This Is What I Think.

Friday, January 29, 2016

This is it. This is what happens.




The beings who planted life here on this planet ( There is *no* God, children. There are no Gods. ) also crafted a limiting factor.

Those beings were intelligent enough to know how their race of human beings would evolve and mature.

They could predict our lack of imagination would reach this very point we are now.

They planted a disease that would wipe out the vast majority of the population when unleashed.

Horrifying, you say? Impossible, you cry?

They made the decision before any of you even existed. Before any human individual even took it's first steps.

They decided to wipe you out and they didn't lose a single moments sleep over it.

*YOU* are doing the same thing every day. Zipping around spewing out your poisons. You are killing the present and the future every day of your meaningless and pointless pathetic lives.

So don't act all shocked and surprised when The End begins in earnest.

*YOU* caused it.

AND YOU'RE OKAY WITH THAT!

BECAUSE YOU CAN'T BE INCONVENIENCED!










http://robertscribbler.com/2016/01/28/zika-and-the-new-climate-dystopia-human-hothouse-as-disease-multiplier/

robertscribbler


by ROBERTSCRIBBLER on JANUARY 28, 2016


Zika and the New Climate Dystopia — Human Hothouse as Disease Multiplier

As of today, authorities in Brazil, Colombia, Jamaica, El Salvador and Venezuela were urging women to avoid getting pregnant… It is unthinkable. Or rather, it is something out of a science fiction story, the absolute core of a dystopian future. — Bill McKibben in a recent statement on global warming and the now pandemic Zika virus.

******

There are a plethora of diseases out there. Diseases we don’t know about. Diseases locked away in far-off, rarefied corners of the world. Diseases that operate in small niche jungle environments. Diseases that live in only cave systems or within a single species. Diseases that were locked away millions of years ago in the now-thawing ice. Diseases that, if given a vector — or a means to travel outside of their little rarefied organic or environmental niches — can wreak untold harm across wide spans of the globe.










http://www.e-reading.org.ua/bookreader.php/71211/Clancy_-_Rainbow_Six.html


Rainbow Six (1998)

Tom Clancy


CHAPTER 17

BUSHES


"Look, you know the science as well as I do - maybe better. We're doing things like-like the Alvarez Event that took the dinosaurs out, except we're doing it willfully. It took how long for the planet to recover from that?"

"Alvarez? The planet didn't recover, Kevin," Carol Brightling pointed out. "It jump-started mammals-us, remember? The preexisting ecological order never returned. Something new happened, and that took a couple of million years just to stabilize." Must have been something to see, she told herself. To watch something like that in progress, what a scientific and personal blessing it must have been, but there'd probably been nobody back then to appreciate it. Unlike today.

"Well, in a few more years we'll get to see the first part of it, won't we? How many more species will we kill of this year, and if the ozone situation keeps getting worse - my God, Carol, why don't people get it? Don't they see what's happening? Don't they care?"

"Kevin, no, they don't see, and, no, they don't care. Look around." The restaurant was filled with important people wearing important-looking clothes, doubtless discussing important things over their important dinners, none of which had a thing to do with the planetary crisis that hung quite literally over all their heads. If the ozone layer really evaporated, as it might, well, they'd start using sunblock just to walk the streets, and maybe that would protect them enough… but what of the natural species. the birds, the lizards, all the creatures on the planet who had no such option? The studies suggested that their eyes would be seared by the unblocked ultraviolet radiation, which would kill them off, and so the entire global ecosystem would rapidly come apart. "Do you think any of these people know about it-or give a damn if they do?"

"I suppose not." He sipped down some more of his white wine. "Well, we keep plugging away, don't we?"

"It's funny," she went on. "Not too long ago we fought wars, which kept the population down enough that we couldn't damage the planet all that much- but now peace is breaking out all over, and we're advancing our industrial capacity, and so, peace is destroying us a lot more efficiently than war ever did. Ironic, isn't it?"

"And modern medicine. The anopheles mosquito was pretty good at keeping the numbers down-you know that Washington was once a malarial swamp, diplomats deemed it a hazardous-duty post! So then we invented DDT. Good for controlling mosquitoes, but tough on the peregrine falcon. We never get it right. Never," Mayflower concluded.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 4:30 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Friday 29 January 2016