Jeff Bezos: I Spend My Billions On Space Because We're Destroying Earth (cnbc.com) 330
In an interview with Norah O'Donnell of "CBS Evening News," Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos explained why he's investing much of his Amazon fortune in the development of space technologies through his aerospace company Blue Origin. Why? "Because I think it's important," Bezos said. "I think it is important for this planet. I think it's important for the dynamism of future generations. It is something I care deeply about. And it is something I have been thinking about all my life." From the report: Bezos -- who says "you don't choose your passions, your passions choose you" -- became fascinated with space when he was a child watching astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong land on the moon, he tells O'Donnell. Further, developing space technologies is critical for human beings to have a long future, Bezos says. "We humans have to go to space if we are going to continue to have a thriving civilization," Bezos says. "We have become big as a population, as a species, and this planet is relatively small. We see it in things like climate change and pollution and heavy industry. We are in the process of destroying this planet. And we have sent robotic probes to every planet in the solar system -- this is the good one. So, we have to preserve this planet."
To do that will require being able to live and work in space, says Bezos. "We send things up into space, but they are all made on Earth. Eventually it will be much cheaper and simpler to make really complicated things, like microprocessors and everything, in space and then send those highly complex manufactured objects back down to earth, so that we don't have the big factories and pollution generating industries that make those things now on Earth," Bezos says. "And Earth can be zoned residential." It will be "multiple generations" and "hundreds of years" before this is a reality, Bezos said on CBS, but with Blue Origin he is working to develop the technology that will make it possible.
To do that will require being able to live and work in space, says Bezos. "We send things up into space, but they are all made on Earth. Eventually it will be much cheaper and simpler to make really complicated things, like microprocessors and everything, in space and then send those highly complex manufactured objects back down to earth, so that we don't have the big factories and pollution generating industries that make those things now on Earth," Bezos says. "And Earth can be zoned residential." It will be "multiple generations" and "hundreds of years" before this is a reality, Bezos said on CBS, but with Blue Origin he is working to develop the technology that will make it possible.
Hey Bezos (Score:5, Insightful)
If you care so much about the Earth, why not reduce the massive pollution of Amazon? Or is responsibility too expensive for the world's richest man?
https://www.theguardian.com/te... [theguardian.com]
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Hey Bezos (Score:4, Insightful)
Right, what me means is "I'm destroying the world and you are paying me to do it, so long suckers!"
This is the plot of several sci-fi novels and movies. Rich people go off and live in space with all their wealth, leaving the rest of us with the barely inhabitable Earth that they are STILL leeching off.
Re: (Score:2)
But there's nowhere else to live in space, and no way that even musk and bezos working together will change that before everything goes straight to hell here. They might get something built out there somewhere, but nothing self-sufficient.
Re: (Score:2)
Really though. I've seen that person post some questionable things, but this one takes the cake. It's cute that some people actually have the capacity to blame the entire planet's shortcomings on one man.
And here I thought they might actually be a half-way reasonable person. Ah well.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, actually - I think Jeff Bezos could personally reverse climate change if he wanted. Look at how much pollution he generates with his data centers.
Re: (Score:3)
Blaming the entire planet's ruin on one man would be wrong, but blaming at least half of it on a relatively small class of wealthy people would be correct:
https://www.theguardian.com/en... [theguardian.com]
The world's richest people have a massively outsized carbon footprint, and ironically they're the ones most capable of reducing their (and other people's) fossil carbon release, they just choose not to, or sometimes even choose to worsen the situation if they're profiting from fossil energy.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Amazon doesn't run factories.
Read your own article. The article says "...The climate proposal requested a report outlining how Amazon âoeis planning for disruptions posed by climate changeâ and âoereducing company-wide dependence on fossil fuelsâ, citing Amazonâ(TM)s coal-powered data centers and the amount of gasoline burnt for package deliveries...."
I GUARANTEE you that Amazon isn't deliberately choosing fossil fuels. I expect Amazon doesn't give a shit.
I'm pretty sure Amazon ju
Re: (Score:2)
Amazon is mostly a corruption problem.
"Grileiros". People that fake a property certificate, then proceed to cut down and sell all the expensive wood to first world countries, then create a basically fake cow pasture to get around some legal hurdles.
Re: (Score:2)
We just had two "Prime Days" at the beginning of the week. Some people are probably still under the euphoria of their "amazing savings".
