Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 11

Thread: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

  1. Back To Top    #1
    ~Paw~Paw})]<^>¥ Hic's Avatar
    Real Name
    Hic
    Location
    Michigan
    Vehicle
    99 Contour SVT
    Posts
    3,164
    Join Date
    Jul 2013

    Question Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    All Empires have a Life Cycle [ even ours ]


    Risk Factors

    1)Population
    2)Climate
    3)Agriculture
    4)Economy
    5)Energy


    Widening divide between Elite and economically challenged or Extreme Economic
    Stratