Just in case global warming isn’t enough
environmentalist-induced guilt for you, then here’s another, from “librit” over at Ezra
Klein’s blog:
At the top of the list is a request that we start
considering some of our smallest critter-neighbors, the bees.
Albert Einstein either did or didn’t have this to say about bees:
“If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe then man
would only have four years of life left. No more bees, no more
pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man.”
And while some bloggers are busy devoting time and bandwidth to
proving or disproving that it was indeed Einstein who made that
dire prediction, I’d like to point out that regardless of who said
it, bees are in trouble.
And so, therefore, are we….
Regardless of your politics, I hope you’ll think about the bees
this weekend, as well as the many ecosystems—all interdependent,
all quite fragile and easy to disrupt—that keep our planet and our
species grooving along.
Yes, the bees are disappearing. Of course, if you look at
the article, the problem appears to be confined to
the United States. I’m not surprised, as environmentalists have a
track record of predicting gloom and doom that usually don’t come
true. Here are a few of their more stellar moments:
-Rachel Carson, the patron saint of the movement, whose
scientifically unsound book, Silent Spring, claimed that DDT caused
cancer in humans (no, it doesn’t). This led to a near worldwide ban
of DDT. Cancer rates didn’t improve because of it, but the incidence of Malaria did, killing millions.
-Paul Ehrlich, who predicted massive worldwide famine during the
1970s and 1980s in his book Population Bomb. How’s that working out
for you, Paul?
-Remember the Alar scare of
the late 1980s? Turns out to have been a hoax perpetrated by the
likes of the Natural Resource Defense Council. Didn’t help at all
with lowering cancer, but banning Alar did make fruits like apples
more expensive.
-Remember noted oceanographer Ted Danson’s prediction circa 1988 that we had only ten years
left to save the oceans? Well, it’s about 19 years later and they
are still there.
So, do yourself a favor this Earth Day. Don’t believe all the
gloom-and-doom hype. Tell yourself the Earth isn’t fragile, because
it isn’t. Get a reasonable perspective on global warming by going
here and here.
And do celebrate. First, fill up your car with gas-best if done
at an Exxon. Second, find some both plastic and disposable and
throw it away. And third, go eat a steak and have lots of peppers
and onions with it so that when you get home you can add some
methane to the atmosphere.