Dr. Jack Wheeler
July 16, 2021
It is noon Friday (7/16) here in the South Luangwa region of Zambia. Late Wednesday afternoon a pride of lions took down a young male Cape buffalo. You can see the lioness on the right smothering the buffalo to death with her jaws clamped upon its mouth. It struggled in vain, and the entire pride of five adults and four cubs began feasting upon it while still in its death throes.
The scene I am now gazing upon as I write this is the opposite of what is pictured above. It is deeply peaceful and quietly serene. Two hippos are lazing in a lily-covered pond. Impala antelope and a half-dozen zebra are calmly grazing in the tree-dotted grassland beyond, accompanied by a few warthogs and a small troop of baboons.
Yet they all must be alert, for danger can instantly arise. At the slightest warning, the impala and zebra will freeze to stare in the direction of the warning, ready to do whatever needed to save their lives from predators. That’s life’s lesson in Africa.
It’s a lesson that is easily lost in the domesticated safety of civilized society, resulting in unawareness of the grisly lethality of human predators always lurking within it. Societies, cultures, and nations then don’t realize the danger until it is too late, and end up like the buffalo.
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