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Home Front: Culture Wars
Influential US scientist calls for death of 90% of all humans ASAP
2006-04-02
Recently citizen scientist Forrest Mims told me about a speech he heard at the Texas Academy of Science during which the speaker, a world-renowned ecologist, advocated for the extermination of 90 percent of the human species in a most horrible and painful manner. Apparently at the speaker's direction, the speech was not video taped by the Academy and so Forrest's may be the only record of what was said. Forrest's account of what he witnessed chilled my soul. Astonishingly, Forrest reports that many of the Academy members present gave the speaker a standing ovation. To date, the Academy has not moved to sanction the speaker or distance itself from the speaker's remarks.

If the professional community has lost its sense of moral outrage when one if their own openly calls for the slow and painful extermination of over 5 billion human beings, then it falls upon the amateur community to be the conscience of science.

Forrest, who is a member of the Texas Academy and chairs its Environmental Science Section, told me he would be unable to describe the speech in The Citizen Scientist because he has protested the speech to the Academy and he serves as Editor of The Citizen Scientist . Therefore, to preclude a possible conflict of interest, I have directed Forrest to describe what he observed and his reactions in this special feature, for which I have served as editor and which is being released a week ahead of our normal publication schedule. Comments may be sent to Backscatter . Shawn Carlson, Ph.D., Founder and Executive Director, Society for Amateur Scientists.

There is always something special about science meetings. The 109th meeting of the Texas Academy of Science at Lamar University in Beaumont on 3-5 March 2006 was especially exciting for me, because a student and his professor presented the results of a DNA study I suggested to them last year. How fulfilling to see the baldcypress ( Taxodium distichum ) leaves we collected last summer and my tree ring photographs transformed into a first class scientific presentation that's nearly ready to submit to a scientific journal (Brian Iken and Dr. Deanna McCullough, "Bald Cypress of the Texas Hill Country: Taxonomically Unique?" 109th Meeting of the Texas Academy of Science Program and Abstracts [ PDF ], Poster P59, p. 84, 2006).

But there was a gravely disturbing side to that otherwise scientifically significant meeting, for I watched in amazement as a few hundred members of the Texas Academy of Science rose to their feet and gave a standing ovation to a speech that enthusiastically advocated the elimination of 90 percent of Earth's population by airborne Ebola. The speech was given by Dr. Eric R. Pianka (Fig. 1), the University of Texas evolutionary ecologist and lizard expert who the Academy named the 2006 Distinguished Texas Scientist.

Something curious occurred a minute before Pianka began speaking. An official of the Academy approached a video camera operator at the front of the auditorium and engaged him in animated conversation. The camera operator did not look pleased as he pointed the lens of the big camera to the ceiling and slowly walked away.

This curious incident came to mind a few minutes later when Professor Pianka began his speech by explaining that the general public is not yet ready to hear what he was about to tell us. Because of many years of experience as a writer and editor, Pianka's strange introduction and the TV camera incident raised a red flag in my mind. Suddenly I forgot that I was a member of the Texas Academy of Science and chairman of its Environmental Science Section. Instead, I grabbed a notepad so I could take on the role of science reporter.

One of Pianka's earliest points was a condemnation of anthropocentrism, or the idea that humankind occupies a privileged position in the Universe. He told a story about how a neighbor asked him what good the lizards are that he studies. He answered, “What good are you?”

Pianka hammered his point home by exclaiming, “We're no better than bacteria!”

Pianka then began laying out his concerns about how human overpopulation is ruining the Earth. He presented a doomsday scenario in which he claimed that the sharp increase in human population since the beginning of the industrial age is devastating the planet. He warned that quick steps must be taken to restore the planet before it's too late.

Saving the Earth with Ebola

Professor Pianka said the Earth as we know it will not survive without drastic measures . Then, and without presenting any data to justify this number, he asserted that the only feasible solution to saving the Earth is to reduce the population to 10 percent of the present number.

