The End of the World?!
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@unknownuser said:
@mike lucey said:
I'd like to swing this topic in the direction of the End of the Financial World as we know it. The IMF are now saying that the Financial World as we know it is is deep trouble.
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I honestly think that there is a major collapse coming soon that will be the End of the World as we know it! The question is what will, or should replace it.Mike, do you think it might have any connection with this text:
β He ( the beast) required everyone, small and great, rich and poor, free and slave, to be given a MARK on the right hand or on the forehead. And no one could buy or sell anything without that mark, which was either the name of the beast or the number representing his name. Wisdom is needed here. Let the one with understanding solve the meaning of the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man. His number is 666.β (Revelation 13:16-18)...or categorically reject such a possibility?!
I was waiting for this....
You gotta be kidding right?
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End of the World? According to the Mayan calender December 21st 2012. Four days before Christmas! So no presents to buy then.
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It seems like those that actually give any credibility to this nonsense can't decide what the PIN number of the beast is. That's gonna cause a few problems, isn't it?
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I put this in the Funny Pics thread but it is more appropriate here.
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That's a good one.
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"The end of the world, is not just near, it happened yesterday" Bob
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@bob-designer said:
"The end of the world, is not just near, it happened yesterday" Bob
The reality is that practically we already go in parallel with the end...
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@oganocali said:
End of cheap oil and climate change are my main worries. I do not believe total annihilation is imminent but a serious reduction in total wealth and well-being seems unavoidable for the next generation. Hopefully internet will be forever...
Oil only became important in the unfolding of human history about 100 years ago. As oil becomes a rare commodity I find it difficult to believe we could not get along without cheap oil. As late as 1933 the Saudi's were importing Rolls Royces and towing them with Camels due to a local lack of oil and gas.
I am less certain about the effects of climate change. I already live in what many would consider an extreme climate, but the architecture and engineering are so poorly adapted to the environment I think we have a tremendous margin for improvement. On many summer nights it is miserable indoors even with air conditioning and yet I can step out doors and enjoy a gentle breeze which is denied men by building designs that do not have openable windows.
Water is a greater concern, but at the present time we have more golf courses per capita than any other comparable metropolis in the world.
The economy has fewer easy answers and am am not at all prepared for that discussion.
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Rock the boat and we all will go overboard.
More we talk on fear of 2012 the more potential to cause harm to others.
So far 2012 seem to be a normal year.
Relaxs and enjoy you time here because we avage 72 years of life and this is one of them. -
@Roger: As of now oil is the number 1 input of the world economy. Availability of oil (and water) and good weather all enable food production and feeding the billions (hence Mike's point at several threads). When big farm companies talk about their efficiency they report how many gallons of corn syrup they produce per gallon of gas. In industrialized nations 10 to 15 % of the energy expenditure goes to food http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture.
As for the current economic woes of the western world, I consider it as the balance shifting a more natural position. Rich ones getting poorer, poor ones getting richer; some kind of global equalization. Average energy expenditure of an industrialized western nation's citizen is several times that of the rest of the world (15-25). I think this will balance itself out very soon.
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