Guest guest Posted May 1, 2007 Report Share Posted May 1, 2007 At 03:10 AM 5/1/07, you wrote: >Nandita Shah >5/1/2007 1:48:06 PM >Nandita Shah >FW: Captain Paul Watson's earth day address > > > > >Captain Paul Watson is one of the most sincere well known environmentalists >I have heard of. I really liked this write up and want to share it with you >all. >Best, >Nandita > > > > >Earth Day Cometh and Earth Day Goeth > >And Where have all the Bees Gone? > >Earth Day Report by Captain Paul Watson > > >Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not >sure about the former. > >- Albert Einstein > >(1879 - 1955) > >Earth Day is almost here. I don't believe in Earth Day myself. I think it's >a little silly to devote one single day of the year to being concerned about >the environment, but I suppose one day is better than no day at all. > > >Having been an environmental activist since 1968, I have seen the movement >go up and down like a roller coaster in popularity. It was big in 1972 with >the Environmental Conference in Stockholm which I attended and it became big >again in 1992 with the U.N. Environmental Conference in Rio De Janeiro that >I also attended. I remember that the priority issue in 1972 was the danger >of escalating human populations but by 1992, that concern was not even on >the agenda. > >Well we are approaching the end of another 20 year period and it looks like >ecology is in vogue again thanks to global warming and a few other scary >things. Green is once again popular. > > >I can always tell when the environment is getting to be faddish again. My >indicator is the number of lectures I am booked for around this time of >year. It reached its peak in 1992, practically disappeared for awhile and >now it's coming around again. > > >What worries me is that the movement is constantly being sidetracked by the >issue of the day. > > >It's global warming now. When we were trying to warn people about global >warming and climate change twenty years ago, no one was interested. Now it's >become the " in " issue and the big organizations are tapping the public for >donations to address the problem although no one has come up with anything >that makes much sense. But global warming is good for business if you're one >of the big bureaucratic organizations whose primary concern is really >corporate self preservation. > > >Greenpeace is even telling people that they can slow down global warming by >(and I kid you not) " singing in the shower " . Yep, you see all you have to do >is run the water, then get wet, shut the water off, and sing in the shower >as you lather up and then open up the faucet and rinse off. Ah, so simple to >save the world. > > >The problem is that these big organizations are too politically correct to >address the ecologically correct solutions. > >Instead they are baffling everyone with abstract concepts like carbon >trading and carbon storage or trying to sell us a new hydrid Japanese car. > >Even Al Gore with his Inconvenient Truth totally ignored the most >inconvenient truth of all. I'll get to that in a moment. > > >But let's look at the number one cause of global greenhouse gas emissions. > > >First and foremost it is human over-population, the very same issue that was >the priority concern at the 1972 United Nations Conference on the >Environment in Stockholm. > > >It's 6.5 billion people folks. > > >Remember in 1950, the world population was 3 billion. It's now more than >doubled. > > >6.5 billion people produce one hell of an annual output of waste and utilize >an unbelievable amount of resources and energy. > > >And this number is rising minute by minute, day, by day, year by year. > > >And most of the people having children have no idea why they are even having >children other than that's what you do. Most of them don't really love their >children because if they did they would be very much involved in trying to >ensure that their children have a world to survive in. > > >Unless over-population is addressed, there is absolutely no way of slowing >down global greenhouse gas emissions. > > >But how do you do that within the context of economic systems that require >larger and larger numbers to perform the essential task of consuming >products? > > >Corporations need workers and buyers. Governments need tax-payers, >bureaucrats and soldiers. More people means more money. > > >I've said for decades that the solution to all of our problems is simple. We >just need to live in accordance with the three basic laws of ecology. > > >First is the Law of Diversity. The strength of an eco-system lies in >diversity of species within it. Weaken diversity and the entire system will >be weakened and will ultimately collapse. > > >Second is the Law of Interdependence. All of the species within an >eco-system are interdependent. We need each other. > > >And the third law of Ecology is the Law of Finite Resources. There is a >limit to growth because there is a limit to carrying capacity. > > >Human populations are exceeding ecological carrying capacity. > > >Exceeding ecological carrying capacity is diminishing both resources and >diversity of species. > > >The diminishment of diversity is causing serious problems with >interdependence. > > >Albert Einstein once wrote that " if the bee disappeared off the surface of >the globe, then man would have only four years of life left. No more bees, >no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man. " > > >That is the Law of Interdependence. > > > >Forget global warming folks. The disappearance of the honeybee could end our >existence as human beings on this planet far sooner than we think. > > >And the honey bee is in fact now disappearing. Why? We don't know why. It >could be