There are 7.5 billion of us humans and every year there are fewer and fewer of everything else except for the slaves we breed for food and amusement.

Almost a half a billion non-human animals have perished in the Australian
fires in the past month. A few dozen humans have also died. All of these
deaths are a tragedy of epic proportions.
Imagine if that were half a billion humans. Hard to comprehend but such a
horrific tragedy is on the horizon before the end of this century.
Some 8,000 Koalas have been reported as having perished in the fires. The
numbers are most likely much higher.
The world is beginning to burn and the reality of the catastrophic
consequences are beginning to pry open the closed minds of many deniers,
especially when it is their home and their lives are being directly
affected.
Most of the media coverage is focused on the human tragedies but by
comparison, humans fared relatively well, at least so far.
My thoughts and tears are for the unimaginable numbers of everything
non-human, whose lives were recently destroyed.
Their lives were every bit as important as human lives.
Is a human life worth more than a koala, a kangaroo, a cockatoo or a
crocodile.
I’m going to tread on some very sensitive toes with this commentary but I
think it needs to be said.
My perspective is biocentric, whereas most of humanity looks on reality from
an anthropocentric point of view.
I do not expect the anthropocentric mind to understand my position.
My position is that a human life is not more important than the life of a
koala or a whale.
This is going to make some people angry as hell but that does not concern
me. What concerns me is the reality of our relationship with the natural
world.
Columnist Dave Bry wrote in The Guardian a couple of years ago:
“As much as I love animals – and I love them very much – the idea that the
life of a cat or a dog or a lion or a gorilla is as important as the life of
a human is a terrible one, a wrong one, an insulting one.
[There] are powerful, important things about being a human being … Yes, I
would save the life of Ted Kaczynski, Idi Amin or Donald Trump over any
animal you could name. (Yes, even my beloved childhood pets: the cats Love
and Honey, the dog, Yvette. Sorry, guys, RIP.)”
Personally I think this statement by Bry is asinine, insensitive and absurd.
Idi Amin was a mass murderer. His life was not worth the life of a mosquito
and if someone had shot the bastard, thousands of people’s lives would have
been spared not to mention the slaughter of African wildlife under his
authority. Would Bry say the same about Hitler, and if not, why not? So I
think Bray's’ position has not been thought out, and if it has, it is he who
holds a terrible idea with a wrong position and insulting to every person
who was slaughtered in WWII because of Hitler or in Africa under Amin. Bry
is saying his cats and his dog are expendable but a vicious dictator is not,
simply on the basis of being a member of the human species.
The reality is that some human lives are simply not worth more than other
humans and also not more important than many animals.
A few years ago when I was teaching at UCLA I asked my students this
question?
If you had to choose between a human life and the survival of an unknown
species, what choice would you make?
And to make the question a little easier for them, I said the human life is
a cute little baby and the species is a type of bacteria.
“So,” I said, “Does the baby live in exchange for the eradication of the
species or do we save the species and allow the baby to die?”
They answered without hesitation and chose the life of the baby.
“What if I ask you to save 200 species of unknown bacteria in exchange for
the baby?”
Again they chose the baby.
“Can anyone tell me why you made that choice? I inquired.
“Because human lives are more important.” One student answered. Another
said, “The life of a baby is more important than some germs, how could you
even ask such a thing?” she said with a look of disgust.
“Congratulations everyone,” I said. “Your choice just caused the extinction
of the human race.”
This is because there are anywhere from 700 to 1,000 different species of
bacteria residing in the human gut and without them we could not digest our
food or manufacture vitamins for our bodies.
This was part of a lesson I was trying to teach on the law of
interdependence, that all species need each other and without some species
we cannot survive.
Are phytoplankton and zooplankton less important than human lives? If it was
a choice between diminishing human numbers and diminishing worldwide
populations of phytoplankton what choice would we make?
