15.01.2020 - 19:49
Maybe we should just let Australia burn, let the koalas die out, and just let nature take its coarse. Australia and koalas have had it comming for quite some time. Both usless. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFTLKWw542g https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAJgs1P-uUE
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15.01.2020 - 20:03
Industry is the ultimate manifestation of nature; natural selection provided human beings the capacity to think critically and create industry--we do what we must for our own survival. There is no need to worry about climate change, because man-made innovations will solve it just as it always has in nature. In 1890, if you asked someone what they want, they'd say "I want a faster horse." Then, Henry Ford created the car. In 1990, if you asked someone what they want, they'd say "I want a faster car." Then, Elon Musk created the Cyber Truck. In 2090, if you asked someone what they want, they'd say "I want a faster Cyber Truck." Then, a child of our generation created the flying car. Nature has its own way of doing things, and we should respect that and let nature take its course.
---- Happiness = reality - expectations
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15.01.2020 - 21:26
BTW, Bily Joel my favorite music, he is awesomeeee
---- Happiness = reality - expectations
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15.01.2020 - 21:35
Oooooooooooooooooooooouuuuuuuuuuuiiiiiidid not read it.
---- *War in Europe again isn't good for anyone... that's why the EU Needs to Evoke and Become the EEC once more, as an International, Nationalist Union Long Live The Realms! Long Live the Europeans!*
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16.01.2020 - 02:49
Man-made innovations will solve it if people worry about climate change. The days of individual genius engineers are quite comfortably in the past. Innovators in the latter half of the Industrial Revolution forwards were usually standing on large, organised efforts. Henry Ford and Elon Musk both made those innovations as a part of an enormous automobile industry able to pay for new innovations and millions of potential customers willing to pay for new innovations. If nobody cared about or was willing to pay for cars, our cities would still be dealing with horse excrement problems. Similarly, if we as a society decide that solutions to environmental degradation are not worth paying for, our descendants may find themselves immersed in a rather different kind of excrement. Societies built on liberal, capitalist markets have seen such dramatic success in the past three or so centuries because markets do a fairly good job of making sure that people who contribute to society are rewarded by that society in a complex, uncontrollable industrial economy. But fairly good is not perfect and we should be willing to recognise when market logic no longer incentivises making socially beneficial decisions.
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