Life is Sacred
I retreat in the summer to the mountains and coasts of Maine and New Hampshire to sever myself from the intrusion of the industrial world. It is in the woods and along the rugged Atlantic coastline, the surf thundering into the jagged rocks, that I am reminded of our insignificance before the universe and the brevity of human life. The stars, thousands visible in the night canopy above me, mock human pretensions of grandeur. They whisper the biblical reminder that we are dust and to dust we shall return. Love now, they tell us urgently, protect what is sacred, while there is still time. But now I go there also to mourn. I mourn for our future, for the fading majesty of the natural world, for the folly of the human species. The planet is dying. And we will die with it.
The giddy, money-drenched, choreographed carnival in Tampa and the one coming up in Charlotte divert us from the real world—the one steadily collapsing around us. The glitz and propaganda, the ridiculous obsessions imparted by our electronic hallucinations, and the spectacles that pass for political participation mask the deadly ecological assault by the corporate state. The worse it gets, the more we retreat into self-delusion. We convince ourselves that global warming does not exist. Or we concede that it exists but insist that we can adapt. Both responses satisfy our mania for eternal optimism and our reckless pursuit of personal comfort. In America, when reality is distasteful we ignore it. But reality will soon descend like the Furies to shatter our complacency and finally our lives. We, as a species, may be doomed. And this is a bitter, bitter fact for a father to digest.
My family and I hike along the desolate coastline of an island in Maine that is accessible only by boat. We stop in the afternoons on remote inlets and look out across the Atlantic Ocean or toward the shoreline and the faint outline of the Camden hills. My youngest son throws pebbles into the surf. My daughter toddles over the rounded beach stones holding her mother’s hand. The gray and white seagulls chatter loudly overhead. The scent of salt is carried by the wind. Life, the life of my family, the life around me, is exposed at once as fragile and sacred. And it is worth fighting to save.
When I was a boy and came to this coast on duck hunting trips with my uncle, fishing communities were vibrant. The fleets caught haddock, cod, herring, hake, halibut, swordfish, pollock and flounder. All these fish have vanished from the area, victims of commercial fishing that saw huge trawlers rip up the seafloor and kill the corals, bryozoans, tubeworms and other species that nurtured new schools of fish. The trawlers left behind barren underwater wastelands of mud and debris. It is like this across the planet. Forests are cut down. Water is contaminated. Air is saturated with carbon emissions. Soil is depleted. Acidity levels in the oceans skyrocket. Atmospheric temperatures soar. And someone, somewhere, makes obscene sums of money from it. Corporations, indifferent to what is sacred, see the death of the planet as another investment opportunity. They are scurrying to mine the exposed polar waters for the last vestiges of oil, gas, minerals and fish. And since the corporations dictate our relationship to the ecosystem on which we depend for life, the chances of our survival look bleaker and bleaker. The final phase of 5,000 years of settled human activity ends with collective insanity.
“All my means are sane,” Captain Ahab says of his suicidal pursuit of Moby-Dick, “my motive and my object mad.”
The ocean floor off the coast of Maine, which this summer has seen a staggering five-degree rise in water temperature, is now covered in crustaceans—lobsters and crabs—that no longer have any predators. The fish stocks have been killed for profit. This crustacean monoculture carries with it the fragility of all monocultures, a fragility that corn farmers in the Midwest also have experienced. Lobsters provide 80 percent of Maine’s seafood income. But how much longer will they last? When a diverse and intricately balanced biosystem is wiped out, what future is there? After you dismantle nature and throw away the parts, what happens when you desperately need to put them back together? And even if you can nurture back to life the fish stocks decimated by the commercial fleets, as valiant organizations such as the Penobscot East Resource Center are attempting to do, what happens when sea temperatures and acidity levels continue to rise amid global warming, dooming most life in the oceans?
The warmer water this year caused lobsters to shed six weeks earlier than usual. What happened to the sea further south is now happening off New England. Long Island Sound, two decades ago, had an abundance of lobsters. Then as the water heated up they disappeared. They fell prey to parasite infestations and shell disease, and the survivors migrated to colder water.
All natural resources are being exploited until exhaustion. They will diminish and soon vanish. Droughts are affecting forests in the Northeast as well as the Northwest. The wintertime die-off of pine beetles and other pests—a reduction vital for the health of the forests—is no longer happening as the planet steadily warms. The traditional hardwoods of the northern forests and the great conifer trees are dying. They are being replaced by oak-hickory forests, dooming the biodiversity, eradicating the habitat of a variety of songbirds and other wildlife and ending the maple syrup industry. Maple syrup was produced a few decades ago in Connecticut and Massachusetts. As a child I would hike in snowshoes to the farmers’ sheds deep in the woods containing vats of boiling syrup. We would pour syrup on the blanket of snow outside to make brittle winter candy. But production in the southern New England states has been largely extinguished and shifted to northern Maine and Canada. These are the small natural indicators that something is terribly wrong.
