MougyWolf · 36-40, M
*sighs in relief* can I go to sleep now?
Oneofthestormboys · 56-60, M
Yep. We truly are on an island that is fast running out of trees to build boats with.
I think if you plugged all the data into an AI superbrain, it would just laugh at the irony.
I think if you plugged all the data into an AI superbrain, it would just laugh at the irony.
RisingMorningStar7 · 36-40, M
@Oneofthestormboys We will eventually run out. I don't think colonizing other planets is feasible. So should one cut all the trees and hope for a miracle in the future.
Oneofthestormboys · 56-60, M
@RisingMorningStar7 Certainly looks like it. The distances we’re talking about are so vast that our brains can’t cope with the numbers, let alone the distances. It would take a radio message between 4 and 20 minutes to reach Mars for example. That makes communication alone extremely difficult if not impossible in practicality.
The next nearest star to us is over 4 light years away, and it’s highly doubtful that it could support life as we know it due to solar flares and radiation.
The next nearest star to us is over 4 light years away, and it’s highly doubtful that it could support life as we know it due to solar flares and radiation.
RisingMorningStar7 · 36-40, M
@Oneofthestormboys I think I understand your comment read it in a wrong context.
Reflection2 · M
The differences in gravity and the megnatism, radioactivity, the density of air, are too lethal for humanity to survive in other planets. Can't get to another generation.
eMortal · M
If we're still alive after this eminent WW3.
TrashCat · M
So says Reich Marshall Musk
TexChik · F
Maybe by 3025. We do not have the technology or the motivation to start doing that yet.
BeauShasta · M
