Greetings to my visiting friends. I use this space to comment on important subjects of the day, on the continuing evolution of my writing, my video and my photography work, to acknowledge good ideas and some good people I've crossed paths with along life's journey, and on stuff that's just plain curious or fun.
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Wild Animal Populations Collapsing Worldwide
Alarming could not be more of an understatement. A 52 percent decline in wildlife populations in just the last 40 years. That is the conclusion of an intense study of animal numbers by the World Wildlife Fund. Why? A look in the mirror will give you the answer. Human numbers have doubled to 7.3 billion in the same period, and demographers are now saying there is a 70% chance that the growth of the human population will hit nearly 11 billion before it stops. That is an astonishing number. It's no wonder the populations of other animal species are collapsing.
We humans are mindlessly shredding the fabric of our biosphere. We are behaving like parasites... the kind of parasite that ultimately kills its host.
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Taken from the Huffington Post 9/30/14
GENEVA (AP) — About 3,000 species of wildlife around the world have seen their numbers plummet far worse than previously thought, according to a new study by one of the world's biggest environmental groups.
The study Tuesday from the Swiss-based WWF largely blamed human threats to nature for a 52 percent decline in wildlife populations between 1970 and 2010.
It says improved methods of measuring populations of fish, birds, mammals, amphibians and reptiles explain the huge difference from the 28-percent decline between 1970 and 2008 that the group reported in 2012.
Most of the new losses were found in tropical regions, particularly Latin America.
WWF describes the study it has carried out every two years since 1998 as a barometer of the state of the planet.
"There is no room for complacency," said WWF International Director General Marco Lambertini, calling for a greater focus on sustainable solutions to the impact people are inflicting on nature, particularly through the release of greenhouse gases.
The latest "Living Planet" study analyzed data from about 10,000 populations of 3,038 vertebrate species from a database maintained by the Zoological Society of London. It is meant to provide a representative sampling of the overall wildlife population in the world, said WWF's Richard McLellan, editor-in-chief of the study.
It reflects populations since 1970, the first year the London-based society had comprehensive data. Each study is based on data from at least four years earlier.
Much of the world's wildlife has disappeared in what have been called five mass extinctions, which were often associated with giant meteor strikes. About 90 percent of the world's species were wiped out around 252 million years ago. One such extinction about 66 million years ago killed off the dinosaurs and three out of four species on Earth.
In the new WWF study, hunting and fishing along with continued losses and deterioration of natural habitats are identified as the chief threats to wildlife populations around the world. Other primary factors are global warming, invasive species, pollution and disease.
"This damage is not inevitable but a consequence of the way we choose to live," said Ken Norris, science director at the London society. "There is still hope. Protecting nature needs focused conservation action, political will and support from industry."
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Sparks- A Bit of Cinema Magic
I have been a fan for Cirq du Soleil almost since it's beginning. We went to one of the tent shows in Los Angeles. It was unique and beautifully realized. Terrific performers in stunning costumes that defy description. The music is also very appealing.
Cirq du Soliel is now an international brand, with dozens of different live circus shows touring the world. They even have several permanent shows in Las Vegas.
I just came across a video titled Sparks. It's a Cirq du Soliel video freely available on the internet. It uses cutting edge technology to deliver some wonderful moments of entertainment.
Sparks is fun. If you appreciate performance art, Sparks is worth a look.
Here is the link to Sparks... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6C8OJsHfmpI
Here is a link to a video about how they did it... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YqUocVcyrE
Friday, September 26, 2014
Oregon's Whale Wars Veteran
I am a big fan of the Sea Shepard Society, a group of volunteers, who ply the world's oceans battling Japanese industrial whalers, the people who club harp seal pups in the Canadian Arctic, illegal tuna fishing, etc., etc.
