On March 13, 2024
Letters

Cannot humans do better?

 

Dear Editor,

Yesterday, March 9, 2024, a small flock of robins arrived here in the Rutland valley, four pairs to be exact. The ground was soggy but bare and they set about scanning the earth for food. 

This morning, the robins are scampering anxiously about, nonplussed by the thick coating of slushy snow. A small group gathers at the base of a large tree where the snow is scantier. 

Other beasts of the field are equally stressed and desperate. A chickadee, a titmouse,  a goldfinch and a junco show up hopefully at the feeding station, which was recharged with black oil sunflower seed and peanut suet two days ago. The bag of seed has been used up in anticipation of spring. Eventually birds will scavenge buds and even tree bark.

Starlings mob the suet basket, squabbling and jostling for position, with more sailing in by the second. 

A squirrel shelters in the dry spot under my car. Another wraps itself around the hanging feeder until I shoo it away. 

Whether these critters survive or die is not Nature’s concern. So what if the robins’ timing was bad? They were responding to the biological imperative to return north for breeding season… and food. They have to take what they can get.

In the fight for survival, Nature is landing a knockout punch this morning. Somehow, some will make it. They have nowhere else to go. Nature is oblivious to their wellbeing. 

But humans are supposed to be different. The success of the human species has been in spite of Nature’s worst. We have gained hegemony from two causes: social collaboration and the year round ability to propagate. 

But now at the quarter-point of the 21st Century, with all our historical knowledge, our life-preserving and life-enhancing technology, too many of us have become like the robins — born with hope, knocked down by the agendas of other, more powerful humans who, like Nature, care not for the collateral damage they inflict while pursuing their own ends. In fact, these potentates blithely celebrate the social Darwinism they enact.

One would think that human beings could do better by each other than Nature does so callously with the hapless beasts of the field.

Julia Purdy,

N. Clarendon

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Please be mindful of antisemitism in political messages

June 4, 2025
Dear Editor, The Anti-Defamation League’s 2024 Audit of Antisemitic Incidents reports a deeply troubling rise in antisemitism across the country, including and especially here in Vermont. We know that many people in our community are passionate about political issues, including those related to Israel and Palestine. The local Jewish community asks that, especially in this…

Education cuts hurt the economy, won’t lower taxes

June 4, 2025
Dear Editor, The debate over H.454 might seem irrelevant to Vermonters without children in school. Still, its impact stretches far beyond education—it threatens our economy, property values, and long-term tax stability. Although school consolidation and cost containment may appear fiscally responsible, both the Senate’s and the governor’s proposals provide only short-term budgetary solutions rather than…

Congrats, new board members

June 4, 2025
Dear Editor, I want to extend my sincere congratulations to Bill Vines and Jay Hickory on their election to the Killington Select Board. Their longstanding ties to our community and steady approach clearly resonated with voters. I wish them both success as they begin their terms on the expanded board. Although I was not elected,…

Oppose the Senate Conferee proposed changes to H.454

June 4, 2025
Dear Editor, Editor’s note: This letter was originally posted by the office of the Mountain Views School District Superintendent on Saturday, May 31. It is the second letter to the school community Superintendent Sherry Sousa has sent regarding H.454, the education funding reform bill. I’m again turning to you to become involved with the education…