
National Geographic article cover
Our administration would push for a strong “ocean ethic.” Staying up on foreign/domestic affairs, across the board, I regularly read. This particular article was tremendously eye-opening. An excerpt: “The oceans are dying. The collapse of fisheries marks the decline, a steady funeral drumbeat: cod in the Maritime Provinces of Canada, anchovies off Peru, salmon off the Pacific Northwest, Patagonian toothfish in Antarctic waters, sharks in all the oceans…” And this article specifically focuses on the Bluefin tuna, which it says is “…the most overfished species on Earth. The stock that spawns on the western side of the Atlantic has been reduced by 64% since 1970.” While the Bluefin is, in a sense, the ‘canary in the coal mine,’ as the article notes, this is happening across the board, ‘er rather across the seas, of late. The essence of this is greed and gluttony. The fishing companies/fishermen want to make as much money as they can. And consumers want the best prices, and the most fish, that they can get. Unbeknownst to many, because, frankly, spiritual leadership is not calling out much, if any, of this, is that this is sin behavior on both fronts. And coupled with this is tremendously bad environmental stewardship. More sin. Our administration would promote guard rails, if you will, to promote an ocean ethic, with moral constraints. God gave us the natural resources to use, but to use in appreciative moderation. *The Native Americans were actually quite good at this. Our environmental platform is replete with examples that bring this kind of stellar environmental stewardship to life. See…









