We Can Save the World: The Uniworld Plan
Title | We Can Save the World: The Uniworld Plan |
Year for Search | 1997 |
Authors | Greenberg, Robert [S.] |
Date Published | 1997 |
Publisher | Metro-West Publishing |
Place Published | Van Nuys, CA |
Keywords | Male author |
Annotation | Detailed eutopia with a world government, the reduction of the world’s population to two billion, a protected environment, a new cashless economic system that will stress basic goods and services, and other reforms, including a common language, and universal social security and health insurance. Cities of about 100,000 so that most people can walk or bike to work. There will be a limit of longevity to about 80 with three methods of achieving this goal suggested. Includes a Bibliography (216-20) and and Paul R. Ehrlich and Anne H. Ehrlich, “Ehrlich’s Fables.” Illus. Bruce Maddocks. Technology Review (MIT) 39.1 (January 1997): 221-36, but for the book adapted from the much longer version in their Betrayal of Science and Reason: How Anti-Environmental Rhetoric Threatens Our Future (Washington, DC: Island Press/Covelo, CA: Shearwater Books, 1996), 125-87, 282-309. |
Holding Institutions | PSt |
Full Text | 1997 Greenberg, Robert [S.]. We Can Save the World: The Uniworld Plan. Detailed eutopia with a world government, the reduction of the world’s population to two billion, a protected environment, a new cashless economic system that will stress basic goods and services, and other reforms, including a common language, and universal social security and health insurance. Cities of about 100,000 so that most people can walk or bike to work. There will be a limit of longevity to about 80 with three methods of achieving this goal suggested. Includes a Bibliography (216-20) and Paul R. Ehrlich and Anne H. Ehrlich, “Ehrlich’s Fables.” Illus. Bruce Maddocks. Technology Review (MIT) 39.1 (January 1997): 221-36, but for the book adapted from the much longer version in their Betrayal of Science and Reason: How Anti-Environmental Rhetoric Threatens Our Future (Washington, DC: Island Press/Covelo, CA: Shearwater Books, 1996), 125-87, 282-309. |