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Climate change and the extinction of Homo Sapiens.

Let me make this clear, I do not believe in foreordained theory of events. But I do believe in cause and effect in the natural world.

Science (which I do believe in), has researched and studied ancient world history and has strongly supported theories indicating significant climate changes in the distant past which resulted in large die offs of significant numbers of species that were widely present at that point in time of the major climate change.

They call these extinction events. It has been suggested that we are now in an extinction event of our own making due to the effects of our human life style having an adverse effect on the earths environment.

Many are now running around, trying to convince people to drastically change life styles in an attempt to counter the ill effects of this impending extinction event. And I might add, many people are highly resistant to making these changes.

Well, what if the extinction of Homo Sapiens is actually the natural course of events? The dinosaurs did not want to become extinct, but their extinction became part of the natural course of events after either a large object stuck the earth or the eruption of a large group of volcanos (or a combination of both events). Their extinction was not either a good or a bad thing, it was just the result of the cause and effect of the natural course of events.

Humans fouled and fucked up their planet, with large numbers in denial of that happening or lacking the personal resolve to take corrective actions. There fore our extinction is just the result of cause and effect of the natural course of events. To paraphrase Shakespeare "All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players: they have their exits and their entrances." Our exit is forth coming.

creative51 8 Aug 13
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6 comments

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Ummmmmm, "Eskimos? High-altitude Peruvians & Sherpas?? Extreme desert dwellers? Far more adaptable than you imply

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With our vast numbers it might well be that not all of us go extinct. There are lots of survivalists who are willing to undergo deprivations just to stay alive and I suspect they will do so (sort of an Adam and Eve in reverse). The big question is whether they will get the message and create a system of true sustainability, not the faux buzzword people toss around today.

@creative51 Still, climates will be different in different parts of the world. People are often willing to live under extreme conditions so one cannot lump all humans together.

@creative51 Sometimes others get implications that are not there. I try to base my comments on reason not emotion. It is reasonable to think that out of 7.5 and counting billion of us some will make it.

I made a posting recently about an article that theorizes that, within our galaxy over the billions of years there have been several 'intelligent' life forms within the 'Goldilocks' zone but given the odds of most life forms eventually becoming extinct ours will be just another dead end.

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I don't think it will be a total extinction event, certainly a mass die off. Unless we manage to kill everything animal and vegetable, some small pockets of humans will survive. They will form small primitive tribes of hunter gatherers. Most technology will be lost but simple things like bow and arrow or spears will allow the small tribes to survive.

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Those who deny climate change are usually either idiots or have their money or livelihoods tied to dirty energy

bobwjr Level 10 Aug 13, 2021
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I certainly believe what we’re seeing in the extraordinary number of extreme weather events currently occurring at an alarmingly frequent rate, and throughout almost all parts of the world, as being exacerbated by human activity, if not due to it entirely. Yes I’d say that it probably is cause and effect in action, and whether we can actually halt and reverse any of it at this late stage, after ignoring the increasingly obvious warning signs for a couple of decades, is crucial to our survival as a species. At the moment I fear what we are proposing is too little too late as we may be past the point of no return, when no matter how drastically we manage to cut back our greenhouse gas emissions, the damage that has already been done to the planet could prove to be irreversible.

Survival of the fittest means those able to adapt. I know there will be some humans who will be able to do so but it won't be easy or fun.

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What's more, it couldn't have happened any other way. To say you could have done differently is simply another way to say you didn't.

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