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Monday, June 4, 2012

Little Sparrow Falls


Phil Burpee, Columnist
Phil Burpee
Other than for a raggle-taggle of scriptural literalists for whom the great biological fact sometimes known as Creation came into being between early Monday morning and somewhere after the hockey game on the following Saturday night some sixty-six hundred years ago, it is widely accepted that life on this planet is inutterably ancient. Not long after the surface of the Earth cooled sufficiently, self-replicating molecules formed and fairly quickly assembled themselves first into single cells, and then into an ever-complexifying array of living things. Below is a tally of these occurrences, courtesy of Wikipedia.

The basic timeline of a 4.6 billion year old Earth, with approximate dates:
Grasshopper Sparrow
Our merry little band of living things is very, very old indeed. And every one of us is a direct linear descendant of a vast throng of ancestors stretching back hundreds upon hundreds of millions of years. Consider the little Grasshopper Sparrow that I hear buzzing away outside my window. She is tiny, but she is an inheritor of the bloodlines of that estimable family of creatures called dinosaurs who ruled the planet for some 200 million years before being laid low by a wayward asteroid that ploughed the Yucatan one fateful day some 65 million years ago. She is sublime. She has survived. She has paid her dues.

Our species, one of the youngest, is now in a state of exponential increase. When I was a kid we anticipated with a certain giddy wonder the imminent arrival of the three billionth person. We have now, a mere half-century later, seen the arrival of the seven billionth. We are amok, a mass proliferation of organisms on the swirling petrie dish that is our dear world. And with our headlong rush towards dominion, we have come to forget who we are, and what is our place in the order of things. We have fallen into the dangerous and unbecoming self-delusion of importance. But sadly, our only importance within a planetary context is a negative one. There is virtually nothing we do that provides net benefit to our fellow creatures, other than dying and rotting – and even that we seek to deny by pumping our carcasses with chemicals and sealing them in fancy boxes. If it weren’t for our art and music and philosophical inquiry, the efforts of our civilizations would be wretchedly superficial and forgettable – nothing but a tiresome series of conflict and over-weaning monkey-business. But we know a lot of stuff. The information thing we’ve got down pat. What a shame we can’t make formative use of it.

Athabasca Tarsands
Look at Bill C-38, the Omnibus Budget Bill currently before Parliament. It has breezed through the Senate and is rapidly on its way to Royal Assent and subsequent enactment. It is also known as the ‘Jobs, Growth and Long Term Prosperity Act’. Here, in this dippy and self-serving phrase, we can see the whole sorry conceptual apparatus of unbridled development at play. For it is within such jingoism that can be seen the still-persisting belief that economic vitality can somehow be achieved without due and careful regard for the wellbeing of the physical environment from which that very vitality is drawn. This budget bill contains measures to repeal the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act, set timelines for environmental assessment hearings, gives the federal cabinet the authority to approve new pipeline projects and overhauls the Fisheries Act to focus only on major waterways. This is only a taste of what this omnibus bill covers, but is a fair representation of the over-bearing emphasis on environmental aspects of various pieces of legislation, all conspiring to bring about in the country at large what has been known in Alberta for some time as a ‘streamlined regulatory environment’. What it says is this – “We’re too busy to be careful – so get outta the goddamn way.”
The little Grasshopper Sparrow is at once immensely delicate and immensely robust. It is also exceedingly beautiful, and its very minuteness against the vast backdrop of prairie, mountain, wind and sky is poignant beyond words. Here is a creature who is born with all the tools necessary to live its life and pass on its genes to the next of its kind. It asks no favours and tells no lies. It honours its purpose, which is to be a sparrow, and it gives no quarter to self-doubt or delusion. Such marvellous beings as this fall before our avaricious onslaught by the millions and millions every day. Countless voices are silenced, even as we crow and exult from every rooftop as to our greatness and the necessity of our continued advance across the face of the land. How wrong we are. How inattentive we are. How blind and deaf we are to the lyrical wonders of the world that surrounds, supports and enables us. How sad, and how exasperating, to see our elected leaders paying such homage to stupidity and short-sightedness as that represented by Bill C-38. Ministers Joe Oliver and Peter Kent ride shotgun on the belching juggernaut that Stephen Harper uses to grind his way through the natural world, as though the anticipated ‘jobs, growth and long-term prosperity’ were somehow to be achieved independently of the actual physical capital from which they must derive. Jobs and money come from work. Work is the action of manipulating the physical environment. The physical environment is this planet. It is a completely closed system. And it is circular, not linear. Goes around absolutely does come around. And you can only spend your collateral on operating costs for so long before you wind up flat bust. The line of credit dries up.
The little sparrow falls. Who really sees it? We are rather too busy to notice it tumbling in our reckless wake. And a flame we inadvertently snuff as we grind towards our crowded destiny, a flame which has shone for aeons, shines no more. We inherit an unimaginably splendid and anciently interconnected heritage of living things. How blithely we ignore and betray it. But all it takes is to look and to see. That little buzzing sound outside the window is none other than the Voice of Ages ringing down to us from the immemorial reaches of our collective heritage. All that is required of us is to notice – and to recognize amongst the living cavalcade of beings that surround us our brothers and our sisters and our fellows and our peers. For truly, we are nothing more than clumsy walk-ons in the Great Drama, and the least we can do is to remember the few lines we have been tasked to learn for the show.
Oh, that which is done to the least of our fellows is done to each and every one of us. What we poison or crush or pave over or lay low is a shadow we cannot flee. It is the shadow we glimpse as we pass by the mirror of our thoughtless exploits. It need not be this way, yet we accept the low cunning of our political masters. If we truly heard the plaintive song of this little bird, we would rise up in horror and heartfelt dismay for that which we allow to be done in our name. And for all the suffering that we visit upon the countless creatures of our world, what are we then to make of Maria Straub’s childlike ditty of yesteryear? -

