“Humans
are part of nature, not separate from it,
and
human activity that hurts the environment also hurts us.”
Meehan Crist
writer in residence,
biological sciences, Columbia University
I’ve often
thought that the Fall of Man, the biblical story of the casting out of Adam and
Eve from the Garden of Eden, that state of Nature where man and woman lived in harmony
and grace with other creatures, is a parable about our degradation of the Earth after the Fall. That is our original sin and this is my interpretation.
Eating the
fruit of the Tree of Knowledge sought to establish a hierarchy among living beings with
Man at the apex, assuming dominion over Paradise. This false knowledge created a false hierarchy which created a false narrative: Man is not of Nature, but above it;
Man is not controlled by Nature but rather controls
it. In my interpretation of this parable, it was our blind, misguided,
arrogant pride and our belief in an illusion of superiority that is our original sin, and it is that sin which caused us to be
cast out of Paradise into a kind of Hell that we alone have created on Earth.
Today I
read that COVID-19 infections have shut down meat packing plants, breaking the
food supply chain. Tyson Foods, Inc., an
American multinational based in Arkansas, the world's second largest processor
and marketer of chicken, beef, and pork, says millions of animals will need to
be killed without being turned into food, because people--not the animals--got sick. The Chair of the House Committee on Agriculture estimates that
between 60,000 and 70,000 pigs will have to be euthanized every day. I guess it’s cheaper to kill these innocent animals than to feed
them. And cheaper still than to revamp slaughterhouse production lines to socially distance workers. If this horrendous killing of perfectly healthy animals for rank greed isn't a sin, I don’t know
what is.
Can we
atone for our vainglorious pride and get back into harmony with Nature? I am not alone in thinking that the coronavirus provides
us with that historic--even evolutionary-- opportunity. An op-ed in today's New York Times by Guterres, UN Secretary General, outlines a six-point plan to stop the pandemic and slow climate change at NYT
Guterres.
The fact is, as Guterres implies, the virus is writing history and has offered Man the role of a lifetime. What can we read in that, starting with the animals?
The
lockdowns may have kept humans indoors, but they've released animals into the everyday world we're used to dominating (See Guardian
animals). Venetians report seeing fish and water fowl swimming in their canals.
A sea lion basks on a sidewalk in Buenos Aires.
Grey langurs cavort on a deserted road in Ahmedabad, India.
And fallow deer graze on a lawn in East London.
The lockdowns have also had good short-term effects on climate, as NYT
Crist describes:
In
China and Italy, the air is
now strikingly clean. Venice’s Grand
Canal, normally fouled by boat traffic, is running clear. In
Seattle, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Atlanta, the fog of pollution has
lifted. Even global carbon emissions have fallen.
Coronavirus
has led to an astonishing shutdown of economic activity and a drastic reduction
in the use of fossil fuels. [The decreased demand has resulted in oil producers paying oil sellers to store their oil instead of marketing it.] In China, measures to contain the virus in February
alone caused a drop in carbon emissions of an estimated 25 percent. The Center
for Research on Energy and Clean Air estimates that
this is equivalent to 200 million tons of carbon dioxide — more than half the
annual emissions of Britain.
The
coronavirus lockdowns have also re-calibrated our social behavior and made it clear that personal choice can translate into political choice, not just for public health, but also for climate mitigation. As a climate change advisor to the WHO writes at Weforum:
…the
global health crisis we find ourselves in has forced us to dramatically change
our behaviour in order to protect ourselves and those around us, to a degree
most of us have never experienced before. This temporary shift of gears could
lead to a long-term shift in old behaviours and assumptions, which could lead
to a public drive for collective action and effective risk management. Even though
climate change presents a slower, more long-term health threat, an equally
dramatic and sustained shift in behaviour will be needed to prevent
irreversible damage.
…[C]rises like these offer an opportunity for a regained sense of shared humanity,
in which people realize what matters most: the health and safety of their loved
ones, and by extension the health and safety of their community, country and
fellow global citizens. Both the climate crisis and unfolding pandemic threaten
this one thing we all care about.
When
we eventually overcome the COVID-19 pandemic, we can hopefully hold on to that
sense of shared humanity in order to rebuild our social and economic systems to
make them better, more resilient, and compassionate. The financial and social support
packages to maintain and eventually resuscitate the global economy
post-pandemic should therefore promote health, equity, and environmental
protection.
Ultimately,
public health is a political choice. A choice we are now confronted with, and
one we will have to make over and over again as we transition to a more
resilient, zero-carbon, just and healthier future.
The coronavirus
has vividly clarified the relationship between a healthy public and a healthy
planet. As reported in Guardian
London:
There
is mounting evidence of detrimental health impacts of air pollution, through
lung disease, heart attacks, asthma, effects on pregnancies and on intelligence
levels.
Research
published on Monday also found that the five most
polluted regions among 66 analysed in Italy, Spain, France and Germany
accounted for 78% of all reported Covid-19 deaths in those areas.
Another
study looked at fine particle pollution in the US and found that even small
increases in levels in the years before the pandemic were associated with far higher Covid-19 death rates.
A recent
study even found the coronavirus hitching a ride on particulates,
enhancing the reach of its spread.