You have to admire people who are willing put their lives at risk to get between whales and the humans that want to kill them. The Animal Planet TV show, Whale Wars, is about the Sea Shepard crews operating their own vessels, going to the very treacherous Southern Pacific ocean to confront Japanese whalers. It makes for great TV. I find it very satisfying to watch the Sea Shepard crews protecting whales from the exploding harpoons the Japanese use to kill them.
I work with a lot of good people these days on videos designed to reach the public with Move to Amend's very ambitious and very much needed Constitutional agenda.
One of the Move to Amend supporters I've gotten to know these past few months is a young man named Ryan Rittenhouse. Originally from Cleveland, Ohio, Ryan's background is in theater and video production. He's now working as an organizer for a non-profit called, Friends of the Columbia Gorge [FOCG]. Ryan is heavily engaged in the current fight to restrict hazardous, oil train traffic through the gorge.
Ryan in the Galapagos Islands |
I asked Ryan to work with me on a video that would tie the oil train controversy to the larger Constitutional agenda championed by Move to Amend. Ryan recruited his boss Kevin Gorman, Executive Director of FOCG, to do that outreach video for Move to Amend. Ryan is co-producing that video with me. It was shot this past week and is currently being edited. I will be posting a blog entry about it as soon as it's finished.
I was having lunch with Ryan after we shot the video, when he told me that he had been a Sea Shepard crew member aboard the Farley Mowat, an old ship named after a well-known Canadian naturalist. Of all of the things I have learned about Ryan, that is the most impressive.
When it comes to life, so many people take the path of least resistance, avoiding controversy or anything that even implies some sort of personal risk. That's a big part of why it is so hard to affect positive change on a cultural scale. Way too many people are self-absorbed and are unwilling to ' stand up' for anything that involves any kind of assertiveness and substantive commitment.
That's not the way of Sea Shepard, whose crew members volunteer to work without pay. They are people of great courage, conviction, and commitment to Earth stewardship. They travel to the far reaches of the world's ocean's to confront the worst kind of human hubris.
Ryan Rittenhouse put his ass on the line many times over as a Sea Shepard provocateur. He is a person of character and substance. These days, he sports a bushy red beard. He likes the distinct look it gives him. It's his style, and he has earned the right to express it, unlike so many people who are all about style, with little or no substance behind it.
Here is a link to the Sea Shepard Society... http://www.seashepherd.org/
Here is a link to Ryan's current employer, the Friends of the Columbia Gorge... http://www.gorgefriends.org/
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Prague
I have had the good fortune of spending time in some of the world's most interesting cities. The city I most want to visit that I have not been to is Prague in the Czech Republic.
Prague is one of the few great European cities that was not bombed during the second world war. The buildings in central Prague are pretty much as they have been for at least a century or more. Many of the streets are still covered with cobblestone.
Prague |
I just ran across this video of Prague, shot from a small camera drone. It showcases the beauty of this great city. A visit to Prague is very near the top of my personal bucket list.
Here is a link to the aerial majesty of Prague... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfo2gvt2OlI
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
The Cedar Hills Green Co-op
My wife and I live in a suburb of Portland, Oregon called Cedar Hills. The Homeowner's Association of Cedar Hills [CHHOA] has about 2100 homes and is one of the oldest associations in the United States. Our home is only seven minutes by car from downtown Portland, and a few minutes from the post office, library, groceries, public transport, and pretty much everything else we need in our daily lives. We like being part of this community.
One of the things that has disturbed us since we relocated to this area on the west side of metro Portland is the dearth of song birds. We just don't see them. This is a beautiful area with lots of trees and ground cover, abundant water supplies, and by all appearances everything birds would need to thrive. So, why are they not here?
We do see crows fairly often. They like to roost in the big oak tree across the street. Crows are an opportunistic species that do well in many situations. They also can account for some of the absence of other species of birds, as they are territorial and can be aggressive in pushing out competitors.
