Nature’s Way of Sorting Out the Environment

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I was reading a recent article in the Los Angeles Times about how the cold spell in Florida is killing many of the nonnative animal life.   Burmese Pythons and African Rock Pythons are buying the farm on a major scale.  Iguanas are falling dead from trees.  Nonnative fish are dying by the thousands.   The Mayan cichlid, walking catfish, and spotfin spiny eel, are among the fish floating lifeless to the water’s surface.

I would take this to mean that this is nature’s way of telling these invasive animals to get the hell out of where they don’t belong.   Not that they had a choice in the matter, as many were brought over on ships, or in the case of the snakes, they were former pets that were let go in the Everglades when the novelty wore off or when the hurricane deposited their former domiciles on FEMA’s statistical list of trash.   Nevertheless, these animals who thrive in the warmer climes of he tropics will only thrive so long when the temperature takes a dramatic turn.

Yes, I would take this as part of nature’s way of rearranging the order of things.   I have to wonder what else does nature have in store for us.   We are inundated with dire predictions about global warming, which is not global warming, really, but dramatic climate change.  What’s this mean?  It means that not everything will warm up, but in places that are already warm, it will probably get warmer still.  In the colder spots on the climate, it may get colder still.

Yet the Arctic is melting and Florida has a cold spell.  Who knows what is really going on?   What I do know is that things change.  I have stood in places up on the high desert of Four Corners, Monument National Valley and further North.   It is hard rock, bone dry.  Yet in places you can still see actual dinosaur footprints in what is now rock or really hard ground.   Dinosaur footprints.  I kid you not.   This is the legacy of an earlier time when this vast region was under water, either covered by seawater or vast marshes that prevailed for millions of years.

Things change.  As a civilization that wants to believe that all things are safe and permanent, we have yet to get the memo that the planet is ever changing and in doing so is making things more or less secure at his own universal discretion.  Or in reaction to the conditions we inflict upon our planet.

Suffice it to say that while some of the global changes my be cyclical, it still doesn’t mean it is a good idea to pollute the hell out of it.  You can’t treat the Earth like a rental car and expect it to run smoothly.  Common sense would have it that dumping poisons into our water, filling our air with toxic crap, and leaving piles of waste on our lands and in our oceans will hardly result in something positive.   Common sense would say if you put poison in water then you will poison yourself when you drink the water, and poison the fish that live in that water.  Who you will eat.

In short, global warming may not be a result of our human transgressions, but our human transgressions aren’t helping things either.  No matter how long we care to live in denial.   You do not have to tie natural cycles and human pollution together to validate the fact the planet is going through changes.   Planetary cycles can still take effect, regardless of human pollution.  But for sure as hell, human pollution is not going to improve the situation, any.   Poison the oceans, the fresh water and the landscape, and it is still poisoned, whether there is climate change or not.   Common sense should bear that out.

But, unfortunately, common sense is not so common.  It took certain people hundreds if not thousands of years to realize that crapping upstream and drinking the same water downstream will result in disease.   People in some spots took thousands of years to correlate sex with the making of babies.  In some places on the globe, it seems it is still the case.  Recognizing the existence of germs took awhile.

And then there is the money factor.  There are those who are making money and those who are making more money by ignoring the obvious.   It is cost effective n the short run to ignore the obvious.  If you take the precautions and impose the industrial standards to eliminate or reduce pollution it will cost you bucks in the short run.   This cuts into your bottom line.  The bottom line in America and most countries is the major modern religion and messing with the bottom line for the sake of such minor considerations as the welfare of humanity borders on sacrilege.

Then there are the people who are allegedly in power.  The legislators.   What was once a somewhat responsible body of lawmakers who tried to oversee the well being of their constituents, looks more like a group of small time hustlers, working the corridors of government for their next corporate handout.   With some exception, most are being paid by their keepers to assure us that all is well and that they are maintaining “our way of life.”    They are paid to nod their heads and look the other way, examining their purses and the prospects of future elections, which more often than not conflicts with public interest.

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We leave a lot of things out of any argument.  We do this out of convenience.   While there are obscure noises about overcrowding,  increased strain on an already fragile infrastructure and ecosystem, we don’t talk much about overpopulation.  We fear for social and political repercussions when entertain the fact that the world has too many people.   We are are overcrowded.  Some of the population is undernourished.  And most of the population is undereducated and hardly prepared for the next decades of the twenty-first century.

We cover this by talking about the unique quality of every human being and making Hallmark cards of our sentiment, without addressing the true dangers that overpopulation will create.   We talk about global warning and claim hundred of millions will die.   What we don’t do is say that if we keep flooding this planet with the crushing hordes, it will cause natural reaction.    And natural reactions are often grim and consequential.

We cry over an earthquake in Haiti but ignore the fact that overcrowding, ignorance and the rest may well result in a pandemic, the likes of which we have never experienced.   Yes, it is a pity for Haiti, but if watching a quarter million die on one small island is nearly unbearable, what will it be like when hundreds of millions, billions, start dying from previously unknown diseases?  Diseases for what there will not be a cure.

So we argue out of convenience.  Convenience in this case means we pick and choose the safer salient points while leaving out the dozens of considerations that may really cause us harm.   We find consolation in sentiment when pressing issues loom before us.  We deal in modern day superstitions and embrace the religious either in its traditional form or as some metaphysical salad bar to support whatever half baked theory we are using to confront very real global events.

I would consider that more people have died from ignorance than anything else.  Ignorance has led to war, has caused us to crap upstream and drink downstream.  We overpopulate out of ignorance of the consequences and how it reduces the general well being of this planet.   We declare theory and conjecture as truth and fact,  although we have not yet been able to gather all the relevant information.  We are ignorant and proud of it.

Will all this happen?   It’s probable but not certain.   History is often a cruel prognosticator of what life has in store.   Historically, civilizations have come and gone.   Civilizations here have vanished.   There is room to speculate that even on other planets what was once living is now long since dead.

But then there is the other side of the coin.   Despite the cold spell in Florida, not every nonnative animal has died.   the smaller pythons are surviving, as they are able to adapt by slipping into smaller rock crevices and other spots that may keep them warm enough to ride out of the cold.    Only half the green iguanas have succumbed.  Maybe it’s dumb iguana luck, or it is Darwin’s Laws of Natural Selection, or the Survival of the Fittest, as it is sometimes known.  Or as the more religious will inveigh, it is the hand of divine providence.

I don’t know.  In the case of how and why some live and others don’t everyone has a valid opinion.   As long as it remains an opinion and isn’t carved in stone as absolute fact.

What we do know is that things chance.  Nothing remains the same, whether we want it to, or not.  And life goes on.

Author: Gordon Basichis

Gordon Basichis is the Co-Founder of Corra Group, specializing in pre-employment background checks and corporate research. He has been a marketing and media executive. He is the author of the best selling Beautiful Bad Girl, The Vicki Morgan Story, a non-fiction novel that helped define exotic behavior in the late twentieth century. He has recently published The Cuban Quarter, The Blood Orange, and The Guys Who Spied for China, dealing with Chinese Espionage in the United States. He is the author of The Constant Travellers. He has been a journalist for several newspapers and is a screenwriter and producer.