Hey, I don't personally dismiss that pain, but in a way your post confirmed what I suggested: many people do dismiss it and don't think twice about hurting animals and destroying the environment.

But I'm with you on this one. I refuse to visit a good friend of mine in the country because his wife insists that he kill any viper that strays near their house. Vipers around here are not dangerous, and just like possums and buzzards there, they are actually quite beneficial. And I think they're beautiful. I also love seagulls, even though I don't know anybody else in Helsinki who more than just barely tolerates them. Last spring and early summer I had a chance to watch fledglings grow up near my window, and that was a wonderful experience.

I think you just misunderstood my point, which was that this film is not going to impress people who are not already worried about peak oil, climate change etc. The rest of us will find it quite inspiring.

I think he was replying to me?

Well, my post was more an elaborate, "Speak For Yourself." I don't deny that other people have "spiritual pain". I mean, how could I? I am just suggesting that it is not a generalized human predicament, and that, perhaps, nothing important on a large scale can be obtained from that sort of analysis.