The lack of song birds in our neighborhood is hardly just a problem of 'mobbing' by crows. Domestic cats are also part of the problem. There are 85 million house cats in America. Cats alone are accountable for the loss of up to six billion small birds annually. Cats are predators. If they are outside roaming, they are looking for prey. Hunting is what they are hard-wired to do. The only answer to this problem is to keep them inside, or perhaps put a bell on a collar that might provide some warning to a small bird before kitty can pounce.
The biggest reason for the lack of birds may be the choices we make in landscaping our residential properties. A well groomed lawn might offer a modicum of 'curb appeal', but it's not a place that is friendly to nature or birds. Removing trees and natural groundcover in favor of nicely manicured grass is a problem, more than anything else, because keeping lawn and gardens 'beautiful' 'requires regular applications of chemical fertilizers, weed killers, and other kinds of biocides. At least, that's what most people assume.
It's no wonder our suburbs have gotten so far out of balance with nature. The green, weed-free lawn monoculture is hammered into us as the esthetic ideal. Suburbs are supposed to look like a TV lawn care commercial. That vision of being a good neighbor is constantly sold to us. That's what the multi-billion dollar lawn care industry wants us to embrace. That's what maximizes profits for them.
Allowing one's property to become a bit unkempt and wild is frowned on, even thought of as diminishing property values.
I, like most people, do not advocate turning residential suburbs into an eyesore of weeds, invasives, and non-indigenous vegetation. We're talking about making our personal home space more friendly to the plants and animals that would be present if we were not here, not eliminating landscape maintenance altogether.
Probably with much less of a time commitment, and also at less cost than it takes to do the lawn care we are accustomed to, we could landscape our personal outdoor space in ways that are both esthetically pleasing and friendly to the natural world. Every well-considered argument I can visualize leads directly to a cooperative, 'green' approach to community.
I've been thinking about how to make our personal existence more in harmony with nature for some time. We have taken some steps already with our landscaping. We have no lawn, and we allow our plantscape to look a bit busy... not unkempt, but probably too close to unkempt for some. We also try to avoid or very much limit any use of pesticides and herbicides. That's not to say we are a good example. We have not been attentive to what we plant. We need to do much better. Native species and flora that are attractive and nurturing to small birds and insect pollinators should get planting priority. Anyway, I'm not suggesting us as an inspiring example. My wife and I need to change our yard space so that the plantings are good for the birds and bees.
About a year ago, I started asking questions and expressing myself publicly about what I now refer to as a green co-op. At the beginning, it was just an expression of concern for birds and pollinators in the Cedar Hills area. Then, as I asked questions and talked to local people with lots of knowledge and life-affirming experience, a compelling picture emerged. I was seeing my home area, Cedar Hills, as an inspiring example of what a human cooperative for nature looks like. I was seeing Cedar Hills as a reflection of a place whose primary mantra about nature is; first, do no harm.
Portland, Oregon is well ahead of most urban regions in the way nature and the environment are considered. The Portland Metro Counsel and it's commissioners oversee a 'nature in neighborhoods' program. They support nature-friendly community initiatives all across the region. In fact, Kathryn Harrington, the metro commissioner for the Cedar Hills area, is already backyard certified.
Another thing I learned is there are already many families in Cedar Hills that are living on personal landscapes purposefully shaped to encourage birds and pollinators. What an amazing foundation to build on.
So, I wrote down a brief concept paper that makes the case for a Cedar Hills Green Co-op. I took it to Jodie Phelps, the office manager at CHHOA. Jodie is a real asset to our community.
On September 9th, I asked the citizen Board of Directors of the Cedar Hills HOA for their support in launching a Cedar Hills Green Co-op, run by volunteer citizens of our community. The board endorsed our effort, and they will consider formal oversight of the Green Co-op after the level of community support can be determined
So, that's where we are. Around mid-October, an announcement for the green co-op will be included in the semi-annual mailing to HOA members. The announcement urges residents to join the green co-op, and makes a special request that residents who have already embraced a green lifestyle become the core of this community initiative.
