Tuesday, December 15, 2015

After Paris: Half the World's Animals

After the COP21 conference in Paris, the good news is that climate change is now being taken seriously by so many of the World's nations. Perhaps now all debate around whether it is happening will fade and we can get down to work.

However, while there is some good news here, my own concern is less about climate change, very real though I am sure it is, and probably worse than we now anticipate.

I am more concerned about this late 2014 report (and others) about the condition of the World's animals: we have killed off more than 50% of the vertebrates on Earth since 1970. We're talking about individual animals here, not species.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2014/09/30/weve-killed-off-half-the-worlds-animals-since-1970/

Based upon this discovery, I feel confident in my subsequent analysis of the numbers, which goes like this:

If we have killed more than half of the vertebrates on Earth since 1970 - 46 years ago, when there were fewer than 4 billion, mostly pre-industrialized people - then it will surely take fewer than 46 years for our 7 billion(++) industrializing people now to kill off all of the remaining animals.

Maybe 25 years?

I am also confident that the Earth will not be quite so habitable a place for humans when that mark is reached - when we have killed off all the animals we are not specifically raising for food - because Earth's ecosystems cannot support global life once all the natural animals are gone. (The reasons are complex and many, but also obvious.)

At that point, climate change may be forgotten. The greater concern will be survival.

We need to save Earth's animals and preserve their habitats.

May all beings be well.

Sunday, December 13, 2015

"Bring It On Down To Veganville!"

Justin Timberlake delivers a powerful pro-vegan performance on Saturday Night Live. Check it out!

http://en.musicplayon.com/play?v=321315

May all beings be free!

Dogs "On The Road"

This is a story of redemption. Repentant hunters now feed the animals they used to kill and have made a dog train!

This 2:15 min video is a must-see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-aDuNKSvio

May all beings be happy!

Friday, December 11, 2015

What is Sacred?

Everything. Everything is sacred. Nothing, Nothing is sacred.

Nothing has any intrinsic quality of "sacredness." Everything, being One All-pervading Reality, is just what it is. When we say "sacred," we are talking about our own attitude toward something, or toward everything. If there is any question, the question is not about anything or even everything, it is about how we feel and behave

"Biovinity," when it appeared in my dream, meant "all living beings are divine and worthy of our respect and reverence." And yet, I recognize that nothing is any more "divine" than anything else. 

The meaning of biovinity - and this blog - is to point toward our feelings, attitudes, ideas and actions toward other living beings in particular - especially the ones we have intimate and direct relationships with (or do not) - more than it has to do with our sense of wonder about rocks or stars.

Most importantly, how do we interact with what we regard as divine, as sacred? If this rock is sacred, will I behave differently toward it than if I think it is a non-living thing? If this pet is sacred - or this cow in a factory is sacred - will I behave differently toward her than if she were a thing?

The question is about the breadth and depth of our sense of reverence for Life. All living beings are worthy of our reverence, our love, our care, In this way, they are "sacred." We will revere them if we feel reverence for Life itself. Do we feel reverential toward God, toward divinities, toward saints, teachers, neighbors, family members? Do we revere the animals we share the Earth with? 

May all beings be happy and well.

Applying the Salve of Love

In a recent article, journalist, activist, author, and Presbyterian minister Chris Hedges wrote: “We have to let go of our relentless positivism, our absurd mania for hope, and face the bleakness of reality before us. To resist means to acknowledge that we are living in a world already heavily damaged by global warming. It means refusing to participate in the destruction of the planet. It means noncooperation with authority. It means defying in every way possible consumer capitalism, militarism and imperialism. It means adjusting our lifestyle, including what we eat, to thwart the forces bent upon our annihilation.” (Read the full article...)

As a rapidly growing population of beings that generally takes from the Earth more than it needs - something that most distinguishes humans from other animals - we are degrading the health of our little planet with rampant ferocity. Optimism is becoming increasingly scarce, quite in line with the reality we are creating. Remaining "optimistic" without recognizing our role in the problems we are perpetuating is one of the dangers we face.

Whether we are optimistic or otherwise, we have most likely already gone beyond the "tipping point" toward an increasingly unlivable planet. Far beyond indeed for those beings our actions have extinguished! Innumerable species, and individual animals within species, are going, going, gone too soon. With more and more industrializing people coming into the world, and barring some unimaginable catastrophe, this trend will only increase exponentially. Clearly, we cannot stop or go backward from here. We are firmly set on course for more of the same.

The magnitude of the growing loss of natural animals and their habitats, along with our increasing use of their lands for the unnecessary, cruel, and heavily polluting animal industrial complex to feed more and more human mouths, points to a decreasingly habitable world. Healthy ecosystems inhabited by animals living according to the needs of their evolutionary development are requisite to maintain a habitable world for human beings in the long run. This truth involves great complexity and is also plainly obvious.

So then, what if we can't fix it? What can we do? What I want to suggest is that all is not lost, even if we cannot meaningfully slow the damage we continue to wreak, let alone repair it.

