1 00:00:14,709 --> 00:00:17,751 I'm going to start with a quote by the Dalai Lama, 2 00:00:17,752 --> 00:00:19,985 "Today, more than ever before, 3 00:00:19,986 --> 00:00:24,453 life must be characterized by a sense of universal responsibility 4 00:00:24,454 --> 00:00:27,869 not only nation to nation and human to human 5 00:00:27,870 --> 00:00:31,134 but human to other forms of life." 6 00:00:31,135 --> 00:00:32,824 That's what I'm here to talk about; 7 00:00:32,825 --> 00:00:35,022 I'm passionate about wildlife conservation, 8 00:00:35,023 --> 00:00:36,812 thus, other forms of life. 9 00:00:36,813 --> 00:00:39,392 In the last ten years, I've done everything I can 10 00:00:39,393 --> 00:00:41,500 to learn as much as I can about it. 11 00:00:41,501 --> 00:00:44,459 I've read books, I've talked to experts, 12 00:00:44,460 --> 00:00:48,065 I've gone to conferences, and traveled the world. 13 00:00:48,066 --> 00:00:52,004 I wanted to see for myself what's going on in these places. 14 00:00:52,005 --> 00:00:55,953 I visited chimpanzees in Uganda, 15 00:00:55,954 --> 00:01:00,083 I visited mountain gorilla families in Rwanda. 16 00:01:00,084 --> 00:01:05,287 Everywhere I go, the root cause of the dwindling numbers of these species 17 00:01:05,288 --> 00:01:08,213 is human population pressure. 18 00:01:08,214 --> 00:01:12,184 A recent visual example I saw of this is in Uganda, 19 00:01:12,185 --> 00:01:14,079 with farms going up the hillside 20 00:01:14,083 --> 00:01:17,125 right to the boundary of Bwindi National Park, 21 00:01:17,126 --> 00:01:20,920 part of the last remaining habitat for the mountain gorilla. 22 00:01:20,921 --> 00:01:22,801 Let's talk about population. 23 00:01:22,802 --> 00:01:26,051 We're at 6.7 billion people in the world today, 24 00:01:26,052 --> 00:01:30,892 expected to rise to nine or ten billion just in the next 40 years. 25 00:01:30,893 --> 00:01:33,780 The problem is we've already got a billion people 26 00:01:33,781 --> 00:01:36,210 who don't have enough to eat. 27 00:01:36,211 --> 00:01:39,977 What is it going to be like when we increase the pressure, 28 00:01:39,978 --> 00:01:41,586 the human population pressure, 29 00:01:41,587 --> 00:01:43,722 by another 50%? 30 00:01:43,723 --> 00:01:48,875 So, I think, what we are going to have are more conflicts, more wars 31 00:01:48,876 --> 00:01:50,687 over scarcer resources, 32 00:01:50,688 --> 00:01:52,898 less drinking water per person. 33 00:01:52,899 --> 00:01:57,270 We're going to have less food per person, more disease, and suffering. 34 00:01:57,271 --> 00:02:00,959 It's difficult to comprehend, but that's suffering on a global scale 35 00:02:00,960 --> 00:02:03,211 when we are talking about billions of people. 36 00:02:03,212 --> 00:02:05,921 I know this is sobering to think about. 37 00:02:05,922 --> 00:02:10,280 Is this a future we want to leave for our children and grandchildren? 38 00:02:10,281 --> 00:02:11,751 I don't think so either. 39 00:02:11,752 --> 00:02:13,832 So let's steer towards a better future. 40 00:02:13,833 --> 00:02:17,624 Thomas Berry wrote that our great work for our generation 41 00:02:17,625 --> 00:02:21,144 is to learn to live on the planet at least benignly. 