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
The guy who leads a company that's #1 in the world at working people to death using robots, works eagerly at replacing people entirely with robots, busts unions and has a pathological aversion to paying taxes (which it also lobbies to reduce)? The guy whose solution to our planetary crisis is fucking around in space (which cannot be profitable for the foreseeable future due to launch energy costs) instead of fixing the only habitable planet we're likely to ever have access to? What's liberal and progressive
Re: (Score:2)
Poe's law aside the anti-SJW crowd seems more than willing to ignore economics at every level and focus solely on social issues. It drives me nuts. They're more worried about the occasional blue haired college girl blathering on about patriarchy then the last 40 years of slipping wages, economic crashes from Wall Street deregulation and the lack of clean air and water. Never mind that a large numbe
Re: (Score:2)
And liberals hate him because he's a billionaire and his company is... well, acts like any other megacorp re: taxes, workers, etc.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe they should talk to Quark' cousin, Gaila. He owns a moon!
Re:Hey Bezos (Score:5, Interesting)
What I don't get is how little progress Jeff has shown for all of his money and time thusfar. Blue Origin has been around since 2000. 19 years and something like $4,5B... and they're not to orbit yet? I mean, what? Are they actually serious about this? It's actually two years older than SpaceX!
As far as I can tell, SpaceX's total capital raises so far add up to $2,9B total. And most of that only recently, to fund expansion of Starlink and development of BFR - up through 2012 the company had only ever raised $200M (counting Musk's investment). Four years after the first successful Falcon 1, two after Falcon 9, and the same year as their first delivery to ISS.
How can Bezos be so bad at this? Or is there something I'm missing?
Re:Hey Bezos (Score:5, Interesting)
There's something you're missing. SpaceX took the approach that they'd build a reusable, cheap rocket that served the satellite launch market, in order to generate revenue. Then they'd build their big rocket, that could carry people and go to Mars. Along the way they're building Dragon, that can carry people.
Blue Origin is thinking of a little sideline in suborbital tourist flights, but their big attraction is New Glenn. New Glenn isn't as big as Starship, but it's a lot bigger than Falcon. Blue Origin has taken less of an incremental approach than SpaceX has. Maybe because Bezos is a lot richer than Musk.
Neither company has a human rated rocket/capsule yet, and neither company has built their planned super heavy rockets yet. Both are getting pretty close.
Re:Hey Bezos (Score:5, Insightful)
Amateur telescope makers will tell you that it's quicker to make a 4" mirror followed by an 8" mirror than it is to make a 8" mirror right away.
The same probably applies to orbital rockets.
Re: (Score:2)
"Any pollution Amazon does is a micro-drop in the bucket compared to the world at large" - Not really the case at all, Amazon prime day is bigger than "crazy" black friday now. It's all air-shipped, pseudo-discounted fecklessness.
I guess it all depends on what you consider a micro-drop in the bucket. I have seen estimates that Amazon shipping is responsible for 19 million tons of carbon emissions, or about 1/20th of one percent of global emissions. And cloud computing is arguably a greener solution than most companies running their own data centers, so AWS is likely a net benefit to greenhouse emissions.
A drop is about 1/20th of a milliliter, so a single drop in a 5 gallon bucket is about 1/80,000th of one percent of the bucket. A m
Euhm (Score:5, Insightful)
Then how amount spending your billions on preventing the destruction on Earth instead. He could also, and I know this is outrageous, improve the environmental impact of his own business if he would accept making less money from it.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
He's obviously a psychopath, no point appealing his good nature. His wife though... She has billions burning a hole in her pocket, and what better way to give the middle finger to her ex-husband than by spending it on fixing the problems he is creating?
Re: (Score:2)
If he is literally a traitor there should literally be evidence, right? That's what literally means.
No, it's not.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
In case Mr Bezos isn't reading this article (hint - he isn't), you could always send a message by not buying so much stuff on Amazon that you don't really need...
Re: (Score:3)
the thing is:
A few big and central warehouse like Amazon + express/mail shipping has much much much less environmental footprint than traditional retail stores !
Re: (Score:2)
> you could always send a message by not buying so much stuff on Amazon
Actually, that's what I do. I never bought anything at Amazon, and most probably never will.
And I do lead a normal, quite pleasant urban life, not in a yurt or something.
So it's quite possible: don't be afraid!
But it's getting harder as amazon kills more and more small vendors who have no choice but to get on the platform or die. It's also way more convenient visiting one shop that sells pretty much everything and does so cheaper for the most part than more specialist stores and you don't need to keep creating accounts on different sites.