He then showed solutions for reducing the world's population in the form of a slide depicting the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse . War and famine would not do, he explained. Instead, disease offered the most efficient and fastest way to kill the billions that must soon die if the population crisis is to be solved.

Pianka then displayed a slide showing rows of human skulls, one of which had red lights flashing from its eye sockets.

AIDS is not an efficient killer, he explained, because it is too slow. His favorite candidate for eliminating 90 percent of the world's population is airborne Ebola ( Ebola Reston ), because it is both highly lethal and it kills in days, instead of years. However, Professor Pianka did not mention that Ebola victims die a slow and torturous death as the virus initiates a cascade of biological calamities inside the victim that eventually liquefy the internal organs.

After praising the Ebola virus for its efficiency at killing, Pianka paused, leaned over the lectern, looked at us and carefully said, “We've got airborne 90 percent mortality in humans. Killing humans. Think about that.”

With his slide of human skulls towering on the screen behind him, Professor Pianka was deadly serious. The audience that had been applauding some of his statements now sat silent.

After a dramatic pause, Pianka returned to politics and environmentalism. But he revisited his call for mass death when he reflected on the oil situation.

“And the fossil fuels are running out,” he said, “so I think we may have to cut back to two billion, which would be about one-third as many people.” So the oil crisis alone may require eliminating two-third's of the world's population.

How soon must the mass dying begin if Earth is to be saved? Apparently fairly soon, for Pianka suggested he might be around when the killer disease goes to work. He was born in 1939, and his lengthy obituary appears on his web site .

When Pianka finished his remarks, the audience applauded. It wasn't merely a smattering of polite clapping that audiences diplomatically reserve for poor or boring speakers. It was a loud, vigorous and enthusiastic applause.

Questions for Dr. Doom

Then came the question and answer session, in which Professor Pianka stated that other diseases are also efficient killers.

The audience laughed when he said, “You know, the bird flu's good, too.” They laughed again when he proposed, with a discernable note of glee in his voice that, “We need to sterilize everybody on the Earth.”

After noting that the audience did not represent the general population, a questioner asked, "What kind of reception have you received as you have presented these ideas to other audiences that are not representative of us?"

Pianka replied, "I speak to the converted!"

Pianka responded to more questions by condemning politicians in general and Al Gore by name, because they do not address the population problem and "...because they deceive the public in every way they can to stay in power."

He spoke glowingly of the police state in China that enforces their one-child policy. He said, "Smarter people have fewer kids." He said those who don't have a conscience about the Earth will inherit the Earth, "...because those who care make fewer babies and those that didn't care made more babies." He said we will evolve as uncaring people, and "I think IQs are falling for the same reason, too."

With this, the questioning was over. Immediately almost every scientist, professor and college student present stood to their feet and vigorously applauded the man who had enthusiastically endorsed the elimination of 90 percent of the human population. Some even cheered. Dozens then mobbed the professor at the lectern to extend greetings and ask questions. It was necessary to wait a while before I could get close enough to take some photographs (Fig. 1).

I was assigned to judge a paper in a grad student competition after the speech. On the way, three professors dismissed Pianka as a crank. While waiting to enter the competition room, a group of a dozen Lamar University students expressed outrage over the Pianka speech.

Yet five hours later, the distinguished leaders of the Texas Academy of Science presented Pianka with a plaque in recognition of his being named 2006 Distinguished Texas Scientist. When the banquet hall filled with more than 400 people responded with enthusiastic applause, I walked out in protest.

Corresponding with Dr. Doom

Recently I exchanged a number of e-mails with Pianka. I pointed out to him that one might infer his death wish was really aimed at Africans, for Ebola is found only in Central Africa. He replied that Ebola does not discriminate, kills everyone and could spread to Europe and the the Americas by a single infected airplane passenger.

