DoubtingThomas wrote: ↑Sat May 30, 2020 11:27 pm
If that is the case then it means we are long overdue. The last large asteroid impact happened 65 million years ago.
No that's not how it works. If the odds of a large asteroid like the one that killed off the dinosaurs hits on average every 60 million years, it doesn't mean the odds are now really high one will hit in the next 1000 years. The odds are still 1 in 60 millions years. Now we may be able to discover one that size well before it arrives. If we have to decide whether to put money into getting humans to Mars or money on creating capabilities of finding and stopping asteroids from hitting earth I will take the latter every time. Even if one were to hit today, I suspect it would not end humanity due to many things like bunkers and long term food storage.
That is very true, but unfortunately we live in the Trump-era. I hope we don't get another Trump in 2024 because anti-immigration politics works.
yes just like in Nazi Germany. it seems to go up and down over time. We have always had problems with it, but we have seen great improvements in the last century, so hopefully it will be short lived.
I think the system will have to change because automation will take over many jobs and there won't be enough tax payers in the US.
GDP is fairly dependent on consumerism, which depends on consumers. Eventually machines will be able to do all jobs, so yes we will need a new way of doing things. Continual growth in consuming is not sustainable forever.