42 00:02:21,145 --> 00:02:23,005 Why would we do that? 43 00:02:23,006 --> 00:02:26,617 One reason we would do that is that our fellow living things, 44 00:02:26,618 --> 00:02:28,237 who happen not to be human, 45 00:02:28,238 --> 00:02:31,032 don't have a representative in Congress; 46 00:02:31,033 --> 00:02:33,452 they don't have a lobbyist in Washington, 47 00:02:33,453 --> 00:02:35,410 they don't have a voice at the table, 48 00:02:35,411 --> 00:02:40,383 and yet, they are completely dependent for their survival on our good will; 49 00:02:40,384 --> 00:02:42,004 much like children. 50 00:02:42,694 --> 00:02:47,034 Let's talk about our country's population and our wildlife. 51 00:02:47,035 --> 00:02:50,575 We had about five million people in our country around 1800 52 00:02:50,576 --> 00:02:55,476 and about 290 million people in 2000 - more now, of course. 53 00:02:55,477 --> 00:02:59,523 At a conference, I met a scientist, Andrea Laliberte, 54 00:02:59,524 --> 00:03:01,216 who had done fascinating work 55 00:03:01,217 --> 00:03:05,906 comparing wildlife sightings in the 1700 and 1800 in our country 56 00:03:05,907 --> 00:03:09,204 to how wildlife range today in our country. 57 00:03:09,205 --> 00:03:13,325 This chart, the pinkish areas - I'm not sure how it looks here - 58 00:03:13,326 --> 00:03:16,102 are where we used to have black bears. 59 00:03:16,103 --> 00:03:18,495 The yellow areas are where they still are today 60 00:03:18,496 --> 00:03:21,251 - you see there's been a lot of recession there. 61 00:03:21,252 --> 00:03:22,592 This is the gray wolf; 62 00:03:22,593 --> 00:03:25,313 we used to have gray wolves running all over our country; 63 00:03:25,314 --> 00:03:27,489 - the pinkish areas you see on the chart - 64 00:03:27,490 --> 00:03:29,246 not so today. 65 00:03:29,247 --> 00:03:34,725 We used to have grizzly bears running over about half of our country; 66 00:03:34,726 --> 00:03:37,592 as you see, they've receded, and we don't have them. 67 00:03:37,593 --> 00:03:39,125 This was just 200 years ago. 68 00:03:39,126 --> 00:03:40,787 That yellow island-like area 69 00:03:40,788 --> 00:03:43,437 - that would be the Greater Yellowstone ecosystem. 70 00:03:43,438 --> 00:03:47,039 Let's look at a summary map: take a look at the right here - 71 00:03:47,040 --> 00:03:51,772 red is good, green is bad, white is very bad. 72 00:03:51,773 --> 00:03:54,740 You see that we've lost a lot of species in our country; 73 00:03:54,741 --> 00:03:58,450 those white areas mean that all of wildlife that was looked at, 74 00:03:58,451 --> 00:04:00,069 - in this case, in the 1800s - 75 00:04:00,070 --> 00:04:01,410 it's gone from our country. 76 00:04:01,411 --> 00:04:03,724 Do you think is normal not to have wildlife 77 00:04:03,725 --> 00:04:05,885 running around us all the time in our country? 78 00:04:05,886 --> 00:04:07,365 That's not normal. 79 00:04:07,366 --> 00:04:11,089 Let's bring it home, here, to the Front Range of Colorado; tonight. 80 00:04:11,090 --> 00:04:14,328 We used to have wild bison; they're gone. 81 00:04:14,329 --> 00:04:18,149 We used to have gray wolves; they're gone. 82 00:04:18,149 --> 00:04:21,463 We used to have-- - sorry, my clicker's little sluggish - 83 00:04:21,464 --> 00:04:25,582 grizzly bears; could've been right outside. 84 00:04:25,583 --> 00:04:27,066 They're gone. 85 00:04:27,067 --> 00:04:30,702 We used to have lynx, the cat; gone. 86 00:04:33,662 --> 00:04:35,080 Maybe they are not leaving. 