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Futures photo by Paul Brookes
Time to make a stand for the rights of unborn babies
There is a mad optimism with a hefty dose of hypocrisy in the idea of exhorting future generations to protect the environment. What future? What environment? Why should we ask our grandchildren to do what we refuse to do? The time to act was yesterday, but we can no more insist that children not yet born take up the burden of our selfishness, than we can blame our parents for bequeathing us their ignorance.
If we want our grandchildren to have an inkling of what we are depriving them of, we have to stop destroying it now. Stop shedding crocodile tears over embryos and start thinking about the world we are condemning real live babies to suffer in. No more cheap air flights, no more fast fashion, no more eating till we need a crane to lift us out of bed while others starve. No more killing, no more destruction of forests, no more palm oil, petrol, no more worship of the most vacuous and useless individuals in society.
We must stop hiding behind the false flags of, it’s the government/the Chinese/the war in Ukraine/immigrants/fascists/anti-fascists. Governments in a democracy do what their electorate wants. Otherwise they are voted out next election. If they allow the construction of more airports, motorways, commercial centres, holiday resorts, golf courses, yachting marinas, monster cruise ships, it’s because they believe they’re vote-winners. Don’t look to paid representatives to vote themselves out of a job by being morally responsible. It’s up to us, the voters, to point out the moral course we wish to follow.
So, no, I’m not going to plead with my unborn grandchildren to be more responsible. I’m going to do what I can to pressure my co-citizens to do the right thing by the future, and finally, get a grip.
Jane Dougherty
Bios and Links
Jane Dougherty
lives and works in southwest France. A Pushcart Prize nominee, her poems and stories have been published in magazines and journals including Ogham Stone, the Ekphrastic Review, Black Bough Poetry, ink sweat and tears, Gleam, Nightingale & Sparrow, Green Ink and Brilliant Flash Fiction. She blogs at https://janedougherty.wordpress.com/ Her poetry chapbooks, thicker than water and birds and other feathers were published in October and November 2020.
Thanks Paul.