Mountain Gorillas

Mountain Gorillas: Extinct in Our Lifetime

This is actually an issue I have been working on for more than 6 years. It was 6 years ago that I realized how close to extinction the Mountain Gorillas had come. At the time there were some 650 known alive in the wild. That's it. That is so dangerously tiny a population that it is on the border of not being genetically viable. Since then there has been an improvement (there are now about 700 Mountain Gorillas alive in the wild.) But the situation has also gotten even more dire since the civil war in the Congo is threatening the Virunga, the single national park where Mountain Gorillas live, and in the past year, 10 gorillas have been killed...really murdered. That is more than 1% of their population killed in one year.

And today, the Virunga National Park has been overrun by the Congolese rebels. The army is counter attacking, but in essence the Congolese civil war now has completely engulfed the Mountain Gorillas. This is happening right now. Today. As you read this.

Chimps and Bonobos are are closest relatives, being about 98-99% identical to us genetically. That means that looking at the exact order of nucleotides in any given Chimp and you, 98%+ of those nucleotides will be exactly the same. The difference is so close compared with some animals considered branches of the same species (e.g. dogs and wolves), that technically speaking, Chimps, Bonobos and humans really should be lumped together in the same genus. Humans are merely a third chimpanzee, as outlined very effectively by Jared Diamond in his book of that name.


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Words to live by

Lying on my cot, I came to the point that many people reach in a situation where they stop what they’re doing and say, "Wait a second. This is bullshit. This isn’t right." Two guys in our battalion were dead, two families ruined. And try as I might, I couldn’t figure out what the purpose of that was.

Things that had been welling up inside me all summer suddenly exploded in my head like a dozen Roman candles. I hated the president for his ignorance. I hated Donald Rumsfeld for his appalling arrogance and his lack of judgment. I hated their agenda. I hated Colin Powell for abandoning the Army—for not taking care of his soldiers—when he could have done something to stop these people. I hated them because the Army had seen this insurgency coming. I hated them because they didn’t listen to the people who told them this was a bad plan. I hated them because now, it meant that my guys could be next. It meant that I could be next. And I didn’t want to die like this—not in a confusing mishmash of ideologies, purposes, and bullets.

I felt like we had been taken advantage of. We were professionals sent on a wild goose chase using a half-baked plan for political reasons. Lying there restlessly, I was reminded of a Schwarzenegger line in one of his movies—when, after being used and lied to, his muscle-bound character had expressed perfectly what was now on my mind: My men are not expendable. And I don’t do this kind of work.

I longed for the clarity of purpose we’d had in Afghanistan.


— Lieutenant Brandon Friedman, 101st Airborne, in his memoir, The War I Always Wanted: The Illusion of Glory and the Reality of War: A Screaming Eagle in Afghanistan and Iraq


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