This is the final examination. The question you must answer is at the end. There is no single right answer. Your score will depend on the logic of the solution to the the problem that you propose and the degree to which you integrate economic, political and religious components of your proposed solution. It is now November of 2048. The world is not the same as it was in 2017. There has been two important changes. Energy will not be a problem for the foreseeable future. A combination of new green technologies enabling the production of liquid hydrocarbons from sea water (by genetically engineered jelly fish) and the development of cold fusion reactors have led to an abundance of cheap, renewable fuels. The world now faces a rapidly expanding population because of vastly increased birth rates in countries in Europe, North America and China where birth rates had dropped below replacement levels at the turn of the century. The result is an impending global food crisis. Already there are critical shortages in still impoverished countries. Major food exporting countries are reaching the limits of their productive capacity. Some religious communities encourage population growth to increase their political leverage. In countries with food surpluses their are religious leaders who mobilize support for food protectionism by claiming that God is punishing countries with shortages. Some groups encourage food hoarding on a massive scale. There are movements in less fortunate countries that claim that they have religious rights to productive farm lands controlled by others. Others believe that an international cartel run by a secret religious group is using potential starvation as a weapon to control the world. The cartel is said to be run by religious ″others.″ Some say it′s run by Christians, others by by Hindus, Jews, Muslims or the emerging religion of Jedi Knights. The ″Hunger Games″ have become real and they are exactly that on a global scale. You have come a long way since your days at ASU and are now a recognized authority on globalization. There has just been a presidential election in the US. The incoming president has promised to ″Feed Americans and Save the World,″ but has no idea how to keep her promises. You have been designated ″Special Presidential Advisor for Global Issues″. You have been ordered to prepare recommendations for solving economic, political and religious aspects of this multi-dimensional global crisis. How do you respond?