"Rink-a-Tink-Tink-have-a-cool-drink!", Says the refrigetor. Comparing the coolest brands on Earth Firefox (3) is mentioned (by Mozillas own blog) having rocketed past Coca-cola and others by light-years as metered by Googles Trends. Well, we don´t care how much thats just statistical extra-hype but wish to hear some more good news on the way as the automaton dehumanizing progressive maschine is making bad news everywhere; and where the biofuels is mentioned, no grass grows anymore...
In Nigeria abandoned mines are causing risk of radioactivity for some 2 million inhabitants of the area, at Andes the eternally ever-lasted glacing part is melting...but all these threats to nature and human kind, we are still most worried from what will happen to the Oran-gu-tan ...which are mentioned as the first great human-like ape (yet alive) to be at the edge of extinction. Their latest (un)natural enemy: Global palm oil industry most productive at islands that are the living areas of orangutan: Malaysia and Sumatra. The biggest threat for them being ongoing deforestation, the animals are also little short of defenders, as they doesn´t have such qualities like cute looks and are not renown as close relative to humans like chimpanzees. Also orangutan hasn't been enjoying such protected status as Virungas Gorillas (helped by succes of followers for Diane Fossey, one can still notice that gorillas are counted by hundreds nowadays, not thousands as orangutans yet are). Important (culturally at least) movie roles for Oran-gu-tan also have been rarer than the other main species have gained; most renown film apes being Tarzans Cheetah (1931 onwards) and the Mighty King Kong (filmed 1933, 1978, 2004). However, Oran-gu-tans have had some appearances in movies, as character named Clyde in couple C.Eastwood films 1978 and 1980, and also they were in remarkable roles in the 70´s blockbuster films and TV-series which were based on Pierre Boules book Planet of the Apes. As in reality also highly intellectual, in those films orangutans were the ruling class among apes enjoying a science-priesthood position(Sadly for the 2001 boring version they were dropped from movie completely). Oran-gu-tans have also inspired other books (what else might E.R.Burroughs 'big humanoidic apes' be, if not Orangutans, as they are certainly not Chimpanzees and Gorillas[Bolgoni] are mentioned as other tribe ; think he (un)intentionally misplaced orangutans geographically [writers freedoms, I guess] in African jungles). Also, a well-known orangutan book character named Jupiter in Verne´s Mysterious Island roman. In music we find at least couple of groups using the name: in 1970 Hard Rock album named Orang Utan and later several bands from recent decades like Larry´s Orangutang, Acid Orangutang and Orangutang. At the quick look I wasn´t able to find any appearances at comics, but sure there are ...You can find some information about the apes as well as videoclips, news, etc. at Borneo Orangutan Survival UK . Also, Wikipedia link here.
In some parts of the planet blogging has also lately been listed as endangering habit, at the worst cases hobbyers informed to face death penalty. In MuleSkinner world, the area of free speech and thought, we take a strong opposition to such inhuman manners and notice that in the Net there´s always several alternative ways to get the messages to public notion – censorship most likely helps gaining attention for the things censored...In the area of social networking a new player in the field, named Swurl helps to gather all those important writings, contacts from several sites under one personal web-page, including also Youtube and other media-sites data...Google mentioned as cutting privacy policy-link from their front web-site...as they are also same time trumpeting their concerns to keep user privacy unaffected...
Stonehenge isn´t actually the only druidic temple ruins/burial places of ancient European origin-tribes. Ever heard of Ring of Brodgar at Orkney? We neither but now archeologists are proposing to start diggings there (1st since 1970) because most little is known from the "most spectacular stone circle in Scotland." We only stopped to wonder do they really think they´ve solved the mystery of Stonehenge, if in the close neighborhood area with such similar buildings hasn´t been even examined?
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2 comments:
Re: Orangutans
It is often asked, "How many orangutans are left?" The numbers themselves do not matter. What matters is that the rate of decline is increasing, and unless something is done, the wild orangutan will go extinct. Once remaining populations become so small and fragmented, there will be no way to recover the species, as these small populations will be genetically unviable in the long run.
What also matters is the welfare angle of this decline 5000 are dying unnaturally--either from starvation as a result of habitat destruction or from human-wildlife conflict. Working with orangutans for 14 years now, I see them as individuals capable of emotions and pain. The loss of just one of these is heartbreaking. 5000 is genocide.
We have a moral obligation to save these sentient, intelligent cousins of ours from this brutality. I do not subscribe to the view that we need to keep orangutan numbers up so our children have a chance to see them in the wild. Orangutans do not exist for our benefit. They themselves have a right to life, regardless of whether we get the added benefit of gazing upon them in their world one day.
The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation is the largest primate rescue project in the world. We look after close to 1000 rescued orangutans presently, and have rescued and released more than 1000 others so far. We are the only organisation actively rescuing the wild orangutans from certain death in these oil-palm plantations. 2 weeks ago we released a further 25 wild orangutans rescued from oil-palm plantations into a remote protected forest in the north of Central Kalimantan. This release site could potentially support more than 1000 orangutans, making it a viable population. BOS also manages the Mawas Reserve, a forest of 360,000 hectares, home to some 3500 wild orangutans. If BOS can continue to protect populations like those in our release site and in Mawas, we can prevent the extinction of the orangutan in the wild. Find out more at www.savetheorangutan.co.uk.
Michelle Desilets
Founding Director
Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation UK
Yes, Indeed.
The intention was not to underestimate the fact that decrease (of say thousand in numbers) in populations is a remarkable threat itself for any wild animal species these days. In the (distant) past, likely numbers would not necessary have caused such threat, but people have a long history in overlooking the results of their doings directly affecting the species living in the wild (in the case of orangutans this is even more eye-catching as the human-caused deforestation threatening them most, I suppose, seems also to be the cause for unnatural deaths). Naturally, as I see it, them as any living animals have a right to exist in the wild by their own right.
One, most easily carried action for anyone propably, would be to avoid non-sustainable produced palm oils completely.
(thanks for the comment, our way of including a lot topics in few sentences sometimes leaves many obvious points unmentioned)
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