Stay tuned. We should know if the Cedar Hills Green Co-op is going to fly well before the Xmas holidays.
The website for the CHHOA is www.cedarhillshoa.org/
Monday, September 15, 2014
Hope You Can Swim
This is a public service announcement from the 'Ocean Overflow Protection Service'. The subtitle of this silly but thought-provoking video is 'denial won't stop sea level rise'.
Humor can sometimes draw attention to subjects like nothing else can. Warning, people in Baltimore, Boston, Miami might be more alarmed than amused.
Here is the link to this goofy PSA parody from The Center for Biological Diversity... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3PfHerJm6cY
Sunday, September 14, 2014
The Value of Water
Had to repost the following. Water is indispensable. It's amazing just how thoroughly unappreciated it is...
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Sunday, 14 September 2014
The Value of Water: How We View It (Thanks @thereaIbanksy)
It's rare that on the same day I post the same item on WaterWired and my personal blog Campanastan but since I am reading David Zetland's Living with Water Scarcity now I thought this graphic extremely relvant to drought, scarcity, and how we value (or don't value) water.
I suspect street artist banksy did not intend this to apply to water but perhaps I am wrong. Either way, it's worth posting and reflecting upon.
"A cynic is a man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing." - Oscar Wilde
I suspect street artist banksy did not intend this to apply to water but perhaps I am wrong. Either way, it's worth posting and reflecting upon.
"A cynic is a man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing." - Oscar Wilde
Friday, September 12, 2014
Local Power
I just ran across a video for New Era Colorado, a grassroots group in Colorado that has a ballot initiative that removes the local power utility, Excel Energy, from control of the electric power structure that serves the community or Boulder, Colorado..
Excel relies primarily on coal fired power plants to deliver energy to Boulder. Excel is a 'for-profit', shareholder controlled utility. The New Era Colorado imitative will install a municipal public utility to provide power, with the intent that it move rapidly away from reliance on coal to clean, renewable sources of electric power.
This is a volunteer grassroots effort. Excel Energy is spending millions to influence pubic opinion to prevent voters from throwing them out.
I love what the New Era Colorado grassroots team are doing. I hope they prevail against all the huge amounts of corporate influence money being thrown into the process by Excel Energy.
Here is a link to the very compelling 'Local Power' video produced by New Era Colorado... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xh1qCf-ohOQ
Here is a link to New Era Colorado's webpage...http://neweracolorado.org/
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Pay 2 Play
Here is another outstanding wake-up call to the American people. Your political system; your government at every level, local, state, and national is egregiously corrupt. This film demonstrates clearly that America is no longer a democracy. It is a Konfederacy of Kleptocrats for sale to any billionaire, banker, or corporate executive willing to shell out big money to buy the public policy they want, with no regard for the consequences.
This is the core issue... the core challenge of our time. The singular focus on profit above all else is shredding the fabric of life on Earth. Fixing this problem must be job one.
Here is a link to a trailer for the feature documentary, Pay 2 Play...http://vimeo.com/87025347
He3re is a link to the webpage for Pay 2 Play... http://pay2play.nationbuilder.com/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_term=advertising-pay-2-play-20140910-2&utm_campaign=Advertising%20-%20Pay%202%20Play%20-%2020140910
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Tuesday, September 9, 2014
This just published essay, written by Michael Tobias and Jane Gray Morrison, reflects human civilization as I see it; mindless and dysfunctional. Like lemmings, we humans are hurtling rapidly toward a cliff. As Tobias and Morrison point out, every single day that passes, the headlines of most any major news periodical reflect that ugly reality. War, disease, famine, resource depletion, massive environmental degradation; it's all there, in so many words. The facts speak for themselves. Humans are shredding the fabric of life on Earth.
As the great cartoon character Pogo lamented, 'We have met the enemy, and he is us.'