genetically modified crops, I could be pesticides or it could be >that our cell phones are interfering with their ability to navigate. > > >Whatever the cause the fact is that they are disappearing. All around the >world bees are disappearing in a crisis called Colony Collapse Disorder. > > >And bees pollinate our plants. Everywhere on the planet, bees are hard at >work making it possible for you to live and enjoy life. > > >We hold on to our place on this planet by only a toehold. If anything >happens to the grass family, we are screwed. If the earthworms disappear, we >are in big trouble. If the bees disappear, well according to Albert Einstein >who was considered somewhat smarter than most of us, we will have only four >years. Just enough time to get a college degree to discover that everything >you learned is relatively useless when sitting on the doorstep of global >ecological annihilation. > > >We are cutting down the forest and plundering the oceans of life. We are >polluting the soil, the air and the water and we are rapidly running out of >fresh water to drink. > > >Only corporations like Coke and Pepsi have figured out that water is more >valuable than gold. That is why they are bottling it in plastic bottles and >selling it. This week I saw a bottle of water in my hotel room that I could >have drunk for only $4. > > >Unbelievable. That means that water is now being sold for more than the >equivalent amount of gasoline. I hope that I'm not the only one who thinks >this is insanity. > > >Now for Al Gore's really inconvenient truth. In his film he does not mention >once that the meat and dairy industry that produces the bacon, the steaks, >the chicken wings and the milk is a larger contributor to greenhouse gas >emissions than the automobile industry. You see, Al may drive a Prius but he >likes his burgers. > > >This is why the big organizations like Greenpeace and the Sierra Club will >not say a thing about the meat industry. Last year I saw Greenpeacers >sitting down for a baked fish meal onboard the Greenpeace ship Esperanza >while engaged in a campaign to oppose over-fishing. > > >When we pointed out that our Sea Shepherd ships serve only vegan meals, the >Greenpeace cook replied, " that's just silly. " > > >We see what we want to see and we rationalize everything else. > >The oceans have been plundered to the point that 90% of the fish have been >removed from their eco-systems and at this very moment there is over 65,000 >miles of long lines set in the Pacific Ocean alone and there are tens of >thousands of fishing vessels scouring the seas in a rapacious quest to scoop >up everything that swims or crawls. > > >This is ecological insanity. > > >The largest marine predator on the planet right now is the cow. More than >half the fish taken from the sea is rendered into fish meal and fed to >domestic livestock. Puffins are starving in the North sea to feed sand eels >to chickens in Denmark. Sheep and pigs have replaced the shark and the sea >lion as the dominant predators in the ocean and domestic house cats are >eating more fish than all the world's seals combined. We are extracting some >fifty to sixty fish from the sea to raise one farm raised salmon. > > >This is ecological insanity. > > >Yet the demand for shark fin is rising in China. Ignorant people still want >to wear fur coats. In America, we order fries, a cheeseburger and a " diet " >coke. > > >Ecological insanity folks. > > >Last week a reporter called to ask me if I had really said that earth worms >are more important than people. I answered that yes I had. He then asked how >I could justify such a statement. > > > " Simple, " I answered. " Earthworms can live on the planet without people. We >cannot live on the planet without earthworms thus from an ecological point >of view, earthworms are more important than people. " > > >He said that I was insane for suggesting such a ridiculous idea when people >were made in the image of God, and earthworms were not. > > >What we have here of course is a failure to communicate between two >radically different world views. His which is anthropocentric and sees >reality as human centred and mine which is biocentric and sees reality as >including all species equally working in interdependence. He sees us as >divine and better than all the other species and I see us as a bunch of >arrogant primates out of control. > > >But that's my two cents worth for Earth Day 2007. > > >Consider the humble honey bee and remember that the little black and yellow >insect you see flitting busily from flower to flower is all that stands >between us and our demise as a species on this planet. > > >We better see to it that they don't disappear. > > > >May be freely published and distributed > > > > > > > > > > > >Captain Paul Watson Founder and President of the Sea Shepherd Conservation >Society (1977- Co-Founder - The Greenpeace Foundation (1972) Co-Founder - >Greenpeace International (1979) Director of the Sierra Club USA (2003-2006) >Director - The Farley Mowat Institute Director - www.harpseals.org > > > > > " Sail forth - steer for the deep waters only, Reckless O soul, exploring, I >with thee and thou with me, For we are bound where mariner has not yet dared >to go, And we will risk the ship, ourselves and all. " - Walt Whitman > >www.Seashepherd.org Tel: 360-370-5650 Fax: 360-370-5651 > > > >Address: P.O. Box 2616 Friday Harbor, Wa 98250 USA > > > > >------ End of Forwarded Message > > > >-- >Mail sent to you keeping in view your interest. Hope u enjoy it, if not >let me know. >Yours Sincerely >Vispi Jokhi >Mob 09323351529 >Res 91 22 32440710 > ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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