87 00:04:35,081 --> 00:04:36,265 (Laughter) 88 00:04:36,266 --> 00:04:38,143 We used to have black-footed ferret, 89 00:04:38,144 --> 00:04:41,466 very dependent on prairie dog for their survival; gone. 90 00:04:41,467 --> 00:04:42,595 We used to have 91 00:04:42,596 --> 00:04:45,604 this beautiful, little bird: the mountain plover; also gone. 92 00:04:45,605 --> 00:04:48,103 This is sobering information, so what can we do? 93 00:04:48,104 --> 00:04:50,254 We can choose a better future. 94 00:04:50,255 --> 00:04:51,945 Let's apply the empathy 95 00:04:51,946 --> 00:04:56,368 that we have for our cats, dogs, and other pets 96 00:04:56,369 --> 00:04:58,953 to endangered species like this chimpanzee, 97 00:04:58,954 --> 00:05:00,502 but all endangered species. 98 00:05:00,503 --> 00:05:03,363 Let's have fewer children; that's one of the most powerful-- 99 00:05:03,364 --> 00:05:04,383 (Applause) 100 00:05:04,384 --> 00:05:05,492 - Thank you! - 101 00:05:05,493 --> 00:05:06,893 (Applause) 102 00:05:06,894 --> 00:05:08,639 - I didn't expect that response. - 103 00:05:08,640 --> 00:05:12,193 That's one of the most powerful things that we can do in the United States; 104 00:05:12,194 --> 00:05:14,850 if we want to have kids, great; let's have two. 105 00:05:14,851 --> 00:05:18,026 If want to have more than two kids, let's adopt. 106 00:05:18,516 --> 00:05:20,036 What else can we do? 107 00:05:22,302 --> 00:05:23,609 Well, we won't go there. 108 00:05:23,610 --> 00:05:24,763 So, what else can we do? 109 00:05:24,764 --> 00:05:29,065 We can help educate girls and provide economic opportunity to women 110 00:05:29,066 --> 00:05:30,476 in developing countries. 111 00:05:30,477 --> 00:05:32,169 (Applause) 112 00:05:32,170 --> 00:05:33,225 Amen! 113 00:05:33,226 --> 00:05:37,878 When we do that, those ladies choose to have to have smaller families, 114 00:05:37,879 --> 00:05:40,026 and we have more nutrition, more health care, 115 00:05:40,027 --> 00:05:41,757 more education for their kids, 116 00:05:41,758 --> 00:05:44,777 and the impact on the global population is huge. 117 00:05:44,778 --> 00:05:46,329 Finally, what we can do 118 00:05:46,330 --> 00:05:49,146 is we can give more to our planet. 119 00:05:49,147 --> 00:05:51,653 We can give half of our donations, let's say, 120 00:05:51,654 --> 00:05:53,679 to people and people-related causes, 121 00:05:53,680 --> 00:05:55,898 and half of our donations to the planet, 122 00:05:55,899 --> 00:05:59,559 to ocean conservation, to wildlife conservation. 123 00:06:00,201 --> 00:06:04,419 I want to mention, by the way, that today, we only give about 2 to 5% 124 00:06:04,420 --> 00:06:08,992 of all giving that goes to environment and wildlife as a category. 125 00:06:08,993 --> 00:06:12,275 You've been very patient with sometimes, a difficult topic; 126 00:06:12,276 --> 00:06:14,923 I just want to say that the thing to think about 127 00:06:14,924 --> 00:06:18,158 is do we change, as a species, what do we do, 128 00:06:18,159 --> 00:06:21,112 so that our fellow living beings who happen not to be human 129 00:06:21,113 --> 00:06:22,959 can thrive alongside of us 130 00:06:22,960 --> 00:06:26,236 a 100, 500, and 1,000 years from now. 131 00:06:26,237 --> 00:06:27,605 Thank you very much. 132 00:06:27,606 --> 00:06:29,032 (Applause)