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Eco Essay: The Ghosts of Biogeography
August 18, 2014
Periodically, Eco News Network features eco essays written by individuals with the environment close to their heart. The opinions expressed in these essays are those of the writers.
Here, Dr. Michael Charles Tobias and Jane Gray Morrison of Dancing Star Foundation share their thoughts about “The Ghosts of Biogeography.”
On Sunday morning, August 10th, lazily picking up the Los Angeles Times, all but does us in. Consider this rapid-fire sampling of headlines – a schematic of world events that we all, this human condition, suffers in the wake of being caught up in the daily fall-out, directly and indirectly: “Obama sees no quick fix in Iraq,” ”We are alive, but we have nothing,” “Low-level fighting persists in Gaza,” “Anger rises in Liberia about Ebola response,” “Forecast is all sun but still little solar in many states,” “Cancer doesn’t always deter smokers.”
But the most heartbreaking and telling of all, one individual family’s tragedy – the loss of a teenage son.
“One final loving vigil.” This latter story, written by Emily Foxhall describes what suddenly killed the unsuspecting youth, a concoction known as “spice” or “K2,” “a synthetic form of pot that some experts say can overwhelm brain circuitry, leading to psychosis, kidney injury, high body temperature, heart attack or death.”
In the Arts & Books section of the same LA Times issue is a photograph of Pablo Picasso and his future wife, Jacqueline Roque, from a new traveling exhibition of photographs of famous artists curated by Picasso’s grandson Olivier, entitled “Revealed.”
What is so revealing to us about this photograph, and the litany of horrible news on a single morning in a single newspaper, is the realization that there is the giant, Picasso, the man who had painted the searing, unforgettable portrait of human madness in his 1937 masterpiece “Guernica” that was his unrequited outrage over the destruction by Nazis and fascists of the quiet village in Basque Country, northern Spain, named Guernica. But in this reproduced photograph, Picasso is at home, quietly, ever so gently playing with his loving Dalmatian.
“Every act of creation is first an act of destruction,” Pablo Picasso famously said.
The implications, of course, resonate throughout the troubling truths of our human natures.
“The Ghosts of Biogeography”
When the great Renaissance explorer, scientist Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859)
enunciated the principles of biogeography, relating to the distribution of species predicated on geographical differentiations, it is unlikely he could ever have imagined the scope of today’s ecological crises. By 1967, however, when Robert MacArthur and Edward O. Wilson published their book The Theory of Island Biogeography (Princeton University Press), relations between extinction of species and destruction of habitat were becoming all too clear across biome after biome, mathematically characterized and subjected to the unprecedented scrutiny of species and population resiliencies under condition of diminishing habitat. Individuals, by the billions were dying, becoming ghosts before we ever knew they even had existed.
Recently, in the 30th July issue of Current Biology, a PhD student Zuzana Burivalova, based in the Applied Ecology and Conservation Group of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, working under the aegis of Prof. Lian Pin Koh, in concert with her co-authors Cagan Sekercioglu and Lian Pin, have analyzed four dozen studies with respect to loss of biodiversity under circumstances involving impact variables of logging upon tropical forests. Their conclusions, while not surprising to many, are nonetheless devastating, in light of the current calamity of willful human deforestation amongst those very vectors of the world’s most genetically rich equatorial sanctuaries.
The authors conclude that “Every increase of 20 cubic meters per hectare in logging intensity results in an approximately 35% decrease in mammal species richness.” That’s a mere 3-to-4 trees cut down in 2.47 acres (1 hectare).
Placed in perspective, the data is even more shattering than the math can reckon upon: Loggers are not epicurean dilettantes but marauders with little pleasure in the exercise of restraint, a luxury scarcely ever volunteered by multinational calculator-wielding geeks. Hence, the following summary, from the Website “Think GlobalGreen” one of the best I’ve seen, of tropical forest loss: “Unbelievably, more than 200,000 acres of rainforest are burned every day. That is more than 150 acres lost every minute of every day, and 78 million acres lost every year…. It is estimated that the Amazon alone is vanishing at a rate of 20,000 square miles a year. If nothing is done to curb this trend, the entire Amazon could well be gone within another fifty years. If deforestation continues at current rates, scientists estimate nearly 80 to 90% of tropical rainforest ecosystems will be destroyed by the year 2020.”