Re: (Score:2)
You might not be buying anything from Amazon.com, but there's a chance you're using one of their services and funding them indirectly.
https://gizmodo.com/i-tried-to-block-amazon-from-my-life-it-was-impossible-1830565336
Re:Euhm (Score:5, Interesting)
Then how amount spending your billions on preventing the destruction on Earth instead. He could also, and I know this is outrageous, improve the environmental impact of his own business if he would accept making less money from it.
Because the unwashed masses consistently keep voting overlords into power who think the destruction of the earth's environment is a Chinese hoax? Bezos probably did the probability math and decided he'd be more likely to succeed in surviving by pouring his money into trying to escape from a situation where passengers are cheering on while the crew is sabotaging the life support system of the giant spherical space ship they are all travelling on than he would be trying to change the lunatics' minds.
Re: (Score:3)
Those aren't the unwashed masses, they're an unwashed minority. More people voted against that than for it last time. What you're talking about is a very specific problem with the democratic processes of one nation.
The overlords don't think it's a hoax (Score:2)
The overlords are planing on profiting on climate change. They're buying up all the water and they're gonna sell it back to us.
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Because the unwashed masses consistently keep voting overlords into power who think the destruction of the earth's environment is a Chinese hoax?
In order for this sort of accountability to reasonable, then we have to assume that electing Hillary Clinton would have made a difference in dealing with climate change.
Do you honestly expect anyone to believe that any of the climate related policies would be "better" if Hillary Clinton had been elected?
Go ahead and keep blaming the ignorant voters when the system is rigged to give us only two choices, neither of which is significantly different than the other.
Re: (Score:2)
It is hypocritical to tut-tut the inevitable effects of consumerism, while simultaneously running one of the largest retail outlets in the country.
OTOH, he's cutting down on electricity usage by not powering fans in his warehouses.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Then how amount spending your billions on preventing the destruction on Earth instead.
Bezos is orders of magnitudes not rich enough to move the needle on "preventing the destruction".
He could also, and I know this is outrageous, improve the environmental impact of his own business if he would accept making less money from it.
He probably could do more on pushing for better packaging, but do you think better bio degradable packaging is going to make difference? All that means that geological record will have less old Amazon packaging under the thick layer of ash.
Re: (Score:3)
maybe pay taxes (Score:5, Insightful)
pollution (Score:5, Insightful)
so that we don't have the big factories and pollution generating industries that make those things now on Earth
This is stupid. The reason we create pollution is because it's cheaper. For instance, many industries use water in their process, and often the water gets contaminated. When you dump the waste water in the river, it's cheap. If you have to process it until it's pure enough to drink, it can become very expensive.
If you want to do this in space, water is relatively scarce, even in places claimed to have a lot of it, so it makes more sense to make a closed cycle. But if you can do that in space, you can also do it here on Earth.
Re: (Score:2)
The reason we create pollution is because it's cheaper.
It's not the only reason.
Re: (Score:2)
It's not the only reason
Don't keep us in suspense. What's another reason ?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
This reminds me of asteroid mining. Some people get excited about it because of the romantic appeal, but it makes no sense until moving stuff in and out of the Earth and Sun's gravitational well is essentially free.
If there were one metric ton lump of pure native platinum floating around out in the asteroid belt (which there likely isn't), and we knew exactly where it was (which we wouldn't), it wouldn't make economic sense to try to retrieve it, although likely somebody would. Just like some people have
Re: (Score:2)
Unimaginative? I can *imagine* asteroid mining working, but that doesn't mean it's *practical*.
Right now the market price of a ton of platinum is about $28 million. Cost for a Falcon 9 launch is over $60 million. Let's assume that improves by an order of magnitude, which is fairly safe, that's just low Earth orbit. You need to get your prospecting craft out of the Earth's gravity well out past Mars, and it's got to carry enough reaction mass/fuel to move a ton of platinum out of the asteroid belt all t
Re: (Score:3)
Don't bother arguing. drinkypoo is a "Space Nutter". He thinks that mining in Spaaaaaaceeee is better than just mining here on Earth, because, um, Spaaaaaace. Basically these guys know nothing about science, actual engineering challenges or economics, but they think if it is in Spaaaace it must be better, somehow.
Re: (Score:3)
It's better if it's not on this planet for lots of obvious reasons.
It's going to take a lot of time, money, and effort to develop space-based industry, and the sooner we get going, the sooner we accomplish it.
