How Dinosaurs Were Made Extinct
by
Paul Cantor
Previously
by Paul Cantor: Flying
Solo
Originally
published December 1, 1998
I have just
been reading W.J.T. Mitchell's The
Last Dinosaur Book. Miraculously, it manages to use the
subject of dinosaurs as a way of attacking capitalism. Don't ask
me how he does it Mitchell goes on and on about Barney, fossil
fuels, Jurassic
Park, off-road vehicles, McDonald's commercials, Andrew
Carnegie somehow it all adds up to an indictment of multinational
corporations and what they have done to and with the great beasts
of the Mesozoic Era. I didn't much like the book, but it started
me thinking: does the Left now have a lock on paleontology too?
Take the case
of the mysterious extinction of the dinosaurs some 65 million years
ago. Many theories have been offered to explain this event. Some
have pointed to climatic changes, some to dinosaur overpopulation.
Perhaps the most popular theory at the moment attributes the demise
of the giant beasts to a killer asteroid, whose impact on the earth
kicked up enough dust and debris to block out the sun and snuff
out the lives of dinosaurs all over the world.
All these theories
conveniently conjure up various subjects of left-wing paranoia
the grand antithetical fears of global warming and nuclear winter
and they all insidiously suggest remarkable new roles for
the federal government, like protecting us from comets and other
objects from outer space.
Are even the
dinosaurs lining up against the cause of the free market these days?
Well I for one, as a student of Austrian economics, have a more
plausible explanation: the extinction of the dinosaurs must have
been the result of government intervention in the marketplace. Though
my speculations have met with some skepticism from the paleontological
establishment, I am finally prepared to go public with my findings
after a visit to Montana this past summer which allowed me to examine
the fossil record firsthand and to reconstruct the true story of
the rise and fall of the dinosaurs.
It all began
in the late Triassic Period, when the government decided to come
to the aid of cold-blooded creatures everywhere. Federal authorities
were deeply disturbed by the appearance of the first warm-blooded
animals, who seemed to have an unfair advantage over their cold-blooded
brethren they moved faster, were more alert, and generally
seemed to get a lot more done, particularly during the winter months.
Concerned by
the possibility that warm-blooded animals might end up displacing
cold-blooded animals entirely, the government passed the Body Temperature
Stabilization Act. Subsidizing cold-blooded animals at the expense
of warm-blooded, this bill eliminated all federal taxes on the former
and doubled them on the latter. The bill also tried to outlaw winter,
but this move was declared unconstitutional by the courts.
The trouble
with this seemingly enlightened piece of legislation began when
the National Body Temperature Stabilization Control Board ruled
that dinosaurs were cold-blooded and thus granted them enormous
tax breaks. As one bureaucrat put it, "Their name means 'thunder
lizard,' doesn't it? That makes them reptiles and therefore cold-blooded.
Case closed." Of course the latest scientific evidence today
suggests that the dinosaurs were warm-blooded and closer in some
respects to birds than to reptiles. Thus the dinosaurs, as the only
animal group combining warm-bloodedness with tax breaks, prospered
and soon were overruning the earth.
Alarmed at
this new development, the government decided to impose a head tax
on the dinosaurs. Well into the late Triassic Period, all animals
subject to taxes had been assessed by the pound. Government officials
figured they could reduce the proliferation of dinosaurs by taxing
them by number instead of by weight. Still concerned with the uncompetitiveness
of cold-blooded animals, the government also instituted a new tax
penalizing the increase in brain size that was occurring as a result
of evolution.
The impact
of this new tax legislation on the dinosaurs was immediate and dramatic:
taxed by number not weight, they found it expedient to grow fewer
but larger. At the same time, with the new tax penalty on intelligence,
their brains grew smaller. In the end the policy of the federal
government succeeded in producing a remarkable mirror image of itself
in the Jurassic dinosaur: a large, sluggish, bloated, overgrown
body animated by a brain the size of a pea.
You might think
that the government would have been overjoyed with this result.
But as soon as federal policy resulted in colossal land animals
bestriding the earth, the cry went up everywhere: "Break up
the dinosaurs." Resentment was particularly strong against
one species of dinosaur, the Tyrannosaurus rex, which as the largest
predator ever to walk the face of the earth was accused of predatory
pricing by the Justice Department.
Oddly enough,
the campaign against the dinosaurs was led by one particularly horrifying
species of dinosaur, the dreaded Algorosaurus. This creature actually
managed to convince its fellow dinosaurs that they had become too
large for their own good and were consuming an unjustifiably large
portion of the earth's resources. With their morale broken, and
faced with the prospect of hundreds of millions of years of litigation,
the dinosaurs eventually signed consent letters with the Justice
Department, agreeing to break themselves up into several pieces,
no fewer than five or six in most cases.
Many
have dated the demise of the dinosaurs from this moment. The fossil
record seems to bear them out. To this date a whole intact dinosaur
specimen has never been found anywhere. Indeed, judging by the fossil
evidence, by the time the federal government was through with the
dinosaurs, it had picked them to the bone. Once the most successful
creatures on the planet, the dinosaurs ended up wiped out everywhere
across the globe approximately 65 million years ago.
At that point
the government placed the dinosaurs on the Endangered Species list.
To be fair to the government, they actually made this declaration
some 3 million years before the dinosaur extinction. Unfortunately,
the official notices protecting the dinosaurs were sent by regular
mail. Then as now the slogan of the Post Office was "When it
absolutely, positively has to be there in roughly the same geologic
era." Since the mail delivery in this case was off by some
5 million years, the dinosaurs were already extinct when the federal
government invoked its protection over them.
Such is the
story of the extinction of the dinosaurs, at least as I have been
able to reconstruct it.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
August
27, 2011
Paul
A. Cantor [send him mail]
is Professor of English at the University of Virginia and author
of Gilligan
Unbound: Pop Culture in the Age of Globalization.
Hear and
see him on Mises
Media.
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