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Registered
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Tucson AZ USA
Posts: 8,228
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Stunning response, snow........absolutely stunning.
And just WHO can say the world would be useless without people? It did fine without us for over four billion years.
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Bob S. former owner of a 1984 silver 944 |
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sure we are, hunter-gatherers, perfectly evolved for that.
There will be war as long as there are more than one group of people on the planet. Quote:
We have too many and are breeding fast, I could make a list of those we should kick off, but the ones who should stay would be a shorter list. and he is not even that liberal
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She was the kindest person I ever met |
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Monkey with a mouse
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: SoCal
Posts: 6,006
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We are a way for the universe to know itself. Some part of our being knows this is where we came from. We long to return. And we can, because the Cosmos is also within us. We're made of star stuff.- Carl Sagan
Emphasis added is mine. Best, Kurt |
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Registered
Join Date: May 2004
Location: The state of ME.
Posts: 1,736
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That was 2,000,000 years ago for gods sake.
What have you done for us lately !
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Du must schwein haben '67 901/05 rebuilt 2.2 Bultaco Metralla 62 "XDina" '68 BMW R69S |
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Custom User Title
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Miami
Posts: 4,294
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Quote:
I agree that humans cannot be relied upon to act responsibly. But... this is exactly my justification for being against government regulation- the government is run by Humans, and therefore cannot be relied upon to act responsibly. If the government could be run by robots or vulcans, then perhaps I'd be for it running us. |
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Monkey with a mouse
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: SoCal
Posts: 6,006
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Emphasis added by me.
Quote:
FWIW, I'd go with the Vulcans. ![]() Best, Kurt |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Lacey, WA. USA
Posts: 25,310
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Quote:
So we can agree that humans are poor governors. A few are decent, but most succumb to greed and other base instincts. Where we disagree, perhaps, likely, though it is hard for me to understand the opposing conclusion, is which is the lesser of those two evils. Sadly, I would not expect increased peace and security in a society with no government. No police. No military. You guys seem to understand very clearly the implications of failing to keep an effective military for national defense reasons. I think it odd that you expect aggressive and greedy behavior on the part of other nations, and good-citizen behavior from fellow Americans. That's fairy tale stuff. Especially when you consider that America is renowned for its take-what-you-can-get economic and social systems.
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Man of Carbon Fiber (stronger than steel) Mocha 1978 911SC. "Coco" |
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Banned
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: So California
Posts: 3,787
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Superman,
You are clearly a socialist or even communist. Please take offense as it was intended. You are what you say you are and you cannot avoid any label that fits your position. The world doesn't mean sht without humans. The world, without humans, is a meaningless hunk of rock, nothing more, without any value whatsoever. We will make this world better by killing off the less fit, whoever they are. Thats exactly what evolution is about, survival of the fittest. Or are you a fundamentalist of some kind that doesn't buy evolution? If so you are still out of luck. The devil has a mission to accomplish the same thing as Darwin. PS In case you like being a socialist or communist, both have been proven to be the ultimate evil so far. Those are the FACTS. At this point, I can see that only the capitalist system, or some form of it, has any chance of saving humanity from itself. Last edited by snowman; 11-15-2007 at 06:56 PM.. |
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durn for'ner
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: South of Sweden
Posts: 17,090
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I think most of us tend to give our species too much credit. Between the lines I read a subconscious desperate hope for humanity. We believe in different social and economical structures. Short term (relatively speaking) one strategy may work, in other circumstances the opposite may work.
In the long run however, I suspect we are doomed. Perhaps we will be saved by Evolution, making future generations less primitive, but I doubt it.
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Markus Resident Fluffer Carrera '85 |
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I did not do it, God did.
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She was the kindest person I ever met |
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Unregistered
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: a wretched hive of scum and villainy
Posts: 55,652
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hunter-gatherers 2 million years ago? Nope.
We have not found ANY evidence that man Man was around until around 5000 to 7000 years ago. Pyramids, working with metal, languages, it all happened very, very quickly. Man started building incredible structures all around the world and started writing things down and figured out a great deal about the heavens including very accurate calendars and maps of stars. Coincidence? No. There is an incredible amount of evidence that man existed then and ever since then, but there is no evidence of man's existance prior to that time except for some ape-like skeletons they found. Mankind as we know it has only been around for a short time. There may have been some man-like creatures before, but they were not man as we know today. |
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Monkey with a mouse
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: SoCal
Posts: 6,006
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Unregistered
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: a wretched hive of scum and villainy
Posts: 55,652
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Ah, the cave of Lascaux.
They really do not not know how old those drawings are, they think they MIGHT be as old as 30,000 but they can't prove it and they admit it. They are GUESSING. I suggest these paintings are only about 6000 years old. This is taken from their official website: The range of methods and tools used to date the cave art is somewhat limited, partly because the figures are not in a position favourable to stratigraphic dating most of the time and also because of the nature of the materials used. In the eventuality of a single period of Palaeolithic occupation of the site as at Fontanet (Ariège), Combarelles or Rouffingnac (Dordogne), and to some extent, at Lascaux, it is reasonable to note the contemporaneousness of the wall paintings and the material found on the floor of the cave. Whether lithic or bone, or in the form of products of combustion, these elements are more easily dated. An identical approach applies to the pigment which had fallen to the ground during the painting or drawing. They have been sealed in the archaeological levels, at the foot of the decorated walls and are therefore contemporary with the datable archaeological artefacts, and can be dated using radiometry (bone, carbon) or possibly typology (lithic or bone industry). During the past few decades several attempts have been made at direct dating of the paintings using the radiocarbon method (J. Clottes and M. Lorblanchet). The ever-improving performance of radioactive measuring instruments today allows analyses to be made of matter weighing only a few milligrams. Nevertheless, only the paintings and drawings which incorporate charcoal can be studied in this way; in most of the Perigord caves, as at Lascaux, typing of the pigment shows that the basis of the material used on all the figures is metal oxides, iron or manganese, materials that are impossible to date using the suggested methods. |
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Fair and Balanced
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Keeping appeasers honest since 2001
Posts: 2,162
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Quote:
I don't understand how people separate humans from the "natural" earth. We are of this earth, and so is everything we create. Sulfur-spewing factories and nuclear waste are as natural as a bird's nest or a fire pit. |
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Monkey with a mouse
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: SoCal
Posts: 6,006
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Sammy:
Do you believe in the efficacy of any of the numerous scientific dating methods? If so, which ones? Just curious. Best, Kurt |
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Registered Usurper
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 13,824
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Hmmm.....could this thread be veering off into a scintillating discussion of Intelligent Design?
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Monkey with a mouse
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Registered
Join Date: May 2004
Location: The state of ME.
Posts: 1,736
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Quote:
You forgot the ![]()
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durn for'ner
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: South of Sweden
Posts: 17,090
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I am very fond of the evolutionary life of OT threads. Members of this board have such high class, flexible minds that it is almost impossible preventing an interesting topic from evolving into the next. Almost by it´s own.
Friggin beautiful and very entertaining. Being an optimist I would say that count for something good about humanity. At least in this group. I´ll drink to that! After all it is Friday night. ![]()
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Lacey, WA. USA
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It is frightening to notice there are people who think like Snowman.
But it would soften the blow a bit if we could hear his description of how the world would be structured under his reign. Give us that, Snowman. Outline for us your vision for a social and economic system that you would consider ideal. What, if any, government would exist? What controls would there be on humans' behavior, if any? The amusement value of reading your description would, I think, help take the sting out of hearing your disdain for humans.
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Man of Carbon Fiber (stronger than steel) Mocha 1978 911SC. "Coco" |
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