{"id":3678,"date":"1972-08-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1972-08-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1972-vol-53-no-8-conservation-is-a-way-to-stay-alive\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:39:31","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:39:31","slug":"august-1972-vol-53-no-8-conservation-is-a-way-to-stay-alive","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1972-vol-53-no-8-conservation-is-a-way-to-stay-alive\/","title":{"rendered":"August 1972 &#8211; VOL. 53, No. 8 &#8211; Conservation is a Way to Stay Alive"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> In the beginning, natural forces kept in                     order the animal and vegetable resources of the earth. Not                     until man learned to use fire and invented tools was the balance                     upset.<\/p>\n<p> Nature has not been able to keep control in competition                     with our increasing technical skills. As a consequence, the                     world of living things is in great danger of damage or destruction.<\/p>\n<p>This does not mean that everyone should panic, but that                     everyone should do what he can to reduce the harmful effects                     upon nature of his way of living, and even to go so far as                     to adapt his way of living so as to meet the needs of nature.<\/p>\n<p>When the first settlers came to Canada about 370 years ago                     their presence mattered little. They were few in number and                     this is a huge continent. The coming of the railway, the highway                     and the airplane, and the building of cities, have separated                     us from consciousness of the basis of life as it was then                     and still remains: the land, the water, the wild creatures                     that inhabit them, and the air.<\/p>\n<p>Some people look upon the effort to conserve nature as being                     nothing else than a desire to preserve beauty. This is a mistaken                     idea. Unless we conserve our natural resources we forfeit                     life.<\/p>\n<p>Man stands at the apex of the life pyramid, but his indifference                     to the needs of other forms of living beings threatens to                     undermine the entire structure and bring it tumbling down.<\/p>\n<p>It is commonplace in this age to elevate &#8220;realism&#8221; to almost                     the status of a religion, but it is not practical realism                     to eat, drink and smell dirt; it does not indicate the possession                     of great intelligence to wait until the prairie blows in dust                     storms before acting to preserve it; or to procrastinate until                     disease flows abundantly through kitchen taps before compelling                     cities and towns to purify their waste water; or to linger                     until thousands of people die of disease imposed upon them                     by smog before banning the pollutants that poison the air.<\/p>\n<p>Individuals and their societies speak fluently of this or                     that, according to their special interests, as being a desirable                     way of life. Conservation of our resources goes far beyond                     that: conservation is, literally and unmistakably, the only                     way to <em>preserve <\/em>life.<\/p>\n<p>Without conservation, the people of the world are emptying                     the icebox for a glorious feast tonight, disregarding the                     need for meals tomorrow.<\/p>\n<h3>Spaceship Earth<\/h3>\n<p>While we are mapping the moon and Mars, dropping scientific                     instruments on Venus, and sending messages to Jupiter and                     the Milky Way, we need to do some constructive thinking about                     our own planet. Geologic evidence leads to the conclusion                     that the earth will continue to be a comfortably habitable                     abode for creatures like ourselves for perhaps hundreds of                     millions of years to come if we do not destroy it.<\/p>\n<p>The most important spaceship in orbit is this planet, yet                     it has no commander, no trained crew, and no subsistence plan.                     It possesses strictly limited life-support systems, limited                     energy capability, and limited material resources. It carries                     3,600 million passengers, and it is expected to accommodate                     8,000 extra passengers who come aboard every hour.<\/p>\n<p>After stating the case in this graphic way in an article                     in <em>The Manchester Guardian<\/em>, Anthony Tucker says:                     &#8220;There are no emergency plans on the spacecraft for sensing                     and dealing with any approach to instability.&#8221; He adds: &#8220;Few                     of the passengers seem to care.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Look at the facts about how small is the area on which we                     and our natural resources of animal and vegetable life exist.                     The circumference of our spacecraft at the equator is 25,000                     miles, a distance covered by a jet passenger airplane in a                     little over 45 hours. Its surface land area is about 58 million                     square miles, not all of which is habitable or productive.<\/p>\n<p>Human beings exist and enjoy life on this spaceship only                     by virtue of the bounties of nature: air, water and food,                     and countless microbes, plants and animals that convert earth&#8217;s                     inanimate matter into a highly integrated living structure.