Barry Kent MacKay,
BornFreeUSA.org
February 2017
[NOTE: See Art by Barry Kent MacKay]
Taking any wealth from our environment without regard for the wolves, pupfish, bald eagles, jaguars, and other species who are rare, threatened, or endangered comes at costs that are shared by everyone. We all, more or less, equally need fresh water, productive oceans, and clean air to breathe. We also need our fellow plants and animals. However, they are in rapid decline now that we are changing the planet hundreds of times faster than in primal times.
When I was young, the world's wealthiest man was reportedly Aristotle
Onassis (1906-1975), who "earned" staggering wealth partly from owning
shipping lines, from whaling, and from getting a start in business by
selling tobacco. Like most billionaires, he ultimately had diverse business
interests. The great whales whose deaths generated such fortunes are largely
gone, but their destruction certainly contributed to his and others'
fortunes (and to the employment of sailors and whalers).
But now, far more than whales are at risk. There's a growing number of
American species that require protection—protection that was provided, until
now, by the Endangered Species Act. Some legislators seem to think that
making money is more important than protecting the environment, although
nothing could be less true.
In fact, all wealth springs from the natural environment. From the steel of
ships, trains, and aircraft, to the fossil fuels that drive them, to tobacco
and whales, we see the products of nature: of natural geological and
biological processes accessed through the technological innovation and the
physical endeavors of workers. They transfer the raw produce of the planet
into wealth that tends to accumulate up the economic pyramid to those at the
top.
Taking any wealth without regard for the wolves, pupfish, bald eagles,
jaguars, and other species that are rare, threatened, or endangered comes at
costs that are shared by everyone. We all, more or less, equally need fresh
water, productive oceans, and clean air to breathe. We also need our fellow
plants and animals. However, they are in rapid decline now that we are
changing the planet hundreds of times faster than in primal times.
And now, in 2017, I worry that the American government may dismantle the
Environmental Protection Agency: an agency that protects not only Americans,
but Canadians, too (as well as the migrating wildlife that doesn't recognize
human-imposed borders).
Yes, workers at the economic pyramid's broad base may benefit in the short
term—but we can't eat, drink, or breathe money. We must focus on protecting
the natural environment that makes this planet so rich.
Keep wildlife in the wild,
Barry
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