Opinion I Murder Wasps: How Is This Different Than Bombing Iran?

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Link (Archive)

I Murder Wasps: How Is This Different Than Bombing Iran?​

While wasps may cause me harm, they also have a legitimate function in the larger world of nature, a function often hidden to us humans, limited as we are in our perspective about the world we inhabit—and often destroy—mindless to the larger repercussions.
IMG_6627.webp
So far this spring, well armed with a can of some horrifically noxious-smelling, lethal substance, I have killed multiple red paper wasps.

I’ve honed the technique to perfection: I see a wasp flitting around, grab the can, carefully follow it (likely a her, the queen, at this time of the year) around, knowing the wasp will fairly soon come to rest on something, and then . . . within seconds, it is writhing on the ground in a fit of whatever wasp-agony feels like.

Every once in a while, the wandering insect will lead me to a nest, and thus I commit waspicide many times over.

Yes, a sense of relief fills me. So does guilt. I am, rightly, terrified of a wasp sting—one got to me last year, and my arm was swollen and painful for three weeks, plus I’m prone to anaphylaxis, a genuinely scary and life-threatening reaction.

And yet . . .

No wasps directly attacked me. Ever.​

I’m also aware that not one of the wasps I murdered had directly attacked me. These ferocious stinging creatures are beneficial to the environment, especially for the many Peggy Martin Roses that I have all over my yard. In addition, the wasps and their larvae are food for other living organisms such as cardinals, starlings, woodpeckers, praying mantises, dragonflies, and some mammals.

In other words, while these wasps may cause me harm, they also have a legitimate function in the larger world of nature, a function often hidden to us humans, limited as we are in our perspective about the world we inhabit—and often destroy—mindless to the larger repercussions.

Could this be the never-ending challenge of being human with evolutionarily unusual destructive abilities? That we consistently carry and too often act on the temptation to use whatever power we may have, or hope we have, to destroy anything we imagine might threaten us?

Here’s the problem: the ingrained fear of anything different, anything that might make us face our hubris that our way, and only our way, matters; anything that might prove us wrong with long-held beliefs.

This recent Wall Street Journal article about increased enforcement of “right-think” in China serves as a powerful and sad metaphor for the human condition.

A revealing snippet from the article:

The new law adopted by China’s rubber-stamp legislature on Thursday mandates the Communist Party to ensure the country’s 55 officially recognized ethnic minorities embrace a common language and culture centered on the country’s Han Chinese majority. It cements Xi’s reversal of decades-old ethnic policies that had tolerated more expressions of diversity.

The law on “promoting ethnic unity and progress” prescribes efforts to build a “shared spiritual home” for all ethnic groups. This includes the use of standard Chinese as the primary language in schools and public settings, and programs to promote official narratives on history, ethnicity and religion, according to the adopted text published by state media.

The law also requires parents and guardians to teach minors to love the Communist Party and the motherland. It authorizes the imposition of legal penalties on officials and institutions that neglect their duties to foster national unity, as well as on people deemed to have sown ethnic discord or engaged in separatist acts.

Echoes of anti-diversity efforts in the US​

Many echoes here of the anti-diversity effort that has taken over much of the US, where it has become increasingly mandatory that no views differing from the “usual” worm their way into the ears and brains of those who currently hold power.

Uniformity takes on the highest value; differing ideas or ways of seeing the world, economics, politics, religion, or society mean exclusion, even expulsion. Echo chambers grow into desired commodities; comfort without challenge explodes in desirability.

Yes, it’s easier. I’ve lived in that world—my many years in the far-right niche of evangelicalism where the slightest deviation from the “absolutely true doctrines of the faith” earned an eternal seat at the shunned table. In other words, disagree and face elimination. I paid the price—“heresy is mine, saith the Christy.”

But I do ask: is it healthy to live without diversity: diversity of species, of climate, of cultures, of opinions? In the long run, it was far healthier for me, but my experience is not necessarily universal.
IMG_6628.jpeg

What is threatening? How do we decide?​

How do we decide when an opinion or action “may” be threatening to our very existence? When is the first strike the most legitimate choice? What about the harm that such a first strike causes to the innocent? How does one measure and manage the collateral damage?

How much is too much? Who makes those decisions? Who advises them? What kind of expertise do they have? What hidden agendas lurk behind their words? What passion for power, legitimate or illegitimate, undergirds the whisperings, the subtle nudges in one direction or another?

Any student of history knows that the most destructive of wars has been precipitated by the most petty of reasons. And yes, sometimes those wars are necessary; sometimes the wasps must die—maybe.

But I still ask, as I sit in my moral dilemma—why is my life worth more than the wasp’s, especially when it has not directly attacked me?

Would love some thoughts from others here.
 
