I’m unaware of any domestic genocides (not including the odd attack from one of our “enemies”) in the developed world since the end of the second world war - I know they certainly still happen behind closed doors in foreign countries, but nowadays the west is in horror whenever just a few of its own people die, often when just one person is killed. Genocide doesn’t happen to us lot anymore. I’m not saying it couldn’t happen, or be arranged to happen, but there’s just no way it would get far off the ground with all the communication and information open to us about our own countries. As for vaccines, nobody is getting killed by them, be real. They might not all be free of side-effects, but the good they do far outweighs any bad. Trusting doctors is smart, but mania and paranoia about them is able to completely undo all the good they could do in cases like vaccinations - please don’t buy into that. Doctors are normal people but with an unbelievable dedication to helping people and with fine scientific mindsets - they have to keep up to date with what they’re administering and all the tests that go into its legitimacy, pros and cons - only on TV and maybe in the odd isolated case are they corrupt and susceptible. That’s public healthcare at least, in private healthcare they’re often supposed to push whatever the private companies who own them tell them to recommend - private companies are rewarded for the absolute opposite to doctors…
My apologies it was a rather rude sigh that I didn’t have to put into words before tackling your response.
Farming is already incentivised to be sustainable, they have a finite amount of land on which to produce as much as possible - except of course in the case that aggressive expansion is permitted into other habitats like rainforests - but that is that same greedy human input that will inevitably be replaced by technology. It’s entirely possible to avoid that, so much is wasted afterall, it’s all in the name of making far more than we actually need to make more money at the expense of peoples’ health and waistlines. Food chains and plants are easy to sustain. Minerals just need recycling - they don’t die, they just get chucked in landfills. All the minerals that ever were in the ground are still on the earth - except for the odd thing we send into space that didn’t come back. They just need to get reused - technology could no doubt help recycling become competitive with simply throwing stuff away.
But ummm… UBI?
Let’s not get off topic now.