The Sky is Falling!

From The Heartland Institute

November 29, 2018

By Greg E. Walcher

A new report from the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) claims humans have killed more than half the all the wildlife in the world since 1970.

A new report from the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) claims humans have killed more than half the all the wildlife in the world since 1970. The report attracted media mass attention, though if you read the entire 145-page essay, it doesn’t really say that, much less prove it. More ironic, the political focus is mostly on countries where the declining wildlife populations do not live, and the solution suggested is so vague it couldn’t possibly address the issue.

The hype about the document, an annual harangue called the “Living Planet Report,” is not surprising, considering the source. This is the same organization that told us a decade ago we would all have to leave. “Earth’s population will be forced to colonize two planets within 50 years if natural resources continue to be exploited at the current rate, according to a… study by the WWF. [The study] warns that the human race is plundering the planet at a pace that outstrips its capacity to support life. The report… reveals that more than a third of the natural world has been destroyed by humans over the past three decades.”

That was a remarkable conclusion, especially considering that 71 percent of the Earth’s surface is water. So humans would have to have destroyed virtually every square inch of land on Earth for the report to be credible.

This year’s diatribe claims almost 60 percent of all the fish, birds, and animals on the Earth have been killed by people in two generations. It proposes “a new global deal for nature,” a companion for the Paris Climate treaty. Except unlike Paris, the proposed “new deal for nature” has no numbers, no specific goals. In fact, there is no definition of what the agreement might entail. Rather, it includes vague suggestions that we’re not locking up enough land from public access, nor creating enough national parks, wildlife refuges, wilderness areas, and other unpeopled places.

The report’s language is decidedly European and American, using policy terms common to the western environmental industry. For example, it discusses the “progress” in removing dams in the U.S., especially criticizing agriculture in the Rio Grande Valley, and cites efforts to designate more wild and scenic rivers. It continues the ongoing criticism of western mining, timber production, and “unsustainable agriculture,” with which we’re all familiar. These people simply want to stop most human uses of land, water, and other resources of the American West.

There is just one major problem with using this report to further that goal. The wildlife it laments does not live in the American West. Keep in mind that the reported declines in wildlife populations are based on computer modeling, not actual counting of actual animals. Still, even if you give such a report the benefit of the doubt, as many will, the dangers cited are from “warming oceans choked with plastic,” toppled rain forests, and dying coral reefs. Thus, populations are said to be tanking worst in the tropics, including an 89 percent decrease in South and Central America. But make no mistake – the U.S. is nonetheless at fault. The report claims “crop failures brought on by climate change” are the reason caravans of Central Americans stream to the U.S. illegally. That’s why we must “urgently transition to a net carbon-neutral society and halt and reverse nature loss — through green finance and shifting to clean energy and environmentally friendly food production.”

Read the full article here:

HT/Marcus

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Pamela Gray
December 2, 2018 11:02 am

Two years ago, the wildlife killed in my part of NE and central East part of Oregon easily matches that statistic. At the end of the entire hunting season come spring carcasses where everywhere nearly cleaned of every scrap of meat with the now flattened skin still draped over a bare rib here and there. Many were just left alongside the roads. One reservoir even had dead elk carcasses under water! It was one hell of a hunting season! Heroic efforts to harvest meat!

Coldest snowiest longest winter we have experienced since the 50’s! Tell me which group I should belong to to shut down snow and cold. Or at least make winter restrict the number of kills. Maybe ban snowflakes all together?

Bruce of Newcastle
December 2, 2018 11:56 am

Well it is true that humans in that time period have massacred about a billion birds.
With wind turbines.
At the WWF’s behest.
What hypocrites the WWF are!

Kristi Silber
December 2, 2018 7:09 pm

Heartland is misreporting what the WWF said. Why doesn’t anyone complain about that?

acementhead
Reply to  Kristi Silber
December 3, 2018 2:08 am

Kristi Silber in your post of December 2, 2018 at 12:28 pm you demonstrated that you are innumerate, as I showed in the post following yours. Falsus in uno falsus in omnibus is a good working assumption, therefore you need to demonstrate that “Heartland is misreporting what the WWF said”. Mere assertion is not enough.

Marcus
Reply to  Kristi Silber
December 3, 2018 7:28 am

.Hmmmmmm…. an example would probably go a long way in helping most people to believe you…Unless of course, you are just whining..