<\/p>\n<p>If a shortage of food threatens our spaceship there will                     be competition among the passengers for what is available.                     A thought voiced by Winston Churchill in an address at Boston                     in 1949 adds this spectre to that of privation: &#8220;It is certain                     that mankind would not agree to starve equally, and there                     might be some very sharp disagreements about how the last                     crust was to be shared.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>No need for extremes<\/h3>\n<p>Some people say that those who plead in favour of conservation                     of natural resources and elimination of pollution are using                     scare tactics. But if low-key educational efforts failed &#8211;                     as they had failed &#8211; to awaken interest in measures to                     preserve life today and to make an environment fit to live                     in tomorrow, then something more was needed to stimulate our                     instinct for self-preservation. As someone with an insight                     into human nature remarked: &#8220;Education of people is very necessary,                     but you can speed that up a little by scaring the dickens                     out of them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Extremism, even in favour of a good cause, is harmful. It                     leads enthusiasts to overkill. It prompts exaggerated statements,                     and when in some instances these are shown to be unfounded                     the public tendency is to lump all warnings, even those given                     with authority, in one package and throw them out with the                     garbage.<\/p>\n<p>The word &#8220;conservation&#8221; has, unfortunately, become a catchword                     under which to group anything in the environment someone wishes                     to (1) change; (2) not change.<\/p>\n<p>Agreement is practically unanimous on the essential points:                     conservation is a good thing and pollution and waste of resources                     are bad things. From that hub speculation radiates in every                     direction, so that not only erosion and poisoned air are attacked,                     but every other unexplained or unpleasant phenomenon is in                     some way attributed to waste and contamination. Over-enthusiasm                     is likely to blur the basic facts, facts which are strong                     enough and well enough authenticated to carry persuasion without                     exaggeration.<\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless, if it were not for extremists, such as inventors                     and geniuses of various sorts, and enthusiasts for causes,                     mankind would not have survived or made the progress it has                     made.<\/p>\n<p>There is no need to burden our minds with anxiety about                     things that may never happen, but it is less than intelligent                     to brush aside warnings of demonstrated dangers.<\/p>\n<p>Few scientists believe that the ecological risks have yet                     reached the point of no return. Equally, few scientists would                     deny the real possibility that this might happen. There are                     thresholds in natural systems which, once passed, seem to                     preclude any restoration of life and balance.<\/p>\n<p>Sincere conservationists do not desire hysteria, but they                     respect the legitimate fears of people who know.<\/p>\n<p>Common sense knowledge has been found among all peoples                     for hundreds of thousands of years. But here we have a problem                     of great magnitude and complexity with which the common sense                     of the individual citizen is inadequate to cope, so we call                     upon science. Science involves not only common sense knowledge                     but special kinds of knowledge, rigid methods of analysis,                     and techniques of prediction.<\/p>\n<h3>Here is the voice of knowledge<\/h3>\n<p>The message of the scientists is that the future of the                     human race is in serious question. Here are some examples                     of statements made by professional people who have no axes                     to grind, economically or politically.<\/p>\n<p>Speaking at the University of Sherbrooke, Que., Dr. R. O.                     Greep of the Harvard School of Medicine said to two hundred                     scientists and medical doctors in 1970: &#8220;If voluntary methods                     of controlling the population fail, then logically involuntary                     controls will have to be imposed&#8230; That would be an unhappy                     stage, and one we hope won&#8217;t have to be faced.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Unless man changes his ideas and behaviour, his future                     on this biosphere may have to be calculated in decades.&#8221; That                     is from a booklet published by the College of Education, Ohio                     State University.<\/p>\n<p>The Club of Rome report entitled <em>The Limits to Growth                     <\/em>(Burns and MacEachern) is a sober, if chilling, technical                     examination of the likely trends in the next 130 years. If                     the calculations are even approximately right, the cost of                     delay could be appalling.<\/p>\n<p><em>Blueprint for Survival<\/em>, a book endorsed by thirty-three                     leading scientists, concludes that by pursuing current trends                     we shall hasten the day when the world grinds to one mighty                     eco-catastrophical halt.