He loves me, too, He loves me, too,
I know He loves me, too;
Because He loves the little things,
I know He loves me, too.”


Phil Burpee
June 2, 2012

5 comments:

  1. So you disparage Christians for what they believe and then close out the article by quoting a Christian hymn. Mixed messages much?

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    1. Phil Burpee4/6/12

      Mr. Craig is very observant. I am indeed quoting the refrain from 'God sees the little sparrow fall.' I often employ quotes from Christian scripture either because it is poetic and sometimes lovely (Psalms) or it is gothic and terrifying (Revelations) or it is self-serving balderdash (Genesis)or it is just plain wide-eyed childishness, as with Maria Straub's simple-minded little song. There is no mixed message - rather the point is the irony. For here the sparrow falls owing to the actions of human beings, and the love that the purported god of the universe is seen to thusly hold for us seems therefore oddly misappropriated. It is this recurring gibberish of Christianity that I find most fascinating - and most disturbing.

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  2. Anonymous4/6/12

    A Gallup poll has found that 46% of Americans believe that the world was created by their god less than 10,000 years ago.

    http://the-mound-of-sound.blogspot.ca/2012/06/jesus-numbers-are-holding.html

    Well, I guess 46% of Americans would question your numbers and timeline of evolution. :-) No wonder the world is so screwed up, with endless wars and such, peopple just got too much religion on their minds and not enough common-sense.

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  3. Christianity is not gibberish and the rhetoric of the comments is another example of offhanded, simple-minded views. Common sense and Christianity work hand in hand, love your neighbor as yourself doesn't get any more common sense. Like so many people who feel free to declare Christianity intolerant etc., often without provocation, you become what you declare. Intolerance is universal amongst human beings, unfortunately we have allowed the weaponizing of the word and these days Christianity is as suitable a whipping boy as any.

    Belief in the Hexamaron (Creation in six days) is no more religion than Evolution. Science requires empirical evidence. In order to gain empirical evidence there needs to be a first hand witness in order to replicate and research the events. Even the most devout evolutionary scientists have no idea how life began, which makes your stats great and all but also based on faith. So there is your true irony, harping on religion while all the while practicing it.

    I am all for opinion here on the Voice but this alienates many readers when opinion is about helping others see your point of view. That said, I appreciate your writing and will continue to read.

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    1. Phil Burpee5/6/12

      "In order to gain empirical evidence there needs to be a first hand witness in order to replicate and research the events."

      With respect, this is false. Empiricism is based on a dance of observation and inference. Hence the Socratic method of inquiry. I do not need to doubt that the sun will rise because I may infer from precedent that this is just exactly what it will do. This is altogether different from faith-based 'received' knowledge. A double-blind procedure typically roots out the charlatans. To say we 'know' something simply because we are told it is not knowledge at all, but simply rote. This allows us to rationalize our way through destructive behaviour, all the while believing that it is sanctioned by the divine.

      As to loving your neighbour as yourself, this is at once a philosophical construct and a fundamental biological tenet. It certainly requires no supernatural goading. Co-operators are more genetically successful than the selfish. Hence the ready impulse towards fellowship so often undermined by religious tribalism and sectarianism. If human beings are not undone by their leaders, secular of spiritual, they will always gravitate towards breaking bread together, exchanging pleasantries and laughter, and sitting down to enjoy the day.

      Thanks for the comments. More another day perhaps. Time to move on.

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