In his last e-mail, Pianka wrote that I completely fail to understand his arguments. So I did a check and found verification of my interpretation of his remarks on his own web site. In a student evaluation of a 2004 course he taught, one of Professor Pianka's students wrote, "Though I agree that convervation [sic] biology is of utmost importance to the world, I do not think that preaching that 90% of the human population should die of ebola [sic] is the most effective means of encouraging conservation awareness." (Go here and scroll down to just before the Fall 2005 evaluation section near the end.)

Yet the majority of his student reviews were favorable, with one even saying, “ I worship Dr. Pianka .”

The 45-minute lecture before the Texas Academy of Science converted a university biology senior into a Pianka disciple, who then published a blog that seriously supports Pianka's mass death wish.

Dangerous Times

Let me now remove my reporter's hat for a moment and tell you what I think. We live in dangerous times. The national security of many countries is at risk. Science has become tainted by highly publicized cases of misconduct and fraud.

Must now we worry that a Pianka-worshipping former student might someday become a professional biologist or physician with access to the most deadly strains of viruses and bacteria? I believe that airborne Ebola is unlikely to threaten the world outside of Central Africa. But scientists have regenerated the 1918 Spanish flu virus that killed 50 million people. There is concern that small pox might someday return. And what other terrible plagues are waiting out there in the natural world to cross the species barrier and to which scientists will one day have access?

Meanwhile, I still can't get out of my mind the pleasant spring day in Texas when a few hundred scientists of the Texas Academy of Science gave a standing ovation for a speaker who they heard advocate for the slow and tortuous death of over five billion human beings.
Posted by:lotp

#27  No better than the Nazis and their eugenics. Just less straighforward about who they intend the master race to be.

Hint to the Biologists: you're going find the survivors to be the guys with the guns and the isolationist tendencies. Not exactly your ivory tower eletists who cannot survive otuside of modern society and all the scaffolding it requires "from the bottom tier".
Posted by: Oldspook   2006-04-02 22:59  

#26  #15 CA :) :) :) :) One of the best!
Posted by: Inspector Clueso   2006-04-02 22:08  

#25  Rainbow Six:
"The cause of the sudden outbreak of terrorism is radical eco-terrorists, who are coincidentally owners of a large and successful biotechnology firm. They engineer a modified version of the Ebola virus, codenamed "Shiva"; they also engineer a vaccine for themselves. Their plan is to infect the world, killing everyone but their selected few, who will rebuild the world in a scientifically and environmentally friendly way."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainbow_Six_(book)
Posted by: Darrell   2006-04-02 21:30  

#24  They would be areligious, amoral, and free in their own minds to exercise whatever form of coercion necessary to maintain control over the lower social substratums. Their state would have totalitarian police powers. No dissent would be allowed on the basic social structure and the means required to maintain that structure. Otherwise, limited debate could be practiced. Technological progress would be zero.

Read "Larry Niven, his Police Creation (The ARM) sounds just like this idea.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2006-04-02 20:07  

#23  NS, I'd add another 5.4 for Denmark just on general principle.

Yes, DD, I thought that Tom Clancy did it better in Rainbow 6, although I think Michael Crichton's State of Fear is relevant too. Guys like this should be dropped naked and alone into the interior of New Guinea for about a year to get a feel for what the earth would be like without 90% of us.
Posted by: RWV   2006-04-02 19:13  

#22  If you chart the statistics of lethal epidemics, it is obvious that they kill "from the bottom of the pyramid". This means that the poor, uneducated, in ill health, ill-fed, and in countries with poor sanitation and no concept of hygiene die off far more than healthy, educated people in wealthy and advanced countries.

I'm sure the "scientist" is aware of this fact.

So what he is really saying that he wants third and fourth world peasants to die. This is because he is an elitist pig who despises such people primarily because he is an elitist pig. He would hate these people just as much, and want them to die, even if there were only 10 million people on the planet.

