Renew

More Students Speak Out…NPG’s Annual Scholarship Contest Winners

Ad below for E The Environmental Magazine – March/April/May/June 2011

2011earthdaystudentsad-ETheEnvironmentalMagazine-March-April2011.jpg
See the advertisement as it appeared in major publications.

As part of our broad educational efforts, NPG conducts an annual scholarship contest for college-aged students. Our latest contest invited students to submit text that could be used to create a print advertisement in order to recruit more Americans to our efforts. We are pleased to release the text of two of the winners for your review and we strongly encourage you to visit our website, www.npg.org, where you will find a wealth of information relating to population, immigration and environmental issues. We also sincerely hope you will join our ranks as we continue our work to educate more and more Americans regarding what we deem to be the most critical issue of our time – population size and growth.

Overburdened, stressed, and ready for change.
THE GOOD NEWS: YOU’RE NOT THE ONLY ONE
With out-of-control population size and growth, the United States is experiencing unprecedented problems. It seems that each year it takes less time to fly across the ocean and longer to drive to work! The roads, schools, and police forces cannot sustain an additional 2.9 million people each year. Our forests and farmlands are abandoned in favor of housing developments and strip malls.
THE REASON IS SIMPLE: OVERCROWDING 
The answer is easy: visit www.NPG.org 

Learn how you can help and become one of more than 30,000 Americans supporting Negative Population Growth. Together, we will ensure that our future generations will inherit a healthy and clean environment where all Americans can enjoy a quality standard of living.
Kseniya Kuprienko
Stevens Institute of Technology

Let’s face it – Less is more.
What if you were told that through limiting population growth, you would be supporting sustainability and a better future for the children of this world? What if you were told that limiting population growth isn’t a horrific, undemocratic tactic, but rather, a
smart and responsible decision? What if you were told that through stabilizing the population, we’d be able to limit consumption, lessen overcrowding, and feed more people?
Less is more.
We don’t need more voices, we just need to speak louder, and loudly advocate for societal change: for the good of the world and our children. If you want to stand up and learn more about the benefits of limiting population growth, visit Negative Population Growth at https://hen.ywb.mybluehost.me today.
Kimberly Andresen
Cornell College

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