Easter Island Ecocide

G.I. Joe:
You know, Doc, every time I see photos of Easter Island, I feel this pit in my stomach. Those Moai staring out over a stripped land. It’s like the island is accusing us.

David Suzuki:
It should accuse us. Easter Island is a warning carved in stone. A society that cut down every tree to prove power, status, immortality. They turned a living ecosystem into monuments to ego.

G.I. Joe:
Back then it was stone heads. Today it’s glass and steel.

David Suzuki:
Exactly. Instead of Moai, we build towers. Giant towers. Trump Towers, or their cousins everywhere on Earth. Every so-called alpha male wants to own one—his name stamped into the skyline like a territorial mark.

G.I. Joe:
A vertical chest-thump.

David Suzuki:
Yes. “Look how big I am. Look how high I rise.” But underneath, it’s the same story: forests gone, water poisoned, communities displaced. The island just got bigger.

G.I. Joe:
Easter Island ran out of trees. We’re running out of everything—soil, fish, patience. But the monuments keep going up.

David Suzuki:
Because we confuse growth with progress. The Moai didn’t feed people. Towers don’t either. They don’t clean air, don’t cool cities, don’t heal ecosystems. They just symbolize dominance.

G.I. Joe:
So we’re reenacting ecocide… with better marketing.

David Suzuki:
And worse consequences. The Rapa Nui were isolated. We’re global. There’s no other island to escape to.

G.I. Joe:
Funny thing—those Moai look solemn, almost ashamed.

David Suzuki:
I think they’re asking a question: Did you learn anything?
And so far, our answer is more concrete, more steel, more towers scraping the sky while the ground beneath us collapses.

G.I. Joe:
Maybe the real alpha move now isn’t owning a tower.

David Suzuki:
It’s knowing when to stop building monuments to yourself—and start repairing the living world that keeps you alive.

Ecocide: Protectors of the Earth

REVELATION 11:8 The nations raged, but your wrath has come, and the time for the dead to be judged, and to recompense your servants, the prophets, and the holy ones and those who fear your name, the small and the great alike, and to destroy those who destroy the earth.”

ec·o·cide

destruction of the natural environment by deliberate or negligent human action.

“their crime is nothing less than attempted ecocide”