The
question is, then, when the virus subsides and the world reopens for business
and social activity, will these environmental and climate gains be lost? Will Ruth's Chris Steak House be packed with meat-eating diners once again, or will more people embrace vegetarianism and even veganism? Will air travel roar
back with a vengeance to previous levels, or will people do more
video-conferencing? Will manufacturing
setbacks be so dramatic that businesses will default to the least expensive
forms of energy to power back up, even though these fuels typically emit the
most carbon and dangerous particulates, or will there be a push from the public
to invest more heavily in green technologies?
Will industrialized countries (continue
to) suspend environmental restrictions in order to bounce right back in a “V-shaped”
recovery, or will they realize that public health depends on a healthy planet? Will sovereign debt be so high that countries
will claim they can’t afford to invest in climate mitigation, or will their
citizens see that the money is there, it's always been there, and that allocating it is a political,
not an economic, decision?
At this moment, the virus is controlling our health and writing our climate history. How will we edit and rewrite our future? NYT
Crist considers the question:
In
the short term, response to the pandemic seems to be having a positive effect
on emissions. But in the longer term, will the virus help or harm the climate?
Our
response to this health crisis will shape the climate crisis for decades to
come. The efforts to revive economic activity — the stimulus plans, bailouts
and back-to-work programs being developed now — will help determine the shape
of our economies and our lives for the foreseeable future, and they will have
effects on carbon emissions that reverberate across the planet for thousands of
years.
The
pandemic presents an opportunity, to be sure, as these authors urge, but will we seize the day? In the middle of history, we can't see tomorrow, much less a year or a decade or a generation from now. Per Der
Spiegel Paradigm Shift:
Epochal
theories are always subject to chance. Claims of a fundamental shift are,
despite all the arguments presented, little more than a game. In his tome
"Cultural History of the Modern Age," the both brilliant and
enjoyable Austrian Egon Friedell made the observation that humans have always
been unable to understand the times in which they live. Contemporaries,
Friedell wrote in the early 20th century, are never able to see the entirety of
an historical event, but only seemingly arbitrary pieces.
It's
a point of view that is difficult to argue with. The events of this dramatic
pandemic are inconceivable, with our focus fluctuating wildly between the
global crisis and the urge to panic buy toilet paper, between images of
suffering and Italians singing from their balconies. How will the narrative of
this era ultimately be written? When did the story begin? How many chapters
have already been completed? What are the pieces that will ultimately become
part of the completed work?
While we can't foresee how the story ends, we know that we are writing it, right alongside the virus. And it's critically important to recognize that the plot line isn't us vs. the virus, or Man vs. Nature. It's us living with the virus, Man living in Nature. We are not antagonists, but joint protagonists. We are part of a hermetic, holistic system that operates, whether we choose to see it or not, as one. This is what we have to learn if we are to atone for our original sin and live in harmony with the world.
“The coronavirus pandemic is a distress signal coming to us from imperiled ecosystems and wildlife: it is not a one-off event,” argue Franz Baumann, the former United Nations Assistant Secretary-General and a visiting research professor at New York University, and two other scientists in the New Republic. We must answer the SOS; it's offering us the chance to write a better climate future. Politico Earth Day argues:
“The coronavirus pandemic is a distress signal coming to us from imperiled ecosystems and wildlife: it is not a one-off event,” argue Franz Baumann, the former United Nations Assistant Secretary-General and a visiting research professor at New York University, and two other scientists in the New Republic. We must answer the SOS; it's offering us the chance to write a better climate future. Politico Earth Day argues:
The
good news, or at least the empowering news, is that the fewer greenhouse gases
we emit, the fewer awful things will happen. And the more people adopt a
personal ethic of climate responsibility, the more pressure our leaders will
feel to embrace that ethic. While the virus has momentarily flattened the
emissions curve, bending it permanently will require individual and
systemic change.
The
clean skies over Los Angeles are a reminder that pollution, like social
distancing, is a choice, and that individuals can make it better or worse. The
virus has taught us that in an emergency, we can change our behaviors in ways
we never imagined possible—not just by telecommuting and forgoing business
travel (new climate-friendly habits that will hopefully continue after the
pandemic) but by uprooting our lives to save others.
Do we have
what it takes to return to the Garden? I think the honest answer is simply, "We don't know, but we can hope and we can do our best." Der
Spiegel Paradigm Shift is optimistic about our future:
It
will be exciting to be part of this new world. It will beneficial to put a stop
to harmful developments that have been with us for too long. It will be
fascinating to watch the development of a new paradigm, to see old ideas die
and new ideas take their place. It will feel good to finally surmount the
pre-corona era. It had reached its end. In his Easter speech, German President
Frank-Walter Steinmeier put it like this: "Perhaps we believed for too
long that we were invincible, that we could continue to go faster, higher,
farther. That was a mistake."
Like Adam and Eve in the Bible and like Icarus in Greek mythology, we fell
from grace. Isn't it time we picked ourselves
up?
Keep it
real! Wear your mask!
Marilyn
















Great blog. Lots of awesome thoughts. Stay safe and healthy,we will get through this with many lessons learned.love you and Steve
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