For other vertebrates, particularly all the birds groups, amphibians and reptiles, the numbers are equally chilling. And with respect to invertebrates – who, in places like Yasuní National Park in Ecuador, are the astonishing biological fonts of nature’s evolutionary chances of success, beyond all measure – recent data correlates the halving of all insects and spiders with the doubling of human population, to date, a dire conjoining of sinister, untempered policies and con-volitions that is bound to escalate according to a whole new frontier of biogeography extrapolations and even the most conservative U.N., World Bank and Population Reference Bureau demographic projections.
There are now nearly 7.3+ billion human beings, poised to hit between 9.5 and 16 billion depending upon which demographic model one chooses to focus upon. Homo sapiens are now consuming literally trillions of animals every year for consumption, under Holocaust like conditions of torture, and murder. That legacy is being passed down to our future offspring: a multi-tasking bulwark of outright and conceptual violence, not kindness or the least restraint.
Meanwhile, at a minimum, 800 million people are chronically malnourished. As many as one-third of all species are deemed to be at risk of extinction. Yet, the complexities of gauging levels of risk are underscored by the fact the world’s leading biodiversity monitor (the IUCN or International Union for the Conservation of Nature, based in Gland, Switzerland, and keeper of the “Red Book”) has thus far – after 50 years in existence as an organization – managed to study a mere 71,576 species, against a backdrop of a known 1.7-1.9 million species. While the IUCN record is a huge achievement, the result of vast scientific collaborations throughout the world, the remaining challenges are almost too bewildering to contemplate. Awaiting gap analysis of vulnerability status are not merely the remaining known taxa (that 1.7- to -1.9 million species) but the tens-of-millions of other species we can only guess at.
If one were to utilize, for example, stochastic mathematical theories, or the various Markoff Processes, chains and covers for deducing current population data for other species, the five other Kingdoms of Life would come into furious play, namely, Monera, Protists, Fungi, Plants and Animals. Add to that the multitudinous constellations of viruses (excluded by biologists from the Kingdoms for numerous reasons) and we are possibly speaking of 100 million or more species, each with millions or more individuals – in some cases – from one species of African Red-billed Quelea (Quelea quelea) to countless ant and termite species – in the many billions of individuals. The zeros are like so many stars, or grains of sand. Cosmologists are left with futile anthropic principles; astrogeophysicists throw up their hands in wonder. We cannot grasp them.
“World War III”
In 1994 when we wrote a book entitled World War III: Population and the Biosphere at the End of the Millennium (Bear & Co, Santa Fe, NM), and the second, updated edition in 1998 (Foreword by Jane Goodall, Continuum Books, New York), humans were adding at that time (1994) approximately one city of Los Angeles to the planet every three weeks. We continue at nearly the same pace (it is now one Los Angeles every four weeks, but – as Dr. Paul R. Ehrlich (President of Stanford University’s Center for Conservation Biology and a close personal friend, and John P. Holdren (current assistant to President Obama for Science and Technology) pointed out in their famed 1971 “I = PAT” construct, today’s levels of extraction intensity, population, affluence and technology have so escalated as to swamp the data, whilst demonstrating proof positively the underlying equation, one of the great contributions to modern-day biology.
