Monday, May 10, 2010

Biodiversity

This saddening and frightening BBC report on the third Global Biodiversity Outlook (GBO-3) was forwarded to me this morning by my friend Gary at CHI SPHERE. The basic principle of karma makes good sense to me: that actions have consequences--good actions bring about beneficial consequences, while unskillful, harm-causing actions bring about undesirable ones. It also makes perfect sense to me that this principle should operate on a global as well as an individual scale. The logic is compelling: our actions as a species will inevitably bring proportionate returns. Skillful, conscious actions will serve to benefit all of us who inhabit this planet--including the beautiful diversity of our fellow-travelers on the journey of birth, illness, aging and death. Our careless, ignorant ones will bring the results of carelessness and ignorance that we should have learned to expect. Unhappily, along with all of our brilliant scientific and technical advancements, we are still characterized as a species by a great deal of willful ignorance and a sense of arrogant entitlement when it comes to sharing our natural home with other species, whether plant or animal. Will we learn in time to save ourselves from the perfectly well-known, well-understood and easily anticipated results of our behavior? Or will we choose, instead, to fly in the face of what we know--along with the urgent messages from the planet itself--and suffer the consequences? In the long term, frankly, it matters little to the immense universe, on the backside of which we are the merest pimple.

2 comments:

Taradharma said...

if history is any indicator, we will allow our willful ignorance to perpetuate the problem. Good and bad, the ying and yang of our tiny planet will someday reach a tipping point and they we can say, "Oops!" The question is, when?

CHI SPHERE said...

Dear fellow stewards of our green, blue, brown and now oily bowl of rice. Will you wait till the day arrives when the tipping arrives at your door.

I just spoke to a younger friend on his cell phone on the shore of Dauphin Island. The tipping bowl has leaked out to his feet from our mothers flesh.

Was it Pindar who said it all in 4 words ?

ALL GRASS IS FLESH

In Tibet the tradition of consuming the bodies of holly men and women is not practiced much anymore. I have a bowl made from the skull of a friend from the NAM war. I ate from it when my birth mother died. I do not wish to eat from it
again!

History is coming round to teach us a very powerful lesson in the Gulf. If your watching the hearings of the 3 representatives from the wound makers now just peer into their expressions as their words skillfully practiced fall from their tight cruel lips....

Where do their children live, work and eat?