But the real, fundamental reason I want it is this: I think that capitalism will keep coming out on top over and over again, whether it "should" (for the benefit of the most humans) or not. And the only way capitalism works is when there is endless growth, and the only way we can have endless growth is
Re: (Score:3)
And the only way capitalism works is when there is endless growth,
Actually, the reason market economies work is that they're an efficient way to distribute limited resources. In fact, in an economics course this is called "The Economic Problem": human wants are unlimited, but resources are finite. Market economies are more resilient to scarcity than planned economies because they adjust without any kind of externally applied control, automatically conserving scarce (expensive) resources.
You've basically reasoned this way (a) assume capitalism is sustainable; (b) assume
Re: (Score:2)
Doing anything as a one-off costs a lot of money. It can't compete against economies of scale.
Space-anything certainly won't be cost effective without in-space infrastructure, robotic or otherwise. But once you've got that infrastructure, things become cost competitive. It costs orders of magnitude less to send things back from the asteroid belt than it does to launch from Earth, go there, and bring them back.
Even then, you wouldn't be dropping raw materials down to the surface, you'd be manufacturing thing
Re: (Score:3)
Sure, but achieving economies of scale in asteroid mining is impractical. The Asteroid Belt is nothing like the asteroid field in Star Wars; it has a total mass of about 4% of the moon spread over an volume about ten trillion times larger than Earth. You have to travel immense distances, achieving huge changes in momentum, to get from any object big enough to examine to any other object big enough to examine.
When you find something, it'll be composed mainly of carbon, iron, silicon becuase those are by fa
Re: (Score:2)
Space exploration would best be done with craft starting in space. Telescopes on the moon, and at Lagrange points
I think you underestimate how much of an industrial base you need to build a telescope.
Let's start with something basic: go to some deserted place on earth, don't bring any modern tools, and make yourself a simple toaster out of raw materials. The toaster should look exactly the same as one you can buy for $20 at Amazon. See also https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] note that this guy cheated, and yet still failed horribly.
Re: (Score:2)
Yawn.
Some things will have to be shipped up, for a while. Then you build that industry. And your energy and material costs will be very low, and the ROI very high, so it won't be hard to justify doing it.
But all of this is dependent on launch costs getting much lower, and doing it is probably dependent on humanity getting serious about survival before civilization collapses, so really this is all just mental masturbation. We'll probably fuck it up beyond repair before any of this happens. It's probably too
Re: (Score:2)
This. Nothing you want on Earth can be made cheaper in space. How do you save money by adding choking resource constraints and ridiculous launch costs? His reason makes the most sense as a bit of made-up nonsense to give plausible deniability for much more selfish plans.
Re: (Score:2)
This. Nothing you want on Earth can be made cheaper in space. How do you save money by adding choking resource constraints and ridiculous launch costs?
You're thinking too small, too local, and too short-term. You get the resources from space, rather than lifting them from Earth. There are no materials available on Earth which aren't also available in space, and much more abundantly. The challenge is that you need to build the infrastructure in space to be able to acquire and refine the resources there.
Of course, you need enormous delta-V to be able to shift the raw materials from where they are to here, though, which means you first have to build the
Re: (Score:2)
He could, just as well, somehow uses that billion dollars to clean up Amazon's footprint, which in turn could create a whole new eco-industry.
I'm all for space exploration - but I prefer the SpaceX variant to the Blue Origin one. B.O. has too much of a "rich mans hobby" flair to it - and justifying it with wanting to help the environment is a bit of a stretch.
Earth (Score:2)
Yes Jeff (Score:2)
You and your greedy fellow 1%ers ARE destroying the earth
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No, we're collectively destroying the Earth because we're demanding all these products that made them so rich in the first place. Oh and I forgot to mention we always want them cheaper by any means.
If Bezos were smart... (Score:2)
Re:If Bezos were smart... (Score:5, Insightful)
If Bezos was smart, he would spend his money on avoiding the Marsification of the Earth surface, instead of trying to Terraform Mars.
Costs much much much less, same effect.
Re: (Score:2)
If Bezos was smart, he would spend his money on avoiding the Marsification of the Earth surface, instead of trying to Terraform Mars. Costs much much much less, same effect.
The top contributor to carbon emissions is China. What is Bezos going to do about that?
Re: (Score:2)
The top contributor to carbon emissions is China. What is Bezos going to do about that?
A good chunk of Chinese carbon emissions is for making cheap gadgets that Bezos sells. He could start there.
Re: (Score:2)
A good chunk of Chinese carbon emissions is for making cheap gadgets that Bezos sells. He could start there.