The daily loss of Arctic sea ice this summer is the most severe on record. The amount of sea ice has fallen by 40 percent since satellite tracking began in the late 1970s. The complete disappearance of summer Arctic sea ice may be no more than a decade or two away. And with the disappearance of the summer ice, our planet’s weather patterns will become dominated by freakishly powerful and sudden storms and other violent natural disturbances. Droughts will devastate some parts of the Earth, and in others there will be unrelenting rainfall. It will be a world of extremes. Hurricanes. Tornadoes. Floods. Dust bowls. Fire and water.
Our political leaders, Democrat and Republican, are complicit in our demise. Our political system, like that in the declining days of ancient Rome, is one of legalized bribery. Politicians, including Mitt Romney and Barack Obama, serve the demented ends of corporations that will, until the final flicker of life, attempt to profit from our death spiral. Civil disobedience, including the recent decision by Greenpeace activists to chain themselves to a Gazprom supply vessel and obstruct a Russian oil rig, is the only meaningful form of resistance. Voting is useless. But while I support these heroic acts of resistance, I increasingly fear they may have little effect. This does not mean we should not resist. Resistance is a moral imperative. We cannot use the word “hope” if we do not fight back. But the corporations will employ deadly force to protect their drive to extract the last bit of profit from life. We can expect only mounting hostility from the corporate state. Its internal and external security apparatus, as the heedless exploitation and its fatal consequences become more apparent, will seek to silence and crush all dissidents. Corporations care nothing for democracy, the rule of law, human rights or the sanctity of life. They are determined to be the last predator standing. And then they too will be snuffed out. Unrestrained hubris always leads to self-immolation.
This article was originally posted on Truthdig.
CONNECT














20 comments on "Life is Sacred"
WA
September 05, 2012 4:00pm
Rachael Carson said in 1962 that we stand at a crossroads in human history, choosing to protect life on planet Earth, or disrespect nature and die. She was wrong. It was not 1962 nor 2062 when the decision must be made, it is 2012. Now, today we have to choose, as Chris has chosen, life by protecting nature. A big opportunity to protect nature comes in just two months when we must vote for Barack Obama, not sit at home griping, not throw away the election on protest votes, the choice is very real and clear, we have a chance with Obama, the other guys are almost sure to end it all, possibly in a world war intended to inaugarate Mittler's "American Century". Thank you, Chris Hedges, for showing the truth about the way things are; my opposition to the Empire Leaders is starting to waiver as the good members of the motion image industry start to make themselves heard in favor of Solar Panels, and the importance of Nature. Already, TV is saying "solar" and showing Solar Panels, this is crucial, what will I do if the Entertainment Empire begins to favor nature and thus life? (there's always mischief to be found.......!)
September 04, 2012 6:31pm
Mr. Hedges has written another deeply moral exhortation, stylishly phrased and brilliantly exposited.
For the longest time native peoples were derided as "savages" by the sophisticated settlers from old Europe, with their megalomaniacal notions of supremacy over all Creation. But the "savages" trod our earthly home with moccasins, while we and our forbears stamped on it with iron-tipped boots.
The price of treating Nature solely as a resource to be exploited for private gain is the daily exhaustion of our natural capital that all our ingenuity may not suffice to replenish.
Every sentient human being (I wouldn't dare take a census) has a covenantal duty to protect the natural world in which human life arose. We cannot fare any better as a species than the condition in which we leave Nature, our first progenitor.
September 04, 2012 4:56pm
I am becoming an old man and in the words of the old song, "is that all there is?" and I'm afraid it is. My great grandchildren, which now number three, may never experience the wonders i have of kayaking Glacier Bay or viewing the sunrise at Mt. Everest. The inevitably of more billions seals their fate, i am impotent to prevent it.
September 04, 2012 4:35pm
I ,too, have been active in a very important movement and I feel that our lack of respect for the smallest of the human family is surely a partial cause of our increasing lack of respect for our Mother Earth. When you cannot see, or better yet, refuse to see the small life among us, then it is a lot harder to see the bigger consequences to our actions.
All those reading here should know that there are things that can and should be done.
Buy local whenever you can, support the small business around the corner.
Donate till "it feels good" to your local charity. Vote like it is important, because it is.
I, personally, feel that if a candidate can't support the very smallest in our society, the human unborn, then no matter what he/she says, they don't care about me.
If a young and struggeling mother needs support and protection, we should all do what we can.
Life WILL go on. I pray that we will be here, and not ignore it to death.
September 04, 2012 1:04pm
Yes, we are seeing the beginning of the end. Yet I agree with Chris that this beautiful planet and all its diverse and miraculous life is still worth fighting for. Whether we win or lose, I'm going to take sides with our Mother Earth and will die for her if I must. It's the only right thing to do. And if we all take this stance we might just win a future for our children.
Please watch 'life at the end of empire' on you tube
September 04, 2012 12:29pm
As a father and grandfather I share your grief, Chris, and at the same time recognize that, as still-relatively-privileged members of the human race--educated, white citizens of the empire, able to eat, rest, take retreats on remote and beautiful islands, etc.--we (and I do include myself) are more prone to defeatism and cynicism than the billions who truly have nothing to lose. Revolution has never been more necessary and more improbable, but to make the case for it--as you always do, inspiringly--without actually upholding it as best you can, only fuels demoralization. I doubt you believe that revolution is impossible, but, if you do, then you should say that, for clarity's sake.