<\/p>\n<p>In view of these, and many other opinions expressed by people                     who know, to deny the need for conservation of nature and                     the abatement of pollution is to fly from reality.<\/p>\n<h3>What about technology?<\/h3>\n<p>Science and technology must be applied to the identification,                     avoidance and control of environmental risks and the solution                     of environmental problems.<\/p>\n<p>The course of progress of human life through the use of                     fire, chipped rock, agriculture, the domestication of animals,                     energy development and the building of machines has led to                     the modification of environment. This has gone too far, and                     men must start adjusting themselves so as to bring the natural                     and the manmade environments into harmony.<\/p>\n<p>Here is a key question: is it possible to reduce the impact                     of technological change to a pace more closely compatible                     with the physiological and psychological tolerance of the                     average human being and the receptivity of nature?<\/p>\n<p>Conservationists are not concerned with altering the course                     of nature but with the problem of balancing human beings and                     the rest of nature so that both may survive. They know that                     throughout the course of life upon the earth one species after                     another of animal and plant has disappeared because of its                     failure to adjust to environmental change. They know, too,                     that if the present trend continues to a crisis not only plants                     and lower animals will perish, but also man, who depends so                     completely upon them for his sustenance.<\/p>\n<p>Some opponents of conservation assert that ecologists are                     against technology. What the ecologists want is that technology                     shall take note of the fundamental fact that nature cannot                     be trifled with. They also seek to enlist technology, with                     all its qualifications, to supply the means to adjust our                     behaviour so that we do not destroy the basis of our lives.                     We have acquired scientific and technical resources which                     can be mobilized by intelligent organization to cope with                     every conservation problem: what is lacking is political and                     social skill in getting together to do the job.<\/p>\n<h3>The only way<\/h3>\n<p>There is only one way to go: forward, using natural and                     acquired skill to fit man to his environment. This is why                     the United Nations Organization has become so deeply involved                     in conservation. It alone has the world-wide system through                     which the essential cooperative and international response                     to the global challenge can be launched.<\/p>\n<p>More than a thousand delegates from member nations met in                     Stockholm in June to focus attention of governments and people                     on the urgent physical and social problems caused by technology,                     industrialization, and population pressures. Secretary-General                     of the Conference was Maurice F. Strong, former president                     of the Power Corporation in Montreal. He retired from industry                     to become head of the Canadian Government&#8217;s external aid programme.<\/p>\n<p>The United Nations working paper declares that population                     pressure, pollution and plunder of resources &#8220;cannot continue                     indefinitely without placing the future of all mankind in                     serious jeopardy.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This is very different from the &#8220;passion for beauty&#8221; referred                     to by some political and economic groups as the only objective                     of conservation movements.<\/p>\n<p>However, the thought of beauty should not be lost sight                     of. Many people hope that they may live in a peaceful, blooming                     countryside, but acquiesce when improvers go about their business                     of using up and defiling natural resources bit by bit. They                     are tranquillized by the glossy prospectus of the employment                     and wages to be provided, the taxes to be received from the                     new development, and the useful things to be produced and                     sold. In the name of adding things to living, they are allowing                     destruction of the things that make life worth living.<\/p>\n<p>We cannot side-step the economics. We need to face up to                     increased taxes if municipal, provincial and federal governments                     are to push through a clean-up job. There may be higher prices                     if industry finds it beyond its capacity to finance the changes                     that will prevent pollution by its factories and waste of                     resources by its methods.<\/p>\n<p>Most municipalities see the need, but they are awaiting                     their share of provincial or federal funds. They are not inclined                     to raise municipal taxes until they are persuaded by public                     opinion to take conservation measures. A <em>Montreal Star                     <\/em>editorial said in March, under the heading &#8220;The price                     of life&#8221;&nbsp;: &#8220;Unless efforts to provide us all with cleaner                     air and purer water are accelerated, eventually there may                     be no economy for factory owners to worry about&nbsp;&#8230;.Will                     it be too costly? The answer is contained in another question:                     What is the price of life?