
Originally Posted by
LDAHL
There’s an interesting article in the Atlantic that makes a pretty convincing case that honeybees are not in fact threatened as a species. They claim the panic is in large part a cultural artifact. I was surprised to read that, given everything I’ve been told for the last couple of decades.
https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/...l-myth/678317/
Thank you for posting this. It's an important article... the most important point it makes is that the campaign to save honeybees was driven by the people who profit from them. Meantime, all kinds of species of wild insects are, in fact, dying. But why don't people care? Because insects are more annoying than profitable.
A couple of years ago, I unwittingly nurtured what I thought were pollinating bees, but which were actually yellow jackets. The wasps didn't harm me in the slightest, but they freaked out my neighbor, and my son, and my daughter. I sacrificed them for the people who scolded me for making their outdoor eating experiences far less pleasant, even though no one got stung by any of the wasps.
So this last paragraph of your article really hit home:
What they are getting at is … an inconvenient truth: America does have an insect-biodiversity crisis. It is old and big—much older and much bigger than colony collapse disorder—and so are the solutions to it. The best require returning our environment into something that looks much more like the place the first American honeybees encountered. Having a backyard beehive isn’t the answer to what’s ailing our ecosystem, because having a backyard is the problem. Buying ice cream from a global food conglomerate isn’t the answer, because buying ice cream from a global food conglomerate is the problem. The movement to save the honeybee is a small attempt at unwinding centuries of human intervention in our natural world, at undoing the harms of the modern food system, without having to sacrifice too much. No wonder so many of us wanted to believe.
We need to value wildness for its own sake.. and ultimately, ours.
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