Again I put the question forth, this time to some die-hard
anti-abortionists. If the choice is between forcefully preventing abortions
and allowing the births of millions of unwanted babies or watching the
disappearance of phytoplankton, what choice would you make?
They said that the lives of the babies were more important even if it meant
the babies would not be properly cared for, nurtured, educated and loved.
One person asked me what a phytoplankton was?
“It’s a tiny marine plant,” I answered.
“You mean like seaweed?”
“Yes but much smaller.”
“So you’re saying that seaweed is more important than babies?” The man asked
with a look of disgust on his face.
“Yes that’s what I am saying.” I answered.
“You’re a sick man,” he literally shouted at me.
And of course he was not interested in my explanation.
And the truth is that we have already made that choice to eradicate
phytoplankton in exchange for increasing human populations.
Since 1950, the Ocean has suffered a 40% decline in phytoplankton
populations and phytoplankton produces over 50% of the oxygen for the
planet.
This is a serious problem but one which most people remain blissfully
ignorant of.
Phytoplankton has been diminished because of pollution, climate change,
acidification and the slaughter of the whales.
Why the whales?
Because whales provide the nutrients essential for the growth of
phytoplankton, especially iron and nitrogen. These nutrients are spread to
the phytoplankton in the form of whale feces similar to a farmer spreading
manure on his crops. A single Blue whale defecates three tons a day of
nutrient rich fecal material which makes the whales the farmers of the sea
and a key species for the survival of phytoplankton.
Diminishment of whales means diminishment of phytoplankton means
diminishment of oxygen.
There are many species much more important that we are. Bees and worms,
trees and plankton, fish, ants and spiders, bacteria, whales and elephants
amongst many others.
They are more important for a very simple reason. Most of them can live
quite happily without humans but humans cannot live without them. A world
without bees and worms would be a world where we could not feed ourselves. A
world without phytoplankton and trees would be a world where we could not
breathe. A world without yeast (an animal) would be a world without beer and
wine which I mention only because this is a loss that may get some people’s
attention.
Nature has three very basic ecological laws. 1. Diversity, meaning that the
strength of an eco-system is determined by the diversity within it. 2.
Interdependence, meaning that the species within an eco-system are dependent
upon each other and 3. Finite resources, meaning that there is a limit to
growth, a limit to carrying capacity.
As human populations grow larger they literally steal carrying capacity from
other species, leading to diminishment of other species which leads to
diminishment of diversity and diminishment of interdependence.
In other words, no species is an island entire unto itself and that includes
our own human species.
Humans have created a fantasy world called anthropocentrism, the idea that
all of reality, all of nature exists only for humanity, that we are the only
species that matters and human rights take priority over the rights of all
other species.
In other words we look upon ourselves as divinely created superior beings
when in reality we are simply overly conceited arrogant, ecologically
ignorant, naked apes who have become divine legends in our own limited
minds.
This anthropocentric view of the world has made us selfish, self-centered and
extremely destructive to all other forms of life on the planet including our
own. Our anthropocentric fantasies have allowed us to destroy the very life
support systems that sustain us, to poison the waters we drink and the food
we eat, to amuse ourselves with blood sports and to eradicate anything and
everything we do not like, be it animal, plant or other human beings. We
demonize each other and we demonize the entire living world.
This fantasy world we have invented has witnessed our creation of thousands
of Gods out of whose invisible mouths we can give voice to our fantasies
with the moral authority to justify our destructive behaviour.
Over the years I have risked my life and my crews have risked their lives to
protect whales and seals, sharks, turtles and fish. I am often asked how can
I ask people to risk their lives for a whale?
Very easy, is my answer because fighting for the survival of whales or fish
means fighting for our own future.
The mystery however to me is how people can question risking our lives for a
whale yet accept that young people are routinely asked to risk their lives
for real estate, oil wells, religion and for a coloured piece a cloth they
call a flag.
Apparently risking their lives to protect property is acceptable whereas
taking risks to defend non-human lives is not.
