Hooked up to the fetal monitor and eagerly awaiting the birth
“If you want to write a blog, write on this,” Bernie said to me as he pointed to today’s newspaper headline.
I’d been planning to write on waiting and how I’m no good at it—especially after our run to the hospital yesterday. We were sure our daughter was going to deliver our first grandchild. But thirty minutes after she’d been examined and hooked up to the fetal monitor, we were sent home to wait longer. We’re still waiting.
The front page headline alarmed me—“Boffins Clean Up Bovine Belches”—even though I had no idea what a boffin is. (After great research, I learned it’s a British slang word for scientist.) First of all, if Bernie was concerned enough to point out the story to me, I knew it had to be vitally important. He’d said nothing about Darfur, Gaza, presidential elections and rioting in Kenya, and the daily casualty figures from Iraq, Afghanistan, and other international hot spots. I knew there had to be some impending crisis with cows that was being averted with such breaking news.
Here it is. For roughly one dollar a day, we can mix cysteine and nitrate in livestock feed. This results in methane production being suppressed during the digestion process. And voila! No methane is expelled when a cow belches. If you’re still not impressed, let me add the clincher. When cows don’t belch methane, global greenhouse gas emissions are cut by about 5 percent. What good news! No more worries! We’re been saved from global warming. Let the celebration begin!
Of course, while “we’ve” been saved from global warming, 24,000 people die daily of hunger (one person every 3.6 seconds). A quick Google search and you can find organization after organization pleading for one dollar a day to save the world’s starving, estimated by the World Health Organization to be one-third of everyone in the entire world. Children and elderly are the ones who suffer most. Statistics indicate that 15 million children die annually from hunger. Perhaps even more amazing is the fact that malnutrition is implicated in more than half of all the deaths of children worldwide.
According to UNICEF, nearly one in four people around the world lives on less than one dollar a day, while the world’s 358 billionaires have assets exceeding the combined annual incomes of countries whose populations make up 45 percent of the world’s people. And we’re talking about what one dollar a day fed to cows could do to reduce belching and greenhouse gases? Absurd is one of the nicest words I can think of.
Don’t get me wrong. I am concerned about greenhouse gases and global warming. It’s why I’m sitting with an afghan wrapped around my legs rather than running our gas stove so that it heats our room to more than 62 degrees. It’s why I walk as often as possible so that I don’t add to Tokyo’s air pollution. There are many other measures we take to reduce our damage to the environment. But let me say it clearly: I am far more concerned with world hunger and the selfishness of the developed world than I am about cows that burp methane gas. When are we going to demand governments and industry—even churches—change some of their priorities?
“Woe to you who are complacent in Zion,” the prophet Amos warned the self-satisfied rich of his day who were secure in their wealth and prosperity (Amos 6:1). Hundreds of years later, Jesus himself issued a stark admonition about our responsibility to care for these nameless, faceless, voiceless, helpless people in the world through a parable of sheep and goats. “‘I tell you the truth,’ he declared, ‘whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me.’ Then they will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life” (Matthew 25:45-46).
I feel sick at my stomach, and belching is not the answer.