When’s Enough, ENOUGH?

A dead elk with huge horns.

The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish is puzzled over the mysterious deaths of more than 100 elk within a 24-hour period in rural New Mexico.

Shame, shame, shame on us. Human beings are polluting our environment to the point of causing disease and death to not only our own species, but to the plants and animals in which we share our environment.

Thoughtless Humans

Basically, the human animal can be very dirty, and we pollute where we live with waste and trash, GMOs, power plants, and processed chemicals. We destroy the natural environment to serve are gluttonous needs, and we dispose of our wastes in ways that destroy other life-forms.

The biggest tragedy of all is that we don’t want to admit that it is our fault that the Earth is dying – we choose to remain ignorant to avoid accountability.

Enough is enough.

Our Damaging Line-Up

Here is just a handful of species that are suffering and dying at the hands of human wars, overcrowding, pollution, oil pipelines, GMOs, Chemtrails, energy power plants, and waste disposal:

A sick dog at the vet.

Veterinarians, health officials and dog owners are alarmed at the mysterious  deaths of four dogs in Ohio. They are blaming bats, pigs, and anything other than man’s harmful influences affecting the environment.

A dead elk with huge horns.

The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish is puzzled over the mysterious deaths of more than 100 elk within a 24-hour period in rural New Mexico.

Three Saiga antelopes running in Africa.

Over three thousand Saiga antelopes mysteriously died in central Kazakhstan in southern Russia north of Afghanistan.

A yellow and black Fire Salamander

A deadly fungus is jeopardizing biodiversity and bringing fire salamanders close to the brink of extinction in the Netherlands, yet scientists wonder why.

A starfish on the beach.

The waters off British Columbia, Canada, are littered with dead starfish, and researchers say that they have no idea what’s causing their massive deaths.

A Red Fox.

An unusual outbreak of rabies among foxes in New Jersey can be sourced to human pollutants and overcrowding, yet scientists claim they are clueless why this is happening.