He hates their races, their cultures, their very existence in nature--which he sees to be unnatural and destructive. They put "footie prints" all over his pristine sand dunes. They infect "his" nature with their presence, and they do not and cannot appreciate his evolved "aesthetic" of environmentalism.

In a manner of speaking, "he is not a vegetarian because he loves animals, he is a vegetarian because he hates plants."

When pressured, certainly he will point to *some* of the people living in developed countries that he believes need to die, too. These would be those "hoi polloi" living in red States, no doubt.

But invariably *none* of them will be in his personal cocktail circuit of "superior intellectuals" and armchair political activists.

Not surprisingly, however, nature has the last laugh on his clique, as while they might be credentialed from the finest schools, they are so sorely lacking in common sense and judgement that a healthy percentage of them, too, are culled when culling is in order.

Poetic justice, I suppose. You can't fool mother nature. She can spot defectives from a long distance.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2006-04-02 18:06  

#21  Our own home grown death cult. I agree that this guy should be denied access to microbio labs, and I'd flag his audience as suspicious also. The Unabomber only killed a few.
Posted by: James   2006-04-02 17:52  

#20  OK, I'm going into full Joe M mode here. I don't know if I believe this myself, but I'm throwing it out there for discussion.

Education level seems to be the number one correlating factor for low fertility, both on an individual and national basis. What if that is masking a real correlation? What if the enviros are fighting a memetic war? Perhaps they have so infiltrated the educational establishment that the longer you are in it, the more you are exposed to their memes and the less likely it is that you'll reproduce?

I'll go even further out on a limb. We know from dealing with Salafism, that highly networked organizations tend towards multiple factions with common goals but different means. What if the militants in the environmental movement have lost faith with the moderates. What if they are tired of wandering around the wilderness and want the promised land right now, dammit!?

What would the promised land look like? If we take the 90% population reduction at face value and read between the lines of other environmentalist goals, then it would have a total population of 600M. The equatorial and polar regions would be human free and given back to "nature." The bulk of humanity would reside in the temperate zones. Of the remaining population, 2/3 to 3/4 would be farmers operating at a near subsistence level -- the indigenous peoples and peasants that the enviros always claim to be protecting. Above the peasant class, there would be another stratum analogous to the "bourgeoisie specialists" of the early Soviet era. They would only exist in numbers sufficient to keep the lights on, bits flowing, hospitals open and in general maintain a late 20th century quality of life for the elites.

The elites would certainly be no more than 100 million (though this could grow is they were open to allowing more modern farming techniques). They would be areligious, amoral, and free in their own minds to exercise whatever form of coercion necessary to maintain control over the lower social substratums. Their state would have totalitarian police powers. No dissent would be allowed on the basic social structure and the means required to maintain that structure. Otherwise, limited debate could be practiced. Technological progress would be zero.
Posted by: 11A5S   2006-04-02 17:18  

#19  I'm with him. Let's see

300 USA
20 Australia
60 UK
130 Japan
35 Canada
5 New Zealand
5 Costa Rica

555 Total

We've got room to spare
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-04-02 17:00  

#18  he has no death wish - except for the rest of us undeserving consumers of air/space
Posted by: Frank G   2006-04-02 16:25  

#17  He needs a vist by Vager.
Posted by: SPoD   2006-04-02 16:21  

#16  Hell, maybe it is time to hit the Reset button... just not the one they're aiming for...
Posted by: Jaitle Thrineger2931   2006-04-02 16:06  

#15  I'll let some of you know what happens.
Posted by: Captain America   2006-04-02 16:00  

#14   Wasn't this the plan in Rainbow Six
Posted by: Dan Darling   2006-04-02 15:54  

#13  We've been talking about this here for as long as Rantburg's been around -- this subconscious death wish that so many seem to have. And when someone gives voice to that death wish, he gets a standing ovation.

