The September issue of Scientific American is a special issue featuring
9 Key Questions About Our Future.
Though not comprehensive, they cover a lot of good territory.
3. Who will prosper and who will fall behind?
6. Will we defeat aging?
Question seven is a direct outgrowth of six:
8. How Long Will We Last?
I like that last question. Can we trust our own predictions? The more you read, the more you can find people on both sides of nearly any prediction. Whether it's the Super Bowl or this weekend's weather, you are going to find disagreements, even when looking at the same facts. Whether its technology, economies, politics, ethics, agriculture, energy, or travel into outer space, there are too many variables to make a clean prediction. We've been hearing about technological change, environmental threats, overpopulation and dwindling resources all our lives, however old you are. My gut tells me that one thing is especially evident. As a species we're not very good at getting along.
Here's another set of "big questions" for pondering, from a different angle. As someone once famously quipped, when all is said and done, there's usually more said than done.
What do you think? I'm guessing that if we're still here, we'll see what happens. Que sera sera.
I think it can be safely predicted that the glaringly obvious trends will continue ... more war and killing for Israel's benefit, less freedom, more control, more injustices done to more people, larger percentage of people (including innocent people) in prison (in the USA), more people drugging themselves (or being drugged) with more numbing and damaging meds, more poverty, more foreclosures, more concentration of the wealth in fewer hands, more false-flag attacks (including so many that are obvious hoaxes with obvious agendas), etc., ...
ReplyDelete... and that some people will go on blithely unaware (or cowardly silent) regarding it all, until it directly hits them. Then they'll say, "How could we possibly have known what was going to happen?" -- when it has been happening all along for decades, already.
It's hard to know whether to laugh or cry.