Humming Bird Humans - The
Model for a New Century?
8 July 2009
Volume 11, Issue 27
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Humming birds are one of the
most interesting of GodÕs creatures. In the forested regions of the American
West, human residents provide feeders for humming birds stocked with sugar
water nectar as a favorite pastime.
On my property I have two
such devices both of which attract the little fellows, but they do it much
differently. Both feeders have glass reservoirs to hold the juice, and both
have red plastic bodies, and flowers with yellow accents. Both a the bottles
hold a little less than a quart of nectar which is all made in large batches,
so the juice is essentially identical in each jug. (See the website article for
pictures of humming birds and the feeders.)
One feeder has six feeding
stations and came from Wal-Mart. The other, a much more sophisticated and
engineered design, with four stations, was purchased from a farm and ranch
supply known as Big R.
For reasons known only to
the humming birds, the feeder from Wal-Mart continually feeds many more birds
than does the Big R station. At times there is well over a dozen birds humming
around the Wal-Mart, zooming here and there, grabbing quickly their chance to
snap up a taste of sweetness. ÒZoom, zoom, drink, and flit! Flit, flit, gulp,
and zoom!Ó
Mean while at the Big R,
three or four birds are sitting on the little perches drinking nectar at their
leisure and to their fill. ÒAh, life of a little humming bird sure has good
times such as this!Ó
Do the humming birds for
some reason seem to think that the nectar is different at Wal-Mart than at Big
R? Just as in the real world, the prices for similar items are pretty much the
same at both Wal-Mart and Big R. And just as in the real world, where the
prices at Big R are a little more, those increased prices are generally
reflected in higher quality. There is no difference in the nectar at either
feeder.
There must be something that
attracts more humming birds to the Wal-Mart feeder than the Big R feeder. Which brings up two questions for this
article. Are humming birds similar in their marketing taste to their human
counter parts? Second and potentially of deeper meaning, are humming birds as
smart as humans, or have humans in this new century digressed to the
intelligence of humming birds?
Before we look at these
questions, it must be said that both humans and humming birds are still known
for their industry. For humans to go to either Wal-Mart or Big R they must
journey to Colville. The closest other locations for Wal-Mart or Big R are on
the northern fringes of Spokane about sixty miles distant.
How far humming birds
journey to my feeders I do not know, but it must be a comparable distance, in
humming bird scale, because I doubt that there is some grand design for humming
birds to build humming bird suburbs around human habitations. It would not be
evolutionary wise to build such a sugar water paradise and then have the humans
not show up on schedule to feed the little critters during the summer, or leave
just when they have become accustomed to the free meals.
This evolutionary concept
would also have to assume, as do many humans, that humming birds evolve in
their lifetimes, not over eons of time. I would assume that humming birds adapt
to their environment of that particular year and food supply. If there is a
predominance of humming bird homes near human habitation it may have to do with
direct associations relating to natural habitat nothing more. So it seems just
has with humans, humming birds seem to be attracted to Wal-Mart because it is
showier than Big R.
Now for something more
germane to this time in history. Humming birds are cute little fellows –
we could call them lightweights. Humans really are not light in weight in the
physical sense. In fact they are becoming more obese all the time. Perhaps that
is because we spend too much time drinking sugar water, and not enough eating
healthy food. Humming birds were designed to live on nectar from plants, and
they seem to be able to handle our feeding sugar syrups with ease.
In the broader spectrum
however, humans are becoming intellectual lightweights, not just in their
shopping habits. Conservative commentators are becoming more frequent in their
critique of President ObamaÕs decisions being lightweight and na•ve. If you
give these critics at least some merit in their observations, you must still admit
that the PresidentÕs intellectual prowess is still at the top of Hells Canyon,
while his fellow Democrat leaders are down near the Snake River, over a mile
below.
When it comes to
Republicans, it looks like Sarah Palin, by far the most popular political
leader, decided to reassess her life and resign as Governor of Alaska. This was
preceded by the sexual affair of Governor Mark Sanford of South Carolina pretty
much ending his political future. Here we have another extreme in physical
distance, but at the same time there seems no substance of any Republican
leadership in the intermediate distances either.
To put it bluntly in the
summer of 2009, other than President Obama, who in either party is a serious
political force in the United States as we hopefully move forward out of this
economic situation?
