Hope,
Sadly, even in these more 'natural' famines, there is often a human agent at work in the background. For instance there are parts of the world where, whilst there is no war at present, the practice of kidnapping young men to serve as child soldiers (think of the Lord's Resistance Army in Uganda and Sudan in the 1990s) has left communities without the men to look after the land. In some cases the young women were also taken to be used as 'recreational playthings'. I don't think that Vlad is suggesting that all famines have a similar human cause, but many have this kind of hidden one. Thinking of Africa, the current size of the Sahara Desert has a certain amount of hna influence to blame over the last few millennia. Deforestation has occurred over a long period and this has allowed the soil to be lost and the sand to take over.
Well this is getting weird. Here's what Vlad actually claimed:
"People starve because people let them or as deliberate policy..."
No sign of a "sometimes' or an "on occasion" or similar there. Nope sirree - according to him, people starve because people let them or as deliberate policy and that's the beginning and end of it.
I then explained how bonkers this is as clearly starvation often happens when neither of these causes are in play.
Somewhat oddly to you then replied with some examples of famine being caused by human agency.
I replied to the effect that no-one denies that, but there are plenty of examples too in which there is no human agency.
Even more oddly, you then reply with
another example of human causation.
As I say, weird. Leaving aside the man-made examples we agree anyway happen, would you care now to turn your attention to the examples when the victims have done nothing wrong at all - both in respect of Vlad's daftness and in the context of a supposedly loving god?
The earth is a dynamic entity and things like failure of monsoons, the eruption of volcanoes, earthquakes, etc, are all part of its natural cycle. If you look at where the worst natural events occur, they are often on low-lying land (floods), poorly conditioned and husbanded land (famines), destruction of usable land - sometimes short-term (volcanic eruptions), etc. 'Ironically', all of these will happen, regardless of whether the earth is an accidental conglomeration of chemicals and space dust, or the creation of a loving God.
Seriously? Why on earth would this supposedly loving god create a home for his special creation in the first place so riven with these phenomena, only a small part of which is habitable at all?
Or, to put it another way, why would a god create a world that looks exactly as you'd expect it to look if there was no god?