do for the world’s new urban majority. Rather, what can the urban majority do for poor rural people and the resources upon which cities depend for existence? The sustainable future of the new urban world may well depend upon the answer.”

    Source here

  2. #2
    A weird thing about urbanization that I'd never thought of until I read it somewhere recently. In most cities across the world, outside of the US, the inner cities are the prime real estate as the business class realizes that way they can escape the grueling commutes from the suburbs and be close to the cultural and social hub of the city. The suburbs become the ghettos instead.

    It seems like, through gentrification, this is starting to happen here to some degree - witness whats happenning in Harlem touched off by (I guess) by Clinton moving in. I'm not sure if New Orleans fits that pattern or not..?

    Rural folks are getting the shaft. I consulted an attorney recently who's been here for 50+ years and all he talks about is the sacrifice its costing him to stay in the area as the snowbirds move into the area in unprecedented numbers and sprawling development. Of course this is the same guy who doesn't practice criminal law because he doesn't want to be around criminals..

  3. #3

    Move 'em off the land

    That's always top priority. By design for centuries in a thousand different ways.

    Left-wing Capitalism – a Senile Disorder

    <snip>

    It is worth recalling that around this time last year the Left Front (LF) government was bending over backwards to amend land laws in order to make 5000 acres of land available to the Salem group from Indonesia. According to news reports, the CPM land reform minister Abdul Rezzak Mollah (a veteran Kisan Sabha leader), even as he drafted the new bill under orders from the chief minister, threatened to oppose it in the Assembly. According to him all this virtually amounted to selling off the peasants’ interests. In the event, the bill when it came up for voting in the state assembly, it was defeated 158-0 and could not muster a single vote in its favour. This clearly meant that the ruling LF and CPM members too decided to stay away or abstain. Buddhadeb of course went forth undeterred and decided to ‘purchase’ land. For all future occasions, this was to become the model.

    This is the story of the acquisition of land (in lieu of compensation). It is NOT a purchase from the peasants at market prices. The state acquires the land from the farmers/peasants at rates that bear no relationship to market rates. In doing this for the Tatas or the Salem group, the CPM completely prostrates itself before the very capitalists whom it had thundered against in earlier times. It is with this ruse that Buddhadeb has managed to silence critics within the party and buy their support for the land grab programme. Thus have the Abdul Rezzak Mollahs and the Benoy Konars now become part of that machine that is ready to come to the streets to silence any protest against capital’s colonization of agricultural land.

    What takes the cake however is the final – and as the Stalinists say – clinching argument put forward by the flag-bearers of the new predatory Left-wing capitalism. What, in the CPM’s opinion, renders these protests illegitimate? That they are not spearheaded by landowners, but by bargadars (sharecroppers) and agricultural labourers who work on that land, being landless. The very rural proletariat in short, that the CPM in earlier times used to call the most oppressed part of Bengali (and Indian) society! The very rural proletariat that along with its urban counterpart was vested with the role of the vanguard – precisely because it owned nothing – had nothing but its chains to lose. Hai Sarbahara – as they would say in Bangla!

    http://www.kafila.org/2006/12/02/left-w ... -disorder/
    "It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness."

    -Karl Marx's 1859 Preface to the Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy

  4. #4

    Sister Mary across the street said a nice young white boy

    came through offering to purchase her home the other day. She's 70 and has had the same phone number 54 years. She has a rent house out back and daughters who, with mamma's help, own the homes on either side of her. She was widowed fairly young, worked a low level clerical job at the hospital for 25 years, kept her nose clean, saved, bought the detritus from estate sales like sheets and dishes and pots and pans "Things folks need" and made a modest little fortune for herself reselling them cheap in a thrift store. We smile at one another knowingly when we cross paths at the Goodwill store.

    We sat on her burglar barred front porch and laughed about the 12 $ 200,000+ townhomes the nice young man would like to build and wondered where all our neighbors will go when the vertical trend has steamrolled and bankrolled its way over our neighborhood and most all of the people in it. Where will they go?

    She said the kind of people who move in those shiny new townhomes so often have empty lives, thanks to working with their minds a lot but seldom with their bodies. With a good night's rest and a belly full of beans one can do that physical labor the next morning, but sometimes sleep - if it comes - is not enough of a restoration for the minds of men in these times and their cubed and keyboarded labors. "The whole problem with folks today is competition." She grew up completely non-monetized in a rural black community consisting of a few families of dirt farmers.

    "And by the way, what is it they mean by a 'starter home?'" "Home is home."

    "Mary, these days they write our life story before we have even picked up the pen."

    We agreed having public housing nearby would benefit the stability of Our neighbors and neighborhood as the inevitable encroachment lurks on the front porch.

    I wonder if the landlord will sell my place out from underneath me.

    And the evening draws near.
    How can this be a free country when everything is for sale?
    I am tired of hearing what rich people think.
    "Possession isn't nine-tenths of the law. It's nine-tenths of the problem." -John Lennon

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