This decade’s numeric bad news truly overwhelms the quantification modalities addressed by the Club of Rome, founded in 1968 (the same year Paul and Anne Ehrlich published their remarkable The Population Bomb); and exponentially outpace the data streams and predictions feeding President Jimmy Carter’s group that assembled around the Global 2000 Report. All that data, plus sum, added to the ecological wildfires that partly predicated our own (highly subjective) interpretation of the human inflictions to life on Earth in the guise of our ten-hour TV miniseries and novel for Turner Broadcasting, “Voice of the Planet” in 1991. Our exhaustive series was, in so many words, a love letter to Gaia who played a “voice” and a sweeping reality of biotic unraveling and lamentation.
That the world is hemorrhaging biologically is clearly the most striking “environmental paradox” in human history. It is front-page news every day. Our response to our own assaults on the Earth constitute the gist of that paradox, that unrelenting downpour of bad news.
Many have masterly described this double-bind situation (the psychotherapeutic brain child of the late Gregory Bateson) by which we, along with most other interdependent life forms, fine ourselves entrapped, Eric Wagner being one of those those insightful commentators who nailed the advancing syndrome in a December 8th, 2010 Conservation Magazine essay entitled “It’s The End Of The World As We Know It… And I Feel Fine.” The first part of Wagner’s title quotes those piercing lyrics from the band R.E.M.’s 1987 album “Document.” It is not just a memorable tune and striking words to nail its message. Far beyond the music, a colossal codex of missteps and ultimate ecocide by one species that should know better, yet – collectively – does not, marches to a different drummer, economic mantras calling for an all-out transmogrification in the name of corporate personhood of Nature into a mindless ledger recording the consumption of goods, GNP, nation against nation, region competing with region, in the myriad battles for economic seniority.
Paul Ehrlich and Michael Tobias recently published a book together, Hope on Earth: A Conversation (University of Chicago Press, May, 2014) in which the Authors discuss the thinking processes that have led our species into this current ecological cul de sac in which we all find ourselves pinioned, like Prometheus on his rock, an eagle devouring his liver by the day. That Promethean pain, elicited in the mythologies of our species is no platitude, but the disease currently eating away at most species and populations, the attrition most demonstrably discernible amongst the very individuals who are the ecological end-losers of the these colossal “pain points” (those aggregates of the largest quanta of suffering, such as rain forests, coral reefs, mangroves, wetlands, sea grasses, and slaughter houses.
Crows and termites, ants and micro-biomes might be flourishing, under the weight of the outright devastation all about, opening up remarkable and untried niches for their predatory strategies. But for organisms of a larger size, the angst is measurable, not by co-sympathetic strategies enlisted by specific theories, but by everyday commonsense observation. As evolutionary biologist and deep ethologist Dr. Marc Bekoff once wrote, anecdotes quantified sufficiently, add up to a science (or words to that effect). In Hope on Earth, Ehrlich and Tobias are clear to point to the various likely scenarios our species is courting: not one of them is pretty, and each pathway mirrors a current crisis that is overwhelming in its implications for trans-generational ethics, equity, parity, and survivability.
“Survival of the – What, Who, How?”
At one point in our “conversation” (Hope on Earth) Ehrlich describes how he gives human civilization about a 10% chance of surviving the 21st century (22 known civilizations before us have gone extinct as a result of their ecological overshoots). Yet, by contrast, Ehrlich is quite optimistic, he says, noting that a close colleague of his, and one of the world’s most eminent scientists, gives us only a “1% chance of survival.”
We (Tobias and Morrison) question the whole notion of kin altruism, because it is clear – from Wall Street to all those commensalist or symobiotic communities the recent emergence of empathy research strives to cast in a limelight – that the Anthropocenic pressures, flashpoints and fortress of callous indifference to the suffering of others is mounting a force of nature all its own that has only occurred 5 times before, in the annals of biology on Earth: The five previous extinction spasms, none of which was caused by a single species, not even close.
