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T
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his is a moment at
which anyone with the capacity for reflection should stop and wonder what we
are doing.
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| What are we doing? |
If the news that in the past 40 years the world has lost
over 50% of its vertebrate wildlife (mammals, birds, reptiles,
amphibians and fish) fails to tell us that there is something wrong with the
way we live, it’s hard to imagine what could. Who believes that a social and
economic system which has this effect is a healthy one? Who, contemplating this
loss, could call it progress?
In fairness to the modern era, this is an extension of a
trend that has lasted some 2 million years. The loss of much of the African
megafauna – sabretooths and false sabretooths, giant hyaenas and amphicyonids
(bear dogs), several species of elephant – coincided with
the switch towards meat eating by hominims (ancestral humans). It’s
hard to see what else could have been responsible for the peculiar pattern of
extinction then.
Read the Guardian
story - “It's time to shout stop on this war on the living world”.

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