As we look toward a future with fewer healthy ecosystems and fewer individual animals and animal species, my own sense of how the Dharma, the Message, the Wisdom of the great wisdom traditions may inform our actions in relation to the needs of our changing Earth today involves to some extent beginning to refocus away from ideas about how we can fix it, looking instead toward how to most beneficially behave with one another as fellow denizens of Mother Gaia facing these increasingly painful challenges together.

As social beings, we are ethical beings. That is how we have survived over millennia. Our ethics, based upon our capacity for compassion, is what makes our human species humane. At the deepest level, our sense of well-being has less to do with the conditions we face; it has more to do with how we behave, how much we care about others, and how we enact that caring with one another.

As the Buddha told us: all we can take with us beyond this life is our actions. This includes not only the effects of our actions. His message points more to how well our actions have matched our most loving aspirations and kindest intentions.

The Dharma is eternal and universal. Our alignment with it begins with our best, most selfless, intentions. Yet, how it is to be applied varies according to the circumstances that arise before us. 

Now, as always, kindness is paramount. Now, as we face unprecedented challenges as a global community, learning to love one another as the sacred beings we are may be more important than ever before - or, to put it another way, more urgently needed and most appropriate to the needs of our fellow beings.

Even if we cannot repair what we have broken, we can remain optimistic that we may yet be able to call upon our best intentions, align them with the Great Wisdom of the ages, and therewith hope to resolve our story on Earth by having learned the meaning and value of Love and having applied that wisdom in loving one another and all beings through the painful and difficult times to come.

May we pray, and also act accordingly. "May all beings be happy and well."

Vatican Animal Projections

Vatican animal projections light up St Peter's Basilica - BBC 8 December 2015

The Vatican has thrown its weight behind an environmental cause, to coincide with the final days of the climate negotiations in Paris. It allowed St. Peter's Basilica to be turned into a huge backdrop for an art show about nature, with images of various animals being projected on to the building.

See the beautiful 1 min. video and read more...

May all beings be happy and well!

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Metta

May all beings be happy and peaceful

May all beings feel safe and protected

May all beings be healthy and strong

May all beings be free of suffering

And may they live with ease.

Friday, December 4, 2015

Racing Extinction

Mass animal extinction. Global climate change. Illegal wildlife traffic. The problems are overwhelming. The scale enormous. But the solutions can start with you.

It starts with one thing. One thing that changes the way you live, eat, act, drive, work. One thing that changes your everyday. One thing that changes your corner of the world. One thing that leads to another and another and another. Learn here what you can do and then share your one thing.

May all beings be free of suffering and the causes of suffering.

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Hear Koko

Koko the gorilla speaks for Nature. Her face and eyes speak volumes.

Watch the 1:14 video...

May all beings be well and free from suffering.

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Beyond Words

Many make the case that people are more likely to refrain from eating animals when presented with the health benefits or the impact of industrial animal agriculture on climate change.

My observation is that people who experiment with vegetarianism because of some hoped-for health benefits just as readily go back to eating animals when someone tells them they "need to eat meat" for their health. And, those who take up the "ism" based upon some ideal, like helping the environment, don't always stick with it; they may decide the issues are too large or they may decide to focus their attention on other forms of advocacy and abandon their vegetarianism for something more momentarily interesting.

My own decision to go veg in the early '90s resulted from a deep and clear sense of identity of myself as an animal and of all other animals as my direct relations. 

Since that moment, I have not eaten my friends, of any species, and I will never again.

That experience was well beyond words. The agent of change was awareness itself, awareness of my relationship with all beings on Earth, and the loving and compassionate feelings I have for them, and - as I continue to discover - share with them.

Beyond Words is a book that may effect others similarly poised to give up eating animals. Here are some reviews that echo my own experience and writings about animals and their feelings and intelligence.

"Beyond Words will have a deep impact on many readers, for it elevates our relationships with animals to a higher plane....Along with Darwin's Origin and Richard Dawkins's Selfish Gene, BEYOND WORDS marks a major milestone in our evolving understanding of our place in nature. Indeed it has the potential to change our relationship with the natural world." -- Tim Flannery, The New York Review of Books

“Captivating...A profound, scientifically based appeal for recognition of the kinship of all living things.” ―Kirkus, starred review

“Carl Safina shows there is indeed intelligent life in the universe, and it's all around us. At once moving and surprising, Beyond Words asks us to reexamine our relationship to other species-and to ourselves.” ―Elizabeth Kolbert, author of The Sixth Extinction

Read more and buy....

May all beings be well and happy, free of suffering and the causes of suffering.

Compassion and B12

"To be truly healthful, a diet must be best not just for individuals in isolation but must allow all six billion people to thrive and achieve a sustainable coexistence with the many other species that form the 'living earth.' 

"From this standpoint the natural adaptation for most (possibly all) humans in the modern world is a vegan diet. There is nothing natural about the abomination of modern factory farming and its attempt to reduce living, feeling beings to machines. 

"In choosing to use fortified foods or B12 supplements, vegans are taking their B12 from the same source as every other animal on the planet – micro-organisms – without causing suffering to any sentient being or causing environmental damage."


May all beings be free of suffering.