BE KIND TO ANIMALS BY NOT EATING THEM
When
the radiation levels in the destroyed nuclear plant at Fukusjima were measured, they were that high,
higher than the emergency plan admitted. Something had to be done anyway, so the
emergency plan was adjusted, so people could get in. They did. They did, though
they knew what the consequences could be. Did they go in willingly, like the
suicide-bombers in World War II. Where they afraid to loose their job. Anyway,
they were portrayed as heroes. And they are.
Nevertheless the problems at the Fukusjima-plant are not solved at all.
Still the meltdown is not under control and at certain times, accidently, tuns
of radio-active water is flushed into the sea. It will get worse. Roger Zelazny,
a favorite of mine, writes about the “black road, with its strange creatures”,
slowly eating away the human domain. It will be like that. Another no-go area on
this planet. Like Tsjernobyl. We all have remnants of that
disaster in our blood. This is a no-go area too. Even though there are some
people living ther. The radiation levels are still high and
there is even a danger of collapse. Radio-active poisoning is a cumulative
process. We are on top of the foodchain, so we think. All the pollution, we
put in our foodchain (and there is a lot of it) returns
back to us.
All
attention is focused on bio-fuel and hybrid cars. The mass consumption of meat
produces much more greenhouse gasses, than all cars combined. More people die of
diseases, related to the meat producing industry, than they do in traffic. The
political discussion had gone hybrid as well. They are discussing the number of
chickens a farmer can exploit. About a quarter of a million, seems reasonable.
There is some collateral damage. Millions of new-born pigs and chickens are
killed the moment they set foot on this earth. They end up in a
“destructione-machine”.The corpses are sold to owners of cats, snakes or
reptiles. This, they call an economic cycle and growth is the motor of this
destructionprocess.
I told
you, the workld is shrinking, because of our diminishing
vocabulary and emotions. But we also are eating away our biomass, our nature and
history. Look out of the window. Do you see a beautiful tree? No, but you will
see a car and not just one.
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