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I blame Greg Bear
It's been years since I read "The Forge of God." The nightmares still haven't gone away.
I'm up at nearly midnight even though I'm sleepy because I'm scared. CERN is trying to create a black hole tomorrow.
Really, I'm not one of those people who hears the word scientist and inserts mad in front of it. Dr. Frankenstein is not my paradigm.
I type on a computer, in a room filled with light (the lights in the Capitol were on late again tonight) because scientists and inventors have made my world better. I drink clean water because Pasteur, Lister, and Semmelweiss existed.
But the idea that the Earth can be torn apart by even a tiny black hole terrifies me.
So, since I know there are scientists and people who are way smarter than I am on my friends list, please reassure me that twenty four hours from now, this world will have beheld one more marvel in the progress of humanity's understanding. And we'll all still be here.
(Pssst, the fact that the Mayan calendar goes to 2012 just isn't enough. *G* Nor is the Torchwood podcast.)
I'm up at nearly midnight even though I'm sleepy because I'm scared. CERN is trying to create a black hole tomorrow.
Really, I'm not one of those people who hears the word scientist and inserts mad in front of it. Dr. Frankenstein is not my paradigm.
I type on a computer, in a room filled with light (the lights in the Capitol were on late again tonight) because scientists and inventors have made my world better. I drink clean water because Pasteur, Lister, and Semmelweiss existed.
But the idea that the Earth can be torn apart by even a tiny black hole terrifies me.
So, since I know there are scientists and people who are way smarter than I am on my friends list, please reassure me that twenty four hours from now, this world will have beheld one more marvel in the progress of humanity's understanding. And we'll all still be here.
(Pssst, the fact that the Mayan calendar goes to 2012 just isn't enough. *G* Nor is the Torchwood podcast.)
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More to the point, CERN is mimicking natural occurrences (albeit not under current local conditions) - if anything they do were likely to destroy the planet, we wouldn't be here to begin with, because they won't do anything the earth hasn't already blithely survived during the last 4 billion years- the equivalent of 100,000 times, based on estimates by the safety committee. Cool science, yes, but very small scale, very low power, and not anything remotely new on the galactic level.
There's an article here, depending how much you want to trust print media just now.
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I'm actually excited to see how this goes. I plan on looking more into it tonight and I'm looking for any TV local listings that might have it (I'm sure the news will).
And I'm not afraid of the earth being destroyed...I have a few friends at CERN and they don't think it anything too disastrous will happen. Unfortunately, I am not knowledgeable in this particular area so I can't say what I think of it. I just know that if the earth is destroyed tomorrow...good riddance. We, as mankind, are a plague. While I think 2000 years isn't enough for us to learn from our own lessons, I don't think I'd care if the world ended tomorrow.
Sure, I haven't lived my life or seen everything I wish to see and we really have no rights to destroy the paradise that IS Earth...I just think it would be cool to see the end of mankind, even if I don't live to tell about it. Call me crazy or weird, but one of my mottos is: Born to live. Prepared to die.
It makes death easier to bear and understand for some reason when I'm in that mindset.
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Has the large hadron collider destroyed the world yet?
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