Genocide Many people
feel that human beings are responsible for the disappearance of some other
animal species. While we may have hastened the disappearance of some, abundant
evidence suggests mankind has had little impact. Biologists point out that 50
species can be expected to disappear in the twentieth century but also remind us
that about 50 species can be expected in the nineteenth century, and 50 species
in each of the centuries before that. Dr. T.H. Jukes at the University of
California has pointed out that about 100 million animal species have become
extinct since life began on Earth about 3 billion years ago. Thus, animals come
and animals go as a natural consequence of something Mr. Darwin discovered. The
human race is a recent newcomer to the scene, so we’ve had nothing whatsoever to
do with the disappearance of millions of species. In fact, when
it comes right down to it, we’re a miserable failure at genocide (种族灭绝). In
spite of an all-out centuries-old war on rats, we haven’t made a dent in their
numbers, much less extinguished a single species. And in spite of all our high
technology we haven’t been successful in eliminating a single undesirable insect
species! A friend of mine owns most of the Douglas DC-7
aircrafts left in the world. They make excellent spray planes because they can
carry a lot of insecticide and fly for a very long time over great distances.
Last year, his company sprayed most of the western Sahara and the Sahel regions
of Africa to hold down the locusts and grasshoppers. This year, the
environmentalists put pressure on the U.N. to stop it because dieldrin and
malathion might cause an increase in the cancer risk of people in the western
Sahara and the Sahel. As a result, the hoppers and locusts are back by the
zillions and the crops are failing. But the people of West Africa certainly
aren’t going to worry about dying of cancer; they are dying of starvation
instead. I’ve come to the conclusion that the people who are
trying to save the world are probably quite sincere about it but they don’t know
much about science and certainly nothing about systems engineering. In the eyes of the author, environmentalists are ______.
A. sincere
B. arrogant
C. empty-headed
D. n0ble-minded