A-list
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
[A-List] Bring Them Back
We should welcome the return of the big wild mammals
by George Monbiot
Published in the Guardian (December 07 2004)
It hardly compares in importance to the invasion of Iraq, or the fall of the
dollar, or the outcome of the next election. But in some ways the decision we
are being asked to make will say more about us and the world we choose to
inhabit than any of the grand political themes.
Last week a man called Paul Lister held a conference in Scotland. He explained
that, if his plans are accepted by the public, within five years he will be able
to reintroduce the wolf, the bear, the Eurasian lynx, the wild boar and the
European bison to the Highlands. Similar claims have been made before, but
Lister is the first enthusiast who can make it happen. He has millions of pounds
and a 23,000-acre estate. He wants his land to become the core of a much larger
conservation area. Another landowner, Paul van Vlissingen, has volunteered to
add his 81,000 acres to the scheme. As animals like wolves and lynxes are smart
and agile enough to escape from almost any large enclosure, this is, in effect,
a proposal to repopulate Britain with its extinct native wildlife.
Two days later, we discovered that the mammals had pre-empted them. A herd of
wild boar - the fourth to have established itself in this country - has emerged
from the Forest of Dean, having escaped, it seems, from a farm. The government
must decide whether or not to let it survive. The big wild animals are returning.
It is an attractive idea, with unattractive implications.
Though the advocates of reintroduction sometimes seek to deny it, four out of
five of the species they hope to bring back are dangerous to humans. A couple
of years ago Mr van Vlissingen told the Times that there are no known cases of a
wolf killing a person in Europe over the last 100 years. <1> If this were true,
then the objections to reintroduction would be harder to sustain. But it is not.
Twenty-one people were attacked by healthy wolves in Europe between 1950 and
2000, and four of them were killed. <2> Five others (though this should not
be an issue in Britain) were killed by wolves with rabies. <3> Lynx won't hurt
anyone, but European brown bears, though less aggressive than North American
grizzlies, killed 36 people in the 20th Century. <4> Though only a few hundred
boar are living in the British countryside, several people have already been
chased by them. <5> The boar aren't half as scary as the bison, as the photos
in this month's BBC Wildlife magazine testify: a herd in Poland appears to be
playing volleyball with a wild boar it has gored to death.
An admiration for large wild animals often appears to be linked with a contempt
for human life. "And I think in this empty world there was room for me and a
mountain lion", D H Lawrence wrote. "And I think in the world beyond how easily
we might spare a million or two of humans / And never miss them". <6> John
Aspinall and Joy Adamson would have nodded vehemently. There is a certain kind
of ill-adjusted person who seems to project himself into the mind of a predator,
roaming across a world without people.
The risk of being attacked by one of these beasts is tiny by comparison to
almost any of the other hazards we confront. In Canada, where bears occasionally
prey on people, you are 67 times more likely to be killed by a domestic dog, and
374 times as likely to be killed by lightning. <7> But it's a risk which those
who would introduce these animals impose on other people, with or without their
consent. It is hard to argue with the verse, with which anyone who picks up a
shotgun is instructed: "All the pheasants ever bred / Won't repay for one man
dead". If we believe that human lives are more important than animal lives,
and if even one person is killed by a wild animal deliberately re-introduced
into this country, is that not too great a price to pay for the purely aesthetic
benefit of restoring our native wildlife?
I am not convinced that it is. If every tree which grows close to a road or a
house were felled, dozens of human lives could be saved; but you would be hard
put to find anyone who thinks this is a good idea. The French government ran
into massive opposition when it tried to clear the famous avenues which line its
country roads. A few extra deaths are considered, by most French people, to be a
fair exchange for the preservation of some flickering shade. When a city council
in Britain proposed to cut down a row of horse chestnut trees because children
might be hurt when collecting conkers - or might hurt someone else when throwing
sticks and stones into the branches - it caused a national outcry. Similarly, we
use public money which could have been spent of the National Health Service to
support galleries, museums and parks. Aesthetic concerns in all these cases are
weighed against human life, and permitted by society to win.
There is, of course, a moral difference between failing to eliminate existing
risks and introducing new ones. But, in permitting public bodies to plant new
trees or dig new ponds, we commission them actively to trade human survival
against a diffuse social pleasure. Unlike the businessmen who want to be allowed
to expose their workers to dangerous industrial practices in order to boost
their profits, the tree planters give us something in return for the risk they
impose on us.
This might make sense even in terms of moral arithmetic: people who live in
unstimulating places are more likely to become depressed, and people who become
depressed are more likely to kill themselves. Dramatic but mildly dangerous
lifeforms - or just the excitement of knowing that they are out there somewhere
- might even save lives.
And the vision of those who would deny room in this empty world for large wild
animals is surely as misanthropic as D H Lawrence's. When Norwegian hunters set
out to eliminate the wolves which kill a few dozen sheep in that country each
year, or when, as they did last month, French hunters shoot the last female
Pyrenean brown bear, we are rightly outraged. We see in them an intolerance
of diversity, of contingency, of unruliness. They would reduce the world to
a money-making monoculture, a bland, controlled, mechanical place that is as
hostile to the needs of humans as it is to the needs of animals.
I want to live in a land in which wolves might prowl. In which, as I have done
in eastern Poland, I can follow a bend in a forest path and come face to face
with a bison. In which, as I have done in the Pyrenees, I can stumble across a
pair of wild boar sleeping under a bush. I am prepared to exchange a small risk
to my life for the thrill of encountering that which lies beyond it. This is a
romantic proposition, I admit. But is it not also a rational one?
www.monbiot.com
References:
1. Gillian Harris, 26th June 2002. Wolves would boost tourism says landowner.
The Times.
2. JDC Linnell et al, January 2002. The Fear of Wolves: a review of wolf attacks
on humans. Norsk Institutt for Naturforskning, Trondheim.
3. ibid.
4. ibid.
5. M J Goulding, March 1998. Current Status and Potential Impact of Wild Boar
(Sus scrofa) in the English Countryside: a Risk Assessment. Report to
Conservation Management Division C, Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food.
http://www.defra.gov.uk/wildlife-countryside/vertebrates/reports/Wild%20Boar%20Risk%20Assessment%201998.pdf
6. D H Lawrence, 1925?. Mountain Lion. From DH Lawrence, Selected Poems, 1972.
Penguin, London.
7. These figures are explained at www.bearsmart.com
Bill Totten http://www.ashisuto.co.jp/english/
- Thread context:
- RE: [A-List] Comment on a truthout.org/tompaine.com article byRayMcGovern, (continued)
- [A-List] The Alternative Media,
Bill Totten Tue 07 Dec 2004, 23:48 GMT
- [A-List] Bring Them Back,
Bill Totten Tue 07 Dec 2004, 23:41 GMT
- [A-List] Very Interesting Investigative Report on 2004 Election by Wayne Madsen,
Erik Freye Tue 07 Dec 2004, 21:47 GMT
- [A-List] Call for Papers: The PEACE REVIEW on the Psychological Interpretation of War,
Richard Koenigsberg, Ph. D. Tue 07 Dec 2004, 17:02 GMT
- [A-List] Ukraine: people power, but which people?,
Michael Keaney Tue 07 Dec 2004, 15:03 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]