&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Pollution is nasty<\/h3>\n<p>We have known the word &#8220;pollution&#8221; since our school-days:                     now we are meeting it face to face, and it is just as nasty                     as teacher made it sound. Sight, smell and taste register                     its unpleasantness every hour, telling us that the wastes                     and effluents produced by modernized agriculture, industry                     and urban concentration are poisoning the rivers, polluting                     the air, and covering the land.<\/p>\n<p>To pollute is defined in the dictionary: To make physically                     impure, foul or filthy. Some of the pollution that plagues                     us is an undesired and unforeseen by-product of manufacturing                     the goods and providing the services we want.<\/p>\n<p>Pollution is not merely a problem for scientists and technologists:                     it is also of social concern. The extent to which we allow                     our environment to become fouled is a measure of our cultural                     and aesthetic standards. The least that we can do to maintain                     our self-respect is to clean up as quickly as possible, using                     all available physical, financial, and technological means,                     and then put into practice plans that will prevent this state                     of depravement from happening again.<\/p>\n<p>Here is a segment of life wherein young people can become                     dominant in a creative way. Youth is animated by idealism                     and has excellence in view. It wants results at once. It has                     in its ranks many thousands of young men and women who are                     not revolutionary, not anarchistic, but who seek to put right                     what is wrong with the world.<\/p>\n<p>All across the land, young people are already engaged in                     the fight against pollution and waste. They are working diligently                     to collect solid garbage for recycling and to inform the public                     about anti-pollution measures.<\/p>\n<p>The word &#8220;recycle&#8221; is so new that it does not appear in                     most dictionaries. The core of its meaning is that resources                     be used over and over again, thus reducing the drain upon                     natural resources and helping in the seemingly impossible                     task of disposing of solid garbage. In January, one day&#8217;s                     edition of the Chicago Sun-Times was printed on recycled paper.                     The recycling paper plant conserves one and a half million                     trees a year.<\/p>\n<h3>Education and information<\/h3>\n<p>Education is the only means of mobilizing an enlightened                     and responsible population to co-operate in work like this.                     Almost from their birth children should be introduced into                     surroundings conducive to their intelligent understanding                     of their part in nature and the respect due to nature&#8217;s laws.<\/p>\n<p>National Wildlife Week stressed that &#8220;Conservation education                     is survival power&#8221;. Elementary and secondary schools are not                     fulfilling their function of preparing young people for their                     future role as citizens if they turn out students who are                     ecologically uninformed. That is, said <em>Wildlife News<\/em>,                     &#8220;not if the species <em>homosapiens <\/em>hopes to survive.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The crusade to overcome the damage that is being caused                     to our way of life by pollution and waste of resources is                     not only for young people. It was by chance that mature people                     of this year found themselves in environmental trouble. When                     they were young, not enough was known about pollution and                     other harmful effects of technology to raise a warning signal.                     But now they recognize that they are living in a rapidly deteriorating                     environment and must do their part in correcting the condition.<\/p>\n<p>Preservation of man&#8217;s place in living nature is not something                     to be left entirely to specialists. Those who are engaged                     in the scientific and technical work need mass support. Only                     widest use of newspapers, educational machinery, film, radio                     and television, will sway the public toward giving the help                     that is necessary. Intellectual awareness of the need must                     be followed by action massive enough to meet the crisis.<\/p>\n<h3>United Nations Action Plan<\/h3>\n<p>The United Nations Action Plan tells about the scientific                     efforts and the co-operation needed on the professional level.                     Scientific and professional people possess impressive means                     for information exchange, such as professional journals. These                     publications will not spark effective activity unless the                     public is informed in terms it can understand about the issues,                     dangers and prospects. With this in mind the United Nations                     guidelines say: &#8220;education at all levels, from pre-school                     to university, should evolve to reflect the environmental                     dimension.