AleXX
2016-01-13 14:19:08 UTC
Programs in computer often have a reset button. Once pressed, it will return
everything to default. Like wise, shall we able to press a button and reset
the Earth to its original format? Starting with Adam und Eva where it was
god's first human creation. Adam und Eva screwed and produces sons and
daughters. Through incest, sons and brothers screwed their own sisters and
daughters; and everybody screwed each other up to produce the likes of
Buddha, Jesus, Prophet Mo and so on.
If properties of the earth can be reset, it will definitely be the best
interest of homo sapiens not to reproduce a Pedophile and war-violence-prone
individual like the Prophet Mo. The world should be a better and more
peaceful place to live. Through divine intervention, god should locate a
huge piece of desert land for "his" people the Jews somewhere in the Sahara
Desert. This will be no conflicts among the Jews and Palestinians.
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20160113-could-just-two-people-repopulate-earth
Quote:
Repopulating the earth with humans is quite another matter. Could we do it?
And how long would it take?
The answer is more than a whimsical discussion for the pub. From Nasa’s
research on the magic number of pioneers needed for our move to another
planet, to decisions about the conservation of endangered species, it’s a
matter of increasing international importance and urgency.
The average person has between one and two lethal recessive mutations in
their genome
So let’s fast-forward 100 years. Humanity’s endeavours have gone horribly
wrong and a robot uprising has wiped us off the face of the Earth – a fate
predicted by Stephen Hawking in 2014. Just two people made it. There’s no
way around it: the first generation would all be brothers and sisters.
Sigmund Freud believed incest was the only universal human taboo alongside
murdering your parents. It’s not just gross, it’s downright dangerous. A
study of children born in Czechoslovakia between 1933 and 1970 found that
nearly 40% of those whose parents were first-degree relatives were severely
handicapped, of which 14% eventually died.
everything to default. Like wise, shall we able to press a button and reset
the Earth to its original format? Starting with Adam und Eva where it was
god's first human creation. Adam und Eva screwed and produces sons and
daughters. Through incest, sons and brothers screwed their own sisters and
daughters; and everybody screwed each other up to produce the likes of
Buddha, Jesus, Prophet Mo and so on.
If properties of the earth can be reset, it will definitely be the best
interest of homo sapiens not to reproduce a Pedophile and war-violence-prone
individual like the Prophet Mo. The world should be a better and more
peaceful place to live. Through divine intervention, god should locate a
huge piece of desert land for "his" people the Jews somewhere in the Sahara
Desert. This will be no conflicts among the Jews and Palestinians.
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20160113-could-just-two-people-repopulate-earth
Quote:
Repopulating the earth with humans is quite another matter. Could we do it?
And how long would it take?
The answer is more than a whimsical discussion for the pub. From Nasa’s
research on the magic number of pioneers needed for our move to another
planet, to decisions about the conservation of endangered species, it’s a
matter of increasing international importance and urgency.
The average person has between one and two lethal recessive mutations in
their genome
So let’s fast-forward 100 years. Humanity’s endeavours have gone horribly
wrong and a robot uprising has wiped us off the face of the Earth – a fate
predicted by Stephen Hawking in 2014. Just two people made it. There’s no
way around it: the first generation would all be brothers and sisters.
Sigmund Freud believed incest was the only universal human taboo alongside
murdering your parents. It’s not just gross, it’s downright dangerous. A
study of children born in Czechoslovakia between 1933 and 1970 found that
nearly 40% of those whose parents were first-degree relatives were severely
handicapped, of which 14% eventually died.