This was very neatly summed up once by a ranger in Zimbabwe who was attacked
by human rights groups after killing a poacher who was about to kill an
endangered Black rhino.
The accusation was, how could you take the life of a human being to protect
an animal?
His answer revealed the hypocrisy of human values. He said, “If I was a
policeman in Harare and a man ran out of a bank with a bag of money and I
shot him dead on the street, I would be called a hero and given a medal. My
job is to protect the future heritage of Zimbabwe and how is it that an
endangered species has less value than a bag of paper?”
Humanity slaughters some 65 billion animals every year for meat and takes
even greater numbers of lives from the sea, much of which is discarded
callously as by-catch. We kill animals for fun or because we consider them
to be pests. There has never been a species as mercilessly destructive as
the human primate. We kill willfully, viciously and relentlessly and we do
so because we feel entitled to do so.
Anthropocentrism is an incredibly delusional conceit by a single species to
lift ourselves above in value and importance over all other living things.
Humanity is so entrenched in this view of the world that we have stifled all
empathy to the feelings and interests of all other species. We view them as
expendable, as property, as nuisances, as sources of amusement, as slaves.
In an anthropocentric world only humans matter and this has absurdly led to
beliefs that this entire planet was created just for us, that we are the
pinnacle of evolution and the masters of the universe.
Every single anthropocentric religion places human beings at the centre of
everything and above all other species. We have fashioned God in our image
in order to justify our superiority and woe be it to any one of that
questions this fantasy.
Anthropocentrism is a form of ecological insanity and is leading us towards
self destruction, because only so many species can be removed before the
laws of diversity, interdependence and finite growth lead to our own
extinction.
Are humans the most intelligent species on the planet? Yes. because we
define what intelligence is and therefore declare ourselves to be the most
intelligent species. We define ourselves as moral, ethical, benevolent and
wise despite the fact that our actions reveal that we are anything but
moral, ethical, benevolent and wise.
I would define intelligence as the ability to live in harmony with nature
and within the boundaries of ecological laws. We willfully ignore that
dolphins and whales have larger more complex brains and we dismiss any
speculation that animals think, make choices, dream and have emotions. We
also dismiss the reality that trees communicate through chemicals and fungal
networks. We pride ourselves on our art, our science, our religions, our
politics, our cultures and totally reject that other species have their own
cultures, their own realities completely independent of our hominid
vanities.
There are 7.5 billion of us and every year there are fewer and fewer of
everything else except for the slaves we breed for food and amusement.
Koalas do not contribute to climate change, to pollution of the ocean, to
deforestation, to war or habitat destruction. They are gentle, vegetarian,
shy, and intelligent self-aware sentient beings whose existence benefits the
planet and gives hope for the future.
What human being can equal a koala for the virtues of harmlessness,
sustainable living, peacefulness and ecological intelligence?
Not one of us. So in my opinion the life of a koala is not only of more
value than the life of a human being, it is a hundred times more valuable,
as are whales, gorillas, elephants, worms, snails, bees and trees.
Why? Because we cannot live on this planet without them.
They on the other hand would do exceedingly well without us.
My heart is pained when I think of how each and every koala, kangaroo and
every other individual of every species that died or were maimed horribly in
these fires suffered.
And let’s not forget, their suffering and their deaths happened because of
us – all of us! It is our greed and willful ecological ignorance and our
perverse and unnatural anthropocentric delusions that has brought about this
tragedy and will bring about many more, even more devastating than this.
The Climate Change apocalypse has begun and still world leaders deny this
reality and still they do nothing for fear of losing profits and
materialistic comforts.
Oh and before I get hit by a deluge of hate comments for holding a koala, I
need to point out that this little guy was recovering from a vicious attack
by dogs and was being rehabilitated at the Wildlife hospital at the
Australian Zoo which by the way, despite being overwhelmed, are tirelessly
saving the lives of thousands of victims of these fires.