There’s a video going around. A man throws a rock at a Hawaiian monk seal.
Not just any seal. One of the most endangered marine mammals on the planet.
An animal so rare, so protected, so woven into the identity of these islands that Hawaiians have a name for it: Ilio-holo-i-ka-uaua. The dog that runs in rough water.
The comments are predictable. Monster. What kind of person does that. I can’t believe and yes. It’s wrong. Full stop.
But here’s what nobody is asking: what kind of world produces that man?
He wasn’t desperate. He wasn’t hungry. He was on Maui. Which somehow makes it worse, and also more revealing. Because cruelty born of privilege is a different animal entirely. It doesn’t come from need. It comes from something hollowed out.
We are very good at pointing. We are very bad at pausing.
The monk seal has survived millions of years. It outlasted ice ages, predators, shifting oceans. There are fewer than 1,500 left. And one afternoon, a man with nothing pressing on his conscience picked up a rock.
Nobody does that in a vacuum.
That’s not an excuse. It’s a question worth sitting with.
When a society optimizes for stimulation over meaning, it produces people who throw rocks at things ancient and irreplaceable, just to feel something, just to do something, just because nothing is telling them not to.
The monk seal didn’t need to be rare to deserve better.
But knowing it is rare should stop all of us cold.
Not just to point. To wonder what we’re building here, and who we’re becoming inside it.




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