Friday, September 07, 2007

With a debt of gratitude to a personal hero, Edward O. Wilson….


The Real Challenge of Global Warming….

Mny Americans have been misled to believe by their government and others that Global Warming is ‘no big deal”—that it is really nothing more than the ‘ebb and flow’ and natural change and that the pendulum will swing back at some future time. These people of parochial vision even try to suggest that the worst thing that might happen is that the temperature will rise by a few degrees….

Informed scientists seem generally opposed to such a view; that it is an attempt to put a happy face on something that could change our lives and our futures in significant ways; that global warming is a disaster in the making…

There are a host of different perspectives on the issues chronicling everything from rising tides to an marked increase in tropical diseases.

One very informed point of view is that of Edward O. Wilson, who sits among the seniors in my own personal pantheon of great scientists who have influenced our times, who sees global warming from a very different perspective: The loss of ecostructure and species.
Dr. Wilson sees as much as 25% of all species lost to us if global warming persists over the next five decades.

To put such percentages into a tangible perspective, consider that over the last 200 years, we have identified and classified a mere 1.8 million species of plant, animal and microorganism species out of what is projected at 10 to 100 million unclassified species to date.

That means that over the next fifty years, we could lose anywhere from 2.5 to 25 million species forever. Imagine what we stand to lose not only intellectually but also from the perspective of science. What we might stand to gain from such knowledge—including innumerable cures for disease, new medicines, new crops, new defenses against common maladies, new products for virtually every purpose and application that could be lost to science and humanity for all time. What a waste that would be.

What most of us fail to recognize that today most of our medicines are derived from natural products and species classified only within the last fifty to seventy five years….
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Unfortunately, few understand or appreciate that each species is a unique study in complexity evolved over millions of years and each species not only contains unique information but also provides special insights as to how all of the human species fit together and how just the absence of a few species could affect or drastically affect the health or even survival of other species vital to our own survival.

In a few instances, the losses could be catastrophic.

Consider these words from “That’s Life” an essay by Edward O. Wilson:
“Normal classes of pharmaceuticals and future crops will be thrown away, ecological service likewater purification, soil renewal and pollination—which are approximately equal to the world gross domestic product, and given away by natural ecosystems—will be diminished. Environmental stability will be harder to maintain.”

Edward O. Wilson is trying to do something about it.

With the assistance of Harvard and a consortium of institutions, the Smithsonian to the Atlas of Living Australia, they hope to complete an electronic database of known species that will be available to all.


It is Doctor Wilson’s intent to promote the larg scale funding and support of such a prospect that aims to complete its goals within ten years.

It is also hoped that the new methods along with an increased commitment will speed up the discovery and analysis of all remaining species within a single generation which would not only be an amazing boon to science but a blessing to mankind.

It is a worthy goal to shoot for considering that much more is at stake with global warming’s threat than we are lead to believe by a government that is staunchly anti-science in its views.


Les Aaron

The Armchair Curmudgeon
Mr. Aaron is the author of Final Warning, an environmental thriller published in January by Lulu.com

We are approaching the anniversary of 9/11

The Twin Towers are down six years now and many people
Are already tired hearing about it; they are tired hearing about the death and destruction.
It seems that remorse and compassion and understanding may have run their course at least for some of the survivors….
Their expressed rationale: It didn’t touch them or they want to move on.

It was interesting to read the comments of those who want to put this horrific experience behind them. And I suppose some had legitimate reasons. They felt it ws time to look forwards; not backwards. It was time to be positive; not negative. Some felt that we have already spent much too much time dwelling on a disaster.

But can we put this aside so easily? And, more importantly, should we?

I don’t think we can as long as the specter of terrorism hangs over our head; nor do I believe we should want to; nor does it matter where you live or whether you had a personal friend or a relative lost that day…

….The WTC should remain firmly engraved on our consciousness as a reminder of many things. One of them, is our egocentricity that allowed us to ignore all of the vital signs; the belief that nothing can touch us. That we were invulnerable!

The “puddle” defense is long ended now; we are all vulnerable and we see just how naïve our belief system was that the ocean that divides us would keep us safe; no, all it did was reinforce our interest in not getting involved in the problems of the rest of the world.

Now, we have “grayed.” We have a better understanding of what the people of Europe had to contend with; we have had to face our own Battle of Britain and stood in the ramparts or underground wondering whether there would be a tomorrow.

Some of us took pride in the steel of our brethren overseas; many moved on with their own lives and didn’t concern themselves. But that is all over now. We are all brothers in a war against a form of madness that seems to target the “innocents” and we had better not forget the lessons of 9/11 now or forever.

Les Aaron

Note: Les is the author of A Blueprint for Winning: Taking Back the White House 2008 available from Amazon.com and Barnes and Noble.
Les, an editor for Democracy Chronicle helped chronicle the destruction of the WTC for the magazine through a series of essays.