Acharya Prashant highlights the alarming rate of species extinction, noting that between one hundred and one thousand species vanish daily, many before we even realize they existed. He explains that human activity has destroyed seventy to eighty percent of wildlife in the last fifty years. This destruction is often ignored because people suffer from a form of 'myopia,' focusing only on immediate, everyday issues while remaining blind to the larger ecological collapse. He warns that we are approaching critical tipping points, such as the potential self-destruction of the Amazon rainforest once it is halved, as its ecosystem can only survive within a dense, closed canopy. Acharya Prashant compares humanity's lack of response to the 'boiling frog' syndrome. Because climate change occurs gradually and carbon dioxide is invisible, people do not perceive the immediate danger. He predicts that within twenty years, India's crop yields will drop by thirty percent while the population continues to grow, leading to a massive food crisis. He criticizes the lack of public awareness and political will, noting that in some developed nations, climate change discourse is even being suppressed. He stresses that while northern countries might hope to gain farmable land from melting ice, tropical regions like India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh face catastrophic displacement and agricultural failure due to shifting monsoon patterns and rising sea levels.