I almost wrote "this subconscious death wish that so many in the West seem to have." Then I pulled back and realized that it's almost everywhere. The industrialized countries aren't breeding. Dar al Islam is edging closer to Allah-daemerung every day. Africa is killing itself with AIDS. Scanning the whole world, only the US, India, Australia, and parts of Latin America seem to have escaped the death wish. Even in the US, the coastal elites would just as soon drag us down into the morass.

It's almost certain then, isn't it? The nexus represented by the Evironmental Liberation Front is at some point going to launch a war virus attack from within even while we battle Islamism in its quest to destroy itself and take the world down with it.

It will be interesting to see if the environmentalists try an indiscriminate attack or if they attempt to innoculate the "chosen" before releasing a weaponized agent. This reminds me a lot of the scenario in Vernor Vinge's Peace War, where environmentalists use weird physics and bio-war to reduce the human population and gain global dominance.
Posted by: 11A5S   2006-04-02 15:47  

#12  This guy sets the bar for radical left wing personas non gratis.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2006-04-02 15:45  

#11  Professor Pianka began his speech by explaining that the general public is not yet ready to hear what he was about to tell us.

Maybe that's because members of the general public might want to track down and kill someone espousing such dangerous and psychotic notions as an intentional pandemic release of Ebola.

Pianka hammered his point home by exclaiming, “We're no better than bacteria!”

Au contraire, I think a bacteria like brewer's yeast, for instance, serves a far more noble and valuable role in this world than does our lunatic Mr. Pianka. It is precisely full-goose-bozo wingnuts like this rectal cavity that propel the perjorative notion of the "mad scientist."

I would like to see this individual monitored and surveiled 24-7. His access to all microbiological R&D facilities and sequencing laboratories should be banned entirely. A thorough psychological review and personality index should be performed upon this individual immediately.

What we have is self-loathing brought to pinnacle elevation. This has nothing to do with ecology, liberalism or science.

He spoke glowingly of the police state in China that enforces their one-child policy.

You are staring into the face of naked elitism locked in the embrace of pure evil.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-04-02 15:40  

#10  "...evolutionary ecologist and lizard expert..."

Figures.

Posted by: Dave D.   2006-04-02 15:27  

#9  oops...just checked out post #5 by Angie. What a creepy psycho.
Posted by: 2b   2006-04-02 15:05  

#8  I put it on Pg 1 because of the not-so-subtle threat of a deliberate biological attack by one of Pianka's worshippers.
Posted by: lotp   2006-04-02 15:04  

#7  I need to see this one confirmed. There were others at the event, someone can confirm or deny. I'm going to wait and see.
Posted by: 2b   2006-04-02 15:02  

#6  Cux he's an Errorist?
Posted by: Tholuper Ebbomose9507   2006-04-02 14:57  

#5  I had a hard time believing this, for various reasons.

But then I found this account of Pianka's talk by someone who admired it. It pretty much jibes with Mims's recollections.

Here are course evaluations from 1998 which show that Pianka was harping on about ebola at least eight years ago. This 2004 course description witters on about the same thing.

Morality aside, I find it pretty shocking that a biologist can't grasp the fact that humans have, to an extent, risen above biology. A disease that wiped out humanity would have to spring up very fast, before we had time to study it, and kill even the young and healthy very quickly.

And, I'll point out, if he thinks that humans have little use for biologists now, just wait until there's only 10% of us left.

Still don't know what this is doing on Page 1, though.
Posted by: Angie Schultz   2006-04-02 14:54  

#4  Yet another reason to be wary of the motives of "ecologists".
Posted by: eLarson   2006-04-02 14:53  

#3  Never that, Shep. Dr. Pianka is obviously Too Important to the Movement® to be among the casualties. Only the best and the brightest ought to survive, you know.
Posted by: Seafarious   2006-04-02 14:39  

#2  Sounds like he'd be right at home in Belbury.
Posted by: Korora   2006-04-02 14:36  

#1  Perhaps the good 'scientist' would do us the favour of being first to leave the human gene pool.
Posted by: ShepUK   2006-04-02 14:19  

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