September 04, 2012 12:28pm
As someone who was active in the anti-war movement during Vietnam (as well as current wars) and in the various civil rights movements during that approximate same time and beyond, I understand fully the importance of activism, resistance, and taking risks. I was at the 68 convention in Chicago, fought against the nomination of Humphrey, and was one of many on the emerging left who refused to vote in that national election. I have regretted it ever since. Nixon was elected and political corruption was raised to a new level. Sometimes, while we mourn, resist, and participate in various forms of public acts of protest, we must also accept the crumbs of the least evil until we can figure out a better way. With the wealthy political right so powerful and so well organized, we cannot afford to capitulate on any front, and that includes voting. Humans and much of life as we know it are, indeed, just about out of time. Just think about how much more quickly our demise will occur if Romney is elected. We need all the time we can get if we are going to do anything at all.
September 04, 2012 1:50pm
Exactly my experience. In 1968, I voted for the anti-war candidate, McGovern, in California...and those third party votes gave Nixon the election. I keep repeating this, so that others will not make the same mistake in 2012. No matter what you think of Obama, you must know that a Romnrey/Ryan Administration would further destroy our country.
September 04, 2012 6:56pm
If you don't vote for change, you won't get it.
September 04, 2012 11:50am
Thank you Chris for your stewardship vision. It hurts me deeply to see ignorance rise to power, but I do believe many of us are awakening to a new conscious. Corporations today are the reincarnated modern dragon/dinosaur and need to be tamed. As an individual in our collective realm of beings, I can do a lot within my own sphere of influence, and as I resonate with others, I notice there are more of us on a pretty solid path of good change than I've ever seen before. Please don't confuse me with the mindless Tea Party persona. You mentioned vacationing in Maine and the fading beauty. We have a Tea Party governor that is clueless about stewardship and enough Republicans to back up his rather mindless agendas. But the surprising thing is that he is being watched by a lot of concerned citizens and the damage may be a lot less than we originally thought. Keep on writing Chris, for you write from a deep intelligence, but maybe you can help in pointing the way it can be, rather the seeming obvious. Critical mass may be within our reach....not yet time to give up....
September 04, 2012 10:48am
Life is indeed sacred, and our culture needs a new story, far different from the narrative or corporate power and nation state dominance. Fortunately, that story is emerging. We are indeed learning that life, and part in it, is sacred. There's even a name for what we are about - World 5.0.
September 04, 2012 10:01am
The Prophet has spoken!
September 04, 2012 10:05am
True, money and corporate power (in the hands of a few) rules.
BUT, there is a difference between Obama (the "centrist") and
Romney (beholden to the extreme right).
Not to vote - or to vote for a third party candidate - is to vote for the winner.
If the Republicans have more control, we will lose more faster.
Think about it!
More conservative judges on the Supreme Court?
More funds for the military?
Abortion becoming illegal and gays and women prosecuted....
September 04, 2012 9:43am
http://prosperityforri.com/38-studios-and-economic-development-in-rhode-...
Chris Hedges is right. the only future worth having will require us to rapidly shrink our ecological and economic footprints.
September 04, 2012 9:39am
Let’s remember that “the corporations” are us. They cannot thrive as they do without our complicity in the form of purchases/consumption. This translates to “the corporations” are our neighbors, friends and relatives not only an elusive bunch of guys in powerful positions. When the focus shifts from “they” to “we/me” the real (tangible) challenge is revealed.
September 06, 2012 12:22pm
Exactly . Thank you !
That was the message that the "occupy" crowd in my hometown would not
consider - grow your own food and stop buying the products.
September 05, 2012 6:59am
Sorry I am not a corporation, I do not support many of them and I do not believe that corporations are people. They are institutions made by man to extract as much as they can from their workers and from nature. Their principal goal is the bottom line. My goal is life is to make a difference as an educator.
September 04, 2012 10:11am
Being forced to comply because they have a monopoly over everything we need: jobs, bread, fuel, pills, etc. does not make business our cozy familial/neighbor. It creates an economic system (called many derogatory things) that perpetuates a thriving economy at the top because we have fewer and fewer options as their dominance is entrenched.
It's indeed a love-hate dynamic, but should not be condoned anymore than telling the serf since he must live on the king's land (where else?), must embrace the symbiotic dimension of authoritarian right-of-kings, for it is good that he not starve with left-over, harvested grains lying about.
September 04, 2012 9:16am
Life goes on even after we're gone. Nature will restore balance to the planet and post-apocolypse man will be living in paradise again.
September 04, 2012 10:51am
Well, Anono, not so sure about that. I rather embrace George Carlin's view on our apopolyptic end. You think global warming and changing climate will end Mother Nature he says. No siree, not Mother Nature, not the planet. The planet will adapt, change, and continue to exist. We will be gone, since we are one puny species sharing a niche with incredibly rich and deverse life.