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CONNECTING THE DOTS

More About: Environment

Our Troubled Country: Losing the Wild

“We lose four acres a minute, 6,000 acres a day and 2.19 million acres annually to development caused by population growth in the USA.” 

         Mike Matz, Denver Post “Losing Spaces”

 

Before the Industrial Revolution, humanity existed by tilling the fields for crops, picking fruits and storing them in root cellars.  Transportation included animals, ox carts, rivers and oceans.  All limited and slow!

          Diseases wiped out millions of people at the drop of a hat.  Polio, cholera and bubonic plague ruled.

          In 1900, the average American male died by 49 years of age.  Citizens kept warm by firewood and coal.  As long as humans depended on solar flow, winds and currents, we remained sustainable within nature’s carrying capacity.

          However, in the late 1800s, steam power burst upon the scene.  With it, steam driven ocean liners and trains afforded swift transport across oceans and continents.  With the advent of the internal combustion engine, the tractor and car made their appearance. 

          Whereas one farmer might feed 10 people with his labors, a tractor allowed one farmer the ability to feed 10,000 humans.  Food canning guaranteed sustenance throughout the year.

          With the advent of electricity, everything changed in America.  Coupled with production and assembly lines, consumption became the driving force of capitalism.   

          Those technologies allowed Americans to overwhelm the natural world.  In 1900, we numbered 76 million in America.  At the time, scientists created 100 different chemicals.  Today, we surpass 72,000 chemicals with an added 1,000 created annually.  All of them outside the bounds of nature!  All of them deadly to life forms including us.

          Today the United States, at 306 million people and headed for 400 million by 2035, sucks the lifeblood out of nature at increasing and alarming rates of speed.   If we examined the carnage and consumption of our voracious civilization, we might be appalled at the figures we exact on Mother Nature and our fellow creatures.

          Each day, Americans slaughter 22 million chickens for consumption.  We kill in excess of 105,000 cattle every 24 hours.  We devour tens of millions of fish and other ocean life every day.  We kill millions of pigs, horses, turkeys, deer, buffalo, ducks, geese, rabbits and other animals.  We euthanize eight million cats, dogs and other domestic animals annually.

          We burn 7.3 billion barrels of oil annually in the USA.  We burn millions of metric tons of natural gas.  We burned 1.17 billion tons of coal to produce electricity in 2006.

          However, as fast we produce it, we devour it faster.  The Sears Tower in Chicago uses more electricity in a single day than the entire city of Rockford, Illinois with 152,000 people.[6]   Humans consume 40 percent of the net primary production of energy on earth—the amount of solar energy converted to plant organic matter through photosynthesis—while we make up less than one percent of the animal biomass on this planet.

          “It’s no accident that as we celebrate the urbanization of the world,” said Jeremy Rifkin, president of the Foundation of Economic Trends, “we quickly approach another historic watershed: the disappearance of the wild.  Rising population; growing consumption of food, water and building materials; expanding road and rail transport; and urban sprawl--continue encroaching on the remaining wild--pushing it to extinction.”

          Within the lifetime of our children, vast areas of the wild we take for granted will vanish from our planet.  The Trans-Amazon Highway cuts across the entire expanse of the Amazon rain forest, hastening its destruction.  What is the result?  Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson states that humans create the ‘Sixth Extinction Session’ whereby we lose, “Fifty to 150 species a day or between 18,000 and 55,000 species a year.  By 2100, two-thirds of Earth’s remaining species are likely to become extinct.”

          Big deal you shrug!  As we kill more and more basic plant and animal life, it creates a cascading effect whereby all creatures depend on all other creatures in the web of life.  As you kill off more and more species, a cascade of extinction destroys environmental equilibrium.  Given enough time, we will kill off the grizzly, hummingbird, bald eagle, moose, giraffe, lion, elephant, cheetah, salmon, trout, bass, dragonfly and millions more of earth’s creatures.

          According to Environmental Magazine, editor Jim Motavalli wrote, “One American uses from 10 to 30 times more resources than a third world person.”  Thus, our 300 million equates to at least 3.0 billion people using resources.  Thus, the next 100 million Americans equal another 1.0 billion humans using resources.   Your mind sobers to the accelerating realities we face.  Can you imagine adding 1,000 cities to the world with 1,000,000 residents each in the next 30 years?  Name one good reason for that!

          In the past 10 years, my state of Colorado lost 1.6 million acres of land to development.  The Rocky Mountain News reported that Colorado expects a net loss of 3.1 million acres of prime farm land by 2022.  Every state affected by population growth can expect commensurate land loss.

         

Makes your head hurt doesn’t it?

 

Since I’ve already seen this nightmare in India and China, I know what’s coming.   Rifkin said, “In the great era of urbanization, we have shut off the human race from the rest of the natural world in the belief that we could conquer, colonize and utilize the riches of the planet to ensure our autonomy without dire consequences to us and future generations.”

          Sorry, we cannot get away much longer with our abuse of this planet.

          As I’ve said before and I repeat, we stand, like a proud whitetail buck, in the cross hairs of the most deadly moment in our nation’s history.  If we fail to stop this Congress from passing pro-growth mass immigration legislation, it will shift into overdrive the greatest importation of humanity ever experienced in the history of the world.  It will assure three to four million people added to our country every year.  It will not stop illegal immigration; it will explode it.  It will not reduce legal immigration; it will double it.

          It’s as if our citizens by their apathy and our politicians by their ignorance--beg for this country’s demise, degradation and collapse. 
 
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Take action: www.numbersusa.com ; www.thesocialcontract.com ; www.frostywooldridge.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 
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