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>That is not going to get things started soon enough, if                     we judge the urgent necessity by the many expert opinions                     expressed after years of study.<\/p>\n<p>Redemption and preservation of earth&#8217;s natural resources                     cannot be pushed off into the future. The world&#8217;s welfare                     depends upon the setting in motion today of remedial and corrective                     actions made public at the conference. National jealousies                     and the sanctity of parochial boundaries need to be brushed                     aside in this planet-wide effort. Governments in all lands                     need to take the initiative in establishing and publishing                     guidelines for their citizens. They should present to their                     people periodic reports telling the state of the environment,                     the outlook for the succeeding year, and the key activities                     on which particular emphasis should be placed. The situation                     calls for individual initiative within a large pattern of                     action.<\/p>\n<h3>What is civilization?<\/h3>\n<p>Almost anyone interviewed on a street corner will say without                     hesitation that mankind is the highest form of life. Why is                     it, then, that the other forms of life almost invariably go                     into decline whenever man takes possession of a piece of the                     earth?<\/p>\n<p>Some people regard &#8220;civilization&#8221; as consisting of the possession                     of things. Well, Jean Henri Fabre, the French naturalist,                     wrote in his monumental encyclopedia: &#8220;Man will be killed                     by the excess of his so-called civilization.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>We need a gradual shift over to a civilization built around                     the knowledge of the oneness of all living things. The extinction                     mankind imposes upon animals and plants is neither normal                     nor moral, and these are virtues we usually associate with                     being civilized.<\/p>\n<p>Even in countries like Canada, with relatively high levels                     of affluence and material prosperity, there are growing indications                     of a social tension symptomatic of man&#8217;s dissatisfaction with                     his lot and with the absence of qualitative choices. Enlightened                     people do not equate ease and irresponsibility with the best                     that life has to offer, but seek quality of living. They look                     toward excellence.<\/p>\n<h3>The plain fact is:<\/h3>\n<p>It is said that the sins of the fathers are visited on the                     children to the third and fourth generation. Well, if the                     ecological sins of our fathers are to be paid for by our children&#8217;s                     children, it will be because we allowed the sins to go uncorrected.                     Horace, who wrote his <em>Odes <\/em>in the first century B.C.,                     put it this way: &#8220;Posterity, thinned by their fathers&#8217; crimes,                     shall read, with grief, the story of their times.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Much can be done to preserve and replenish the world we                     are used to and to heal the hurt places. What we do should                     not be done half-heartedly, but appropriately to the greatness                     of the enterprise.<\/p>\n<p>Improvement is not to be made without inconvenience, but                     that is a little thing to suffer since we have the knowledge,                     the science, and the technology to accomplish the grand endeavour.                     To default would be a crime not only against all humanity                     but against ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>To take part, in however humble a way, in conserving natural                     things, is to give ourselves a chance not otherwise obtainable                     of gaining a conception of the eternal verities at first-hand.                     How superior that is to the plight of the man told about in                     <em>The Wisdom of Gibran<\/em>, who sat by his fireside and                     watched the fire go out, then blew vainly upon the dead ashes.<\/p>\n<p>It is obviously impossible to correct all past mistakes                     overnight, but it is possible to start correcting them at                     once and to prevent the worst of the problems from arising                     in the future.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[52],"class_list":["post-3678","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-52"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>August 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 8 - Conservation is a Way to Stay Alive - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1972-vol-53-no-8-conservation-is-a-way-to-stay-alive\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"August 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 8 - Conservation is a Way to Stay Alive - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In the beginning, natural forces kept in order the animal and vegetable resources of the earth. 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Not until man learned to use fire and invented tools was the balance upset. Nature has not been able to keep control in competition with our increasing technical skills. 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