Oh the irony! Nicely done! Thus part of globalization is the ability to produce cheaper goods and one of the ways to produce cheaper goods it to use less regulated manufacturing facilities that cause large scale pollution that could make the planet inhospitable to humans. Yay, globalization! We need more of that shit. Talk about alienating a market segment... brilliant! For some reason, the abstract notion of a feedback loop of stupidity is coming to mind. :)
Re: (Score:2)
If Bezos was smart, he would spend his money on avoiding the Marsification of the Earth surface, instead of trying to Terraform Mars. Costs much much much less, same effect.
The top contributor to carbon emissions is China. What is Bezos going to do about that?
Long-term, he wants to move manufacturing from China (or other low-cost countries willing to accept pollution) to space, where pollution is irrelevant.
Re: (Score:2)
If Bezos was smart, he would spend his money on avoiding the Marsification of the Earth surface, instead of trying to Terraform Mars. Costs much much much less, same effect.
I think you're confusing Bezos with Musk. Musk is the one who wants to go to Mars and live there. Bezos is saying he wants to move manufacturing into space in order to make Earth a nicer place to live.
Personally, I think both visions have merit. It's not an either-or. Space-based manufacturing will make Earth nicer and living on Mars more feasible. Achieving a self-sustaining population on Mars dramatically reduces the probability that a single event can wipe out humanity.
Both visions are very gran
The world would be a batter place... (Score:3)
...if people who dared utter something that ironic and arrogant got slapped in the face by the hand of god.
Construction Only in Space (Score:2)
The idea that all construction will be done in space is asinine. We'll need energy on Earth regardless, and there'd still be benefit to making the energy plants renewable. Sending raw materials from Earth to orbit/moon/Mars, with finished goods being sent back to Earth, is inefficient. Once we're mining resources elsewhere, then sure there could be construction there, but it'd be more valuable for the base/colony that's there (and Earth-orbiting stations won't be mining resources.)
We're not going to be buil
Re: (Score:3)
"The idea that all construction will be done in space is asinine."
I don't know that's ever been the premise, although it is conceivable. If we had somewhere else to go, and we had space elevators to get people there, then we might reasonably send goods back down in the otherwise empty cars. So the short answer to your assertion is "not any time soon, anyway".
"We'll need energy on Earth regardless, and there'd still be benefit to making the energy plants renewable."
If you're developing space then the only no
aaaa (Score:4, Insightful)
"I'm moving house because I wont clean up dog shit"
Dear jeff, I'm glad you... (Score:3)
... realize we are doing dangerous things on earth.
We all can do small things to reduce our footprints; I for example greatly reduced my purchases on amazon to avoid individual shippment of $5 objects from asia. This allows me on the same time to not encourage the vat fraud scheme that rely on amazon platform's gross negligence, as well as destruction of local distribution businesses. This is less convenient, I admit. Much less indeed. But that's the price I'm willing to pay.
Look around you, you can do a lot to reduce earth destruction. This is my part of the dream; that people like you stop beeing so dumb sometimes, while you can be so smart elsewhere.
Regards,
Abandon ship (Score:5, Insightful)
We're all on a ship sailing in a limitless ocean, and we've managed it such a half-assed way that it's become an unsanitary dump. Then somebody has a bright idea: we'll move into the lifeboats!
Yeah, that'll end well. It makes no sense to get into the lifeboats unless you have a place to go. If you have the technology to, say, terraform Venus, which in the long term may be a very good idea, you very likely have the geoengineering knowledge to handle pollution.
It's not that space exploration is useless. A garden shed is useful, that doesn't make it a viable option to live in if you've filled your house up with garbage.
Re: (Score:2)
Very much this.
Fixing Earth Seems Easier (Score:5, Insightful)
I've never understood the idea that because we are destroying earth, we need to recreate the earth somewhere in space. Whatever damage we may be doing to earth, it seems exponentially easier to fix that damage than to create the earth anew (either on a floating station or terraforming another planet).
We can't even get people to low earth orbit without spending more than than their per-capita lifetime economic output, and you are proposing we move the entire human population off planet? You say the earth is too crowded? That's why birth control was invented.
Re:Fixing Earth Seems Easier (Score:4)
Tech nerds dream of escaping the "common people" and establishing a colony where they rule based on logic and fairness. It is basically the New Religion. That is why every rich tech nerd starts a rocket company when they hit the jackpot.
Re: (Score:2)
Probably.
