Tuesday 14 January 2020

Omnicide: Who Is Responsible For The Gravest Of All Crimes?

Danielle Celermajer at the ABC (Australia): via S. Abbas Raza at 3 Quarks Daily

As the full extent of the devastation of the Holocaust became apparent, a Polish Jew whose entire family had been killed, Raphael Lemkin, came to realise that there was no word for the distinctive crime that had been committed: the murder of a people. His life work became finding a word to name the crime and then convincing the world to use it and condemn it: genocide. Today, not only has genocide become a dreadful part of our lexicon. We recognise it as perhaps the gravest of all crimes.

During these first days of the third decade of the twenty-first century, as we watch humans, animals, trees, insects, fungi, ecosystems, forests, rivers (and on and on) being killed, we find ourselves without a word to name what is happening. True, in recent years, environmentalists have coined the term ecocide, the killing of ecosystems — but this is something more. This is the killing of everything. Omnicide.

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Labels:
law_crime_and_justice, environment, climate_change, climate_disasters, fires, ethics, philosophy,


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