‘We weep at the disappearance of endangered species but avert our
eyes to the causes of Earth’s destruction’ – John Vidal
A baby ibex on a precipitous cliff edge. The hyenas
of Harar eating from a human hand. Leopards in Mumbai, whales breaching and
baby turtles heading blindly away from the sea. We are amazed by images of
wildlife seen in ever more beautifully filmed natural history documentaries.
They raise awareness, entertain, inform and amuse. We weep when we hear there
are fewer birds in the sky, or that thousands of species are critically
endangered. But there are some metaphorical megafauna that the BBC and we in
the media really do not want everyone to see.
After half a lifetime writing for the Guardian about the
decline of the natural world, I have to report that there is a herd of enormous
elephants in the forest that are trashing the place. We avert our eyes and
pretend they are not there. We hope they will go away, but they appear to be
breeding. But it is now clear that they are doing so much damage that unless
confronted, there is little chance that the rest of the animals, including us,
will survive very long.
Read the piece on The
Guardian by John Vidal - “The seven deadly things we’re doing to trash the planet (and human life with it).”

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