Re: (Score:3)
It is the myth of the "perennially shifting frontier" (i.e. the US western border during colonization) combined with a whole lot of stupidity that creates this fantasy of a solution. Of course, there is absolutely no way to even get a minor fraction of the human race into space, even if there were a nice, livable, not messed-up planet at the distance of Mars or Venus. Sure, with a herculean effort, it may be possible to get the 60k or so people there required for a long-term viable gene-pool. But the 8B pe
We are not destroying earth. (Score:3)
Nonsense (Score:2)
As if we're ever going to live out there somewhere in the next thousand years. If our Earth is in trouble, and it is, do something about it with all the money you are leeching from society.
Interstellar fallacy (Score:2)
I have the same issue with this as with the movie Interstellar.
Functioning society but with corn blight --> This planet is fucked. Let's start over on a barren rock planet.
If you can terraform a lifeless planet (with all of the long-tail problems), then you can fix environmental problems on Earth.
Re: (Score:2)
I do agree with that. With the addition that even if we did terraform a new world we could never move any noticeable percentage of existing humans to it. We might someday plant a new population but it still wouldn't make a difference to almost anyone existing now.
However, one could make an argument that it's easier to alter something that doesn't already have 8 billion angry chimps with nuclear weapons on it.
You can drop comets on Mars for a couple hundred years to give it some water, for instance, with no
Re: (Score:2)
And as a direct implication, if you cannot fix the problems on this planet (and it very much looks like the human race as a whole is completely incapable to do that), you most certainly cannot terraform anything.
Jeff watched Elusium and wants to make it real (Score:2)
The wealthy living in space with the poor on a devastated Earth.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1... [imdb.com]
Pretty good movie in my opinion.
Money does not imply insight (Score:2)
And a lot of money does certainly not imply a lot of insight, as Bezos nicely demonstrates. Space tech is not going to rescue the human race from climate change. You may, eventually, be able to create a self-sustaining colony with the required 60k or so people for a long-term viable genetic pool, but that is in the far future, a lot farther out than the full impact of climate change. People continuously underestimate how slow technology is moving. Actually get a larger ( > 100) moon-base going that does
Jeff watched Elusium and wants to make it real (Score:2)
The wealthy living in space with the poor on a devastated Earth.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1... [imdb.com]
Pretty good movie in my opinion.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Or maybe humanity can exercise a some self control for a change.
First, we'd have to stop fucking like rabbits thus increasing our population size exponentially. Perhaps we could convince people that follow bronze age mythology that contraception is not evil too. We are stupid on so many levels as a species, it's hard to know where to start to change our thinking. It's like shooting fish in a barrel
Re: (Score:2)
We already stopped fucking like rabbits (Score:2)
Assuming we don't slip back into a dark ages the problem is likely to be under population not over population. Turns out when you don't need kids to function as retirement and farm hands people just stay home and play XBox.
Aww, did I hurt a twink's feelings? (Score:2)
Keep sucking that God cock. You'll be rewarded after death, honest!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
They re-invest in the company.
Whats wrong with that ?
Re: (Score:3)
The company IS not making a profit, BECAUSE someone gets paid BILLIONS.
BTW, all the non-profits you hear about, and all the woke millenials want to work for? Same thing.
Re: (Score:3)
Space will be inherited by our children - creations of metal and ceramics, because they won't have the legacy of being adapted to live on a planet.
Re: So wait, who could stop it being destroyed? (Score:3)
Space is a no go zone? Wtf maybe for you. No way I am just gonna stare at all that space and empty moons, asteroids, and planets and not go. Fuck you.
Re: (Score:2)
Some people prefer to use a pirated copy of Windows. They like their freedumb!
Re: (Score:2)
Re:lol right (Score:5, Funny)
"No! They did it! They blew it up! And then the apes blew up their society too. How could this happen? And then the birds took over and ruined their society. And then the cows. And then... ... I don't know, is that a slug, maybe? Noooo!" - Philip J. Fry
Re: (Score:2)
But of course we're going to massively overshoot. About the only good thing is that a bunch of Trump property gets flooded out, and that Florida becomes so depopulated that even if Republicans keep it, it will only amount to a couple of seats.
Back
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Ironically, as you can see elsewhere in this discussion, some conservatives see that act as an anti-environmentalist or climate-denialist rant. It's hard to tell whether they're rock-fuck stupid, or capitalist-VHEers happy to see humanity cleansed from the earth so that two coal-powered HFT computers on Mt. Erebus can peacefully trade with each other until the sun engulfs them.