In the meantime, we continue – like an out of control train in a dark tunnel at night, its headlights turned inward – to rapaciously overstep the humble boundaries of a finite biosphere. We do so flippantly and all the science in the world appears incapable of changing our minds. We front our independence fully ignoring human and all other animal rights, with rare exceptions to this suicidal biological vogue, it would appear. We think nothing of spending far more than a million dollars per year to save one California Condor, whilst consuming in the US alone, over 9 billion other birds annually, for redundant protein and to satisfy the approximately ten thousand taste buds on our tongues and riddling the surface of our throats.
But evolution does not condemn or liberate us: only our daily choices can do that.
We have fouled every ecosystem that, by implication, means that we have fouled our nest; that there is no vulture who is not far more meticulous about his/her personal hygiene than the average human being. We do not allogroom – we pamper or exploit; we indulge and kill; we muddle, argue, and invite disaster with nearly every economic aspiration and obsolete insistence on entitlement.
We remain averse to the idea of discussing international family planning in any meaningful political sphere, whilst adding megacity to megacity with dizzying speed, all but ignoring the vast majority of those children who will likely be born into a world of daunting poverty, nutritional deficiencies, chemically distorted atmosphere, sickly soils, and a punishing absence of clean drinking water.
Artists, scientists, students, people of common sense know only too well that we are in trouble. And truly, our continuing need to visit national parks and wilderness areas, to revere and celebrate nature remains the single key to our survival as a species.
If we are to solve these dilemmas – and embrace the obvious solace of a shade tree in a meaningful way – we must stand up to the reality of the vast insults we – our species – are inflicting on the Earth. We cannot stop a patient in ER from bleeding if we don’t understand or acknowledge the source of that injury. The source is ourselves. The question is: do we collectively have the courage to acknowledge that we have made a major mess of things and we have very little time to redeem the consequences of our ecological illiteracy?
Michael Charles Tobias’s and Jane Gray Morrison’s next book, Why Life Matters: Fifty Ecosystems of the Heart & Mind, a photographic compilation of essays previously published here in Eco News Network, and in Forbes, comes out from Springer International this Fall, as does the Author’s other new book, The Metaphysics of Protection, from Waterfront Digital Press, with a Foreword by Professor Dr. Ervin László, two time Nobel Peace Prize Nominee and Founder of the Club of Budapest, and a Preface by evolutionary biologist and deep ethologist, Dr. Marc Bekoff.
About the Authors
Dr. Michael Charles Tobias (www.michaeltobias.org) is a global ecologist whose field research has
taken him to over 90 countries. He has worked in ecological anthropology, bio-cultural ethics, and large-scale biodiversity conservation; eco-restoration, the saving of endangered species, animal rights, and has a particular focus upon the future prospects for biological evolution. His nearly 50 books (non-fiction as well as fiction) and more than 170 films have been read and broadcast throughout the world. Recipient of the “Courage of Conscience Prize” and a myriad of other awards and distinctions, Tobias has been a Professor at numerous universities and is the President of the Dancing Star Foundation. Michael’s most recent book, Hope On Earth: A Conversation (co-authored with Dr. Paul Ehrlich of Stanford, and Additional Commentary from Dr. John Harte of UC-Berkeley) comes out this Earth Day from the University of Chicago Press.
Jane Gray Morrison is an author, ecologist and filmmaker who has done field work
in dozens of countries, productions for many networks around the world, and written numerous books, including God’s Country: The New Zealand Factor, Donkey: The Mystique of Equus Asinus, and Sanctuary: Global Oases of Innocence (www.sanctuary-thebook.org). She has served as a Director on several arts organizations, and is the Executive Vice President of Dancing Star Foundation. Among her recent film productions are the PBS feature documentaries, No Vacancy, and Hotspots (www.hotspots-thefilm.org).
The authors are contributors to Eco News Network. The opinions expressed in this essay are those of the writers. This essay was printed with permission from the authors. Copyright © 2014 by Michael Charles Tobias and Jane Gray Morrison/Dancing Star Foundation. All photos are provided by and published with permission from Michael Charles Tobias and Jane Gray Morrison/Dancing Star Foundation.
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