“My experience leads me to assert that stars and worlds share evolutionary intelligence and other information across vast distances instantaneously, all day, every day. There are many fascinating implications of this theory, but for me one of the most compelling is that by obliterating Earth’s anciently evolved ecologies, we are not only destroying priceless intelligences and ecologies necessary to our own survival; we are committing a crime that touches every living world in timespace, by depriving those worlds of both the conserved intelligences of Earth’s ecologies and the medium through which this conversation travels.

The fact that human science is presently unaware of any process by which such information could be exchanged is relatively trivial; human science is aware of far less than .0001% of what is actually going on in and as organisms and living worlds, and our studies of physics — however seemingly ‘advanced’ to by some of our standards — are still embryonic in terms of the context from which we arise and in which we exist.”

Omnicide is lethal to our own lives and world… but its effects are not… and I suggest cannot be… merely local to Earth in space or time. This is part of why we must find ways to interrupt the behavior of our species as it relates to the remaining ecologies. These ecologies represent something we do not even have a term for the class of. And there are vast arrays of biocrucial concepts that our human lexicons contain no instance or analog of.”

— an anonymous informant

Jan 27, 2018

004550

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