Many echoes here of the anti-diversity effort that has taken over much of the US, where it has become increasingly mandatory that no views differing from the “usual” worm their way into the ears and brains of those who currently hold power.
Oh shut the fuck up
 
No wasps directly attacked me. Ever.
It's legitimately one of the most retarded analogies I ever heard. Wasps would absolutely attack a person for being nearby and are a massive hazards for everyone in the vicinity. At least bees are less homicidal, but even then the analogy works on the ideas that:
1. "I wasn't attacked" - They continually threaten to attack your country, and have attacked other western countries via funding terrorism.
2. "Muslims are part of nature" - Regular leftist savage worship.
 
Please normalize the comparison of Muslims to insects, journoscum

My enemies are insectoid subhuman bugmen
 
Many echoes here of the anti-diversity effort that has taken over much of the US, where it has become increasingly mandatory that no views differing from the “usual” worm their way into the ears and brains of those who currently hold power.
Diversity has been imposed on the many by the few who don't have to live alongside the consequences of this divisive policy.
It has never worked and never will.
 
How much do you want to bet that if the author of this article read an article like this about Israel, one that compared Jews to wasps and was this shockingly lackadaisical about the idea of them being killed, she would be screaming about how anti-semitic it is and that the author should be in prison?

Oh, same author, by the way:
With the privilege of retirement, I awaken slowly many mornings and enter my morning ritual. I stay quietly in bed, beginning the day with prayer and some moments of meditation.

These days, I particularly consider the fact that, daily, that morning ritual is accompanied by the comfort of a decent bed, comfortable bed linens, and a quiet, temperature-controlled environment.

My thoughts then move to the people of Ukraine, with innocent civilians relentlessly bombarded by Russian ruthlessness and subhuman cruelty, coupled with plans for the genocide of Ukrainians.

What greeted those Ukrainian first moments of awakening on this day? What horrors will they face in the next 24 hours? How will they feed themselves today? How will they protect their children? Care for their elderly? Even greater, will Ukraine survive?
Impressive amounts of selective empathy.
 
Look, I’m very much a tree hugger, and any birdies, bees or hornets or butterflies that get trapped in my greenhouse will get gently escorted to freedom, but I’m full Total Wasp Death if they’re within the bounds of my property. Any wasp nest I see starting off gets knocked down and nuked. I took four out last summer, all by myself with a long stick and some spray. it was like waspmageddon. They’ve got all the rest of the world to build their nests in, you try it in my garage, or in my greenhouse, the Raid is coming out.
If you ever revived multiple wasp stings at once you’ll know how dangerous they are . It can kill you. They do attack, they’re not like bees who are chill and don’t go for you.
This article smells of Effective Altruism
 
Many echoes here of the anti-diversity effort that has taken over much of the US, where it has become increasingly mandatory that no views differing from the “usual” worm their way into the ears and brains of those who currently hold power.
This shit is retarded. Has this person ever been to America?

I think they're from Texas. If they've ever been to a Texan city, they should know better.

I see gay watermelon stickers and boomers wearing kefiyahs all over my neighborhood in Baltimore.

"no views differing from the usual" my ass
 
"Have you considered that like the wasp, who has hidden benefits to nature, a theocratic repressive dictatorship that oppresses women and gays while sponsoring acts of terrorism might have a hidden benefit to the world? Like keeping evil Drumpf in check?"

That's what the author is trying to say here. After 47 years of bipartisan opposition to Iran, we should support them now because there is nothing that is wrong or off the table if it's in service of defeating Drumpf, ensuring a permanent Democrat majority, and having the Correct choice made on all decisions or issues as we finally End History.
 
Not only Muslims live in the countries that Israel wants to bomb. I think many people have been fooled that this is about getting rid of Muslims, when it's about getting rid of the entire non Jewish population, including Christians.
 
Yeah, this whole article falls apart when you rightfully realize a singular wasp is still 100x more important to the ecosystem than the entirety of Muslim history is to humanity.
That's just factually wrong the ancient muslim strongholds were actually a bit of a utopia like ancient india and egypt and our algebra and mathematics/numerical system came from them. The first "modernized" multi ward hospital was actually built in Baghdad, they also preserved and helped translate ancient greek writings and also built the world's first college in Morocco if i'm not mistaken. Muslims genuinely contributed a lot to the world BUT that was over 1200 years ago and just like indians the inbred subhuman savages who contribute nothing but rape filth and murder today try to act like the deeds of people whose bones turned to dust millenia ago makes -them- superior to everyone else.

Ancient muslims were a powerhouse of scientific philosophical and medical advancements which is WHY they were so powerful and wealthy, modern muslims of the middle east are worthless subhumans who don't deserve the oxygen they waste. The secular muslims of the Mediterranean are typically pretty chill though, I mean Albania is a predominantly muslim country and they have anti discrimination laws for minorities, alcohol, music and gay clubs/bars. If you're going to shit talk others do it in a way that is intelligent well researched and devastating instead of spewing bullshit and making yourself look retarded.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom