Going the Way of the Dodo

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According to the “Red List” compiled by The International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), there are currently over five thousand species of vertebrate animals in immanent danger of extinction; well over fifteen thousand if all endangered species are considered. As far as we are historically aware, the first animal extinction directly caused by human intervention was that of the dodo, back in the seventeenth century. The sayings, “Going the way of the dodo”, and “As dead as a dodo” are commonly used throughout the English-speaking world. For some years now, animal protection activists have urged us to protect endangered species so that our children would not one day ask us the question, “Daddy / Mommy, what's a lion / rhino / whale … ?” (insert appropriate animal)

Just a while ago, after I'd almost unthinkingly stated that something or other was “as dead as a dodo”, my daughter asked me, “Dad, what's a dodo?”, and because we are who we are, my short explanation led to further dodo research. I'd previously believed that the dodo's extinction was due to over-hunting on the dodo's previously uninhabited island home of Mauritius. I discovered however, that this was not the case. Apparently, although the dodo had no fear of people, and people were responsible for its extinction, it was not hunting that brought about its demise. Reports from the seventeenth century tell us that the dodo actually did not taste very good, and was thus not a favoured candidate for the pot. In fact other, tastier bird species on Mauritius were killed for food in much greater numbers without danger of extinction. So what did people do that made them guilty of the dodo's extinction? As in any good murder mystery, the obvious culprits are actually innocent, and it is the seemingly innocuous, peripheral characters that are to blame. Ship's crews and settlers on Mauritius, brought with them domesticated animals such as dogs, cats, rats, and pigs, as well as pet Crab-Eating Macaques (monkeys). To cut a long story short, these “domestic predators” ate not only the flightless dodos themselves, but also the eggs in the dodo's ground-level nests, thus destroying new dodo generations before they came into existence. In just over one hundred years, people managed to wipe out an entire species without conscious intent; merely as a side-effect of business as usual.

Even a fairly brief study of history and sociology reveals that many societal problems and disasters occur not because of direct evil intent, but rather as a by-product of something else. This is such a repetitive theme in the causation of endangered species that it quite clearly shows that people are either unwilling, or incapable of learning from their mistakes. We continue scientific research in “faith” that this time our findings will not be misused to harm rather than benefit humanity. The wheel was not originally designed for use on war chariots, and atomic fusion was going to solve the world's energy crisis before it was formed into weapons of mass destruction. Research into genetics , nano-machines and artificial intelligence holds incredible potential to help people everywhere. Unfortunately, scientists working in these areas of study seem to be so educationally over-specialised that they cannot see how their well-intended work will be, or has already been misused by businessmen and warmongers. One has to ask the question, “Are these highly intelligent scientists truly unaware of the negative implications and applications of their work, or are they merely ignoring the inescapable negatives so as to carry on doing what they want to do?”

Of course, once that question is out of the box, questions begin to inconveniently proliferate like weapons of mass destruction during the Cold War. Questions regarding the actual benefits, and probable future misuses of stem-cell & DNA research. Questions about the factuality of marketing and advertising campaigns. Do nine out of 10 dentists really prefer AquaFresh, or did they just ask ten dentists and get turned down by one? Will Benzac really solve all my teenage angst along with my pimples, or will it give me skin cancer? Are electric cars really “green”, or are they just moving a similar, or even greater ecological burden further from the consumer, thus providing room for personal denial, and “creative marketing”?

Heaven forbid that these questions begin to turn personal once they escape from their box. Of course I'm an ethical, law-abiding citizen, I'm not a criminal! OK, I took some stationery home from work, but I work at home sometimes. Speeding obviously doesn't count, and slipping the Metro Cop a couple of bills is just the way things work around here now. Its called “creative accounting” –  tax evasion is something that criminals do. Bribery is the curse of Africa, something really should be done about it – now please excuse me I'm taking some potential clients to a game lodge for the weekend to discuss business.

We live in a country in which the previous head of the Ethics Commission, our state president, has repeatedly shown a distinct lack of understanding and practical application in regard to ethics and possibly even the law. South Africa is a country in which literally billions of Rands went missing in government departments this year; a country in which murders are so common that they don't rate the front page of the newspaper unless there's some other twist to the story. I think it safe to say that none of us like the high crime rate. I'm sure that even criminals don't like it since a high crime rate means that crime is a high-competition industry. What we do all seem to love in South Africa is pointing the finger at someone else – anyone else. We are experts at seeing and pointing out which politician, government department, religion, or social group are to blame for whatever problem is currently getting our knickers in a knot. As a true, born-and-bred South African I do it myself. Its so much easier to put the responsibility, and blame on someone other than myself.

International studies on crime have shown a direct relationship between weak personal ethics (& “minor” law disobedience), and high rates of “major” crimes. The research on which these studies were based, focused on the “little things” that most of us do almost without thinking. Things like taking office supplies home, or taking a sick-day for reasons other than illness. What about travelling just slightly over the speed-limit, or not coming to a complete stop at a stop sign because I can see there are no cars coming. Can you truly say that you've never driven when you might be over the legal limit? Things like telling a “white lie”, or withholding a piece of information to smooth a process, or padding one's curriculum vitae to one degree or another. How many of us have ever used the phrase, “What they don't know won't hurt them.”, when what we really mean is, “What they don't know, won't hurt me.”?

Ethics are very simply a personal, conscious, internalised, moral code that is both believed and lived out. In other words, “I act as I do because of what I believe.” Laws, on the other hand, are external structures put in place by society to limit, control and punish those who have insufficient ethics.

These studies show that ethics are the traction that help to stop us, individuals and societies alike, from picking up speed on the slippery slope of major crime. Now here's the thing. You don't have to commit a major crime to be part of the major crime problem. These same studies show a clear and direct correlation between lax ethics and major crime. In other words, every time we do not live out our beliefs, or we tailor them to suit a particular situation, we are helping to create our crime-ridden South Africa.
The South African Lesser-Spotted Ethic is truly an endangered species. How long will it be before one of our children asks, “Daddy / Mommy, what's an ethic?”

Author: Robin Bownes