Monday, 1 April 2013

           I’ve been struggling with something lately. When I’ve spoken to people about the plight that animals face in our world it seems to be generally accepted that humans should always come first. This mentality bothers me because I feel that we live so selfishly already that it doesn’t help to think we are somehow more entitled to decided what happens to this world than any of the creatures we share it with. As a zookepper, I’m taking care of the mess other people have made – eagles that have been hit by cars, bears that are pushed out of their habitat and into garbage dumps and so on. That’s not to say I’m a nature purist, since I – by being alive – consume resources as well, however I recognize that animals have a place in this world and that they welfare needs to be a bigger priority than it is.

Let me set one thing straight before I begin. I don’t think I’m a crazy animal person. Animals are my passion for sure, but I think I’ve a placed a realistic value on them in my life. I often see images of zoo keepers or conservation workers cuddling with lions or tigers and all I can see in those images is a death wish. I also see a lack of respect for the animal. I think zoos should be as natural as possible, not an excuse for a petting zoo. With that being said, I think there needs to a much higher value placed on animals and the environment than there is now.

When we’re spending more money on animal welfare than education then I’ll agree that we’re taking this a little far, but I think our current situation is a far cry from this scenario. We live in a world of oceans on the brink of catastrophic collapse, global warming, vanishing glaciers and many other depressing environmental tragedies. In this situation I don’t think people should come first – clearly we’ve been putting ourselves first for long enough.
I’ve heard two arguments as to why humans should reign supreme.

            The first is a religious argument. The bible says “have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.” To have dominion over something is to have control, it does not mean take advantage of and pillage – which is what we’re doing now. We are taking too many resources (greed), we consume more that we need to (gluttony), we lust after rare pieces of natures (fur, claws, horns etc…), we have the technology to be more environmentally friendly but we don’t implement these techniques because of sloth and greed – these methods take effort and money. We want to be more important than the world we depend on and this stems from pride. I’ve listed five of the seven deadly sins and if you are wanting to live a biblical life then it doesn’t seem like the human race is doing a very good job of it. I think the biblical argument could be valid if this was actually the way we were living. If we have true dominion of the earth, we should be taking much better care of it.


            The second argument is that we have evolved into a superior race. We have found ways to advance in agriculture, transportation and electronics, but we are at heart a species that - like any other - consumes for our own gain. We have found ways to harvest everything nature has to offer very quickly – too quickly. Our fish and forest industry can hardly replenish itself before we are taking more. It’s in our genetics to survive and thrive. The problem I have with the evolutionary perspective is twofold. Firstly, as a species we haven’t existed for very long. We are but a blip on the evolutionary time scale but in that time we have managed to do damage like none before us. We’ve taken habitats away from animals that existed long before we did. Our sense of entitlement knows no end. Secondly, I think it’s stupid, frankly, to brag about the superiority of human intelligence when we are – plain and simple - destroying the very environment we depend on. We won’t be lookin’ so smart once we’ve destroyed the very thing giving us life. If we’re going to use our intelligence then let’s use it to preserve our planet rather than use it to find faster ways to destroy the world we depend on.


            I think if mother nature were a person and humans were her children, she’d be rolling her eyes at the tantrum we’re throwing right now. There’s too much “I want” floating around and I’m sick of it at the moment.


I think I’ll end my semi-rant for now. Next post I will follow up on this, but in a more positive way :P

 Whooooooa a kitty!


 

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