Maybe the problem with
America and the world for that matter really is not the problem with leadership
per se, the problem is with humans that just want to congregate around the
human humming bird feeders, either Wal-Mart or Big R, rather than venture out
into the big cruel world and find our own substance. America has no leadership,
because as long as the human humming bird feeders exist there is no real need
for leadership.
President Obama so far has
squandered an excellent opportunity to promote his vision of ÒChange we can
believe in,Ó into actually ÒChange we can believe in.Ó Instead it has become a
prescription for change that special interests and especially megalithic global
financial institutions and corporations can ÒcontinueÓ to believe in. In that respect it is not really change
at all, but a continuation of an unsustainable compassionate liberal rather
than the quickly scuttled compassionate conservative of George Bush.
Both Bush and Obama seem to
think that keeping the human humming bird feeders full should be the prime
focus of their presidencies. The problem is that the sugar water has turned to
just plain water, and even that liquidity is in short supply when it comes to
the excess of consumer goods the feeders were created to dispense.
It looks like the economic
stimulus package that was ÒdesignedÓ to have unemployment peak at eight percent
and by now return to a realistic seven percent, either was not all that well
designed or the design criteria had no semblance to the real world. The
unemployment rate of nine and a half percent just before the Independence Day
holiday seemed to be in some other utopian hopeful world rather than real
reality on planet earth.
All this means in simple
terms, that even humming birds can understand, in an empirical sense man cannot
and does not control the economic climate any more than he can control the
physical climate.
With the passage of the
recent Òclimate changeÓ bill by the House of Representatives, the President
used California as a leader in the way the rest of the country should manage
its energy. However starting things off with an example of leadership, in which
the example state is bankrupt and issuing IOUs for their debt generally is not
a good place to begin a discussion.
California uses less energy
than the rest of the nation because it has the most temperate climate in the
country, hence it doesnÕt need as much air conditioning in summer and heating
in winter. Added to that, Californians have to import twenty percent of the
energy they do use, because of environmental restrictions on new power plants,
they canÕt feed their own humming energy needs. I would suppose it is sort of a
lightweight illustration to use for a good example: A dry humming bird feeder.
In more pithy terms to emulate a state that is financially and energetically
bankrupt is not a good way to influence a skeptical audience to accept a
seriously flawed bill and program.
Furthermore does this imply
that bankrupting the country is acceptable so that we can attempt to save the
earth for the pantheistic religion of global warming? At least Nancy Pelosi
stated that the bill would create jobs, jobs, jobs, and more jobs. This is
another figment of political fantasy, but at least that concept has the spin
that might focus on the real need over the long run.
So for the present, since we
really canÕt tell one humming bird from another, we must assume that humming
birds are better off without real leaders or at least leaders we can tell as
such. For once your feeder runs out of nectar humming birds adjust almost
instantly. Once the feeder is refilled it only takes a short period of time and
the whole group has returned.
As for we humans there are
real doubts that our sugar water is ever coming back. In fact we have lost
fortunes and significant retirement sugar stocks, by believing the prophets of
continual sweet times. Furthermore the prophets seem to have a lightweight
humming bird view of good times are just another stimulus away, the last was
too lightweight for the required sweet stimuli. It again is time for another
big dose of debt stimulus sweetening.
Perhaps it is time for us to
go out and prospect for our own plants that offer sweet nectar and not believe
that humans are capable of providing a filled humming bird feeder for more than
a brief summer season.
Early in September, the
humming birds no longer come to the full humming bird feeders. It seems that
they have answered a deeper call beyond an easy meal. That call was understood
and required migration to warmer climates so that they could return to the
northern forests and Wal-Mart and Big R feeders next spring. Sure enough those
feeders are up and make the forest summer a pure delight, but if humming birds
had decided to cancel the migration, those feeders would no longer be a gift
for either the birds or the humans.
Will humans look at the
world that has significantly changed seasons and say to themselves personally
and collectively?
ÒWhat we need to do now that
the sweet nectar of the feeders is gone, is to look to ourselves and to GodÕs
order to find a better and more self sufficient way to feed ourselves and also
the world. From now on we will take a pass on our perception of humming bird
logic. For it is written that humans were created in the image of God.
Therefore we are to be stewards of GodÕs creation, not worshipers or gods of
creation. We are smarter than GodÕs beautiful and industrious humming birds,
therefore we probably should act that way.Ó
Therein lies the logic of
AmericaÕs founders of 233 years ago. In some semblance of human intellect we
must return to those roots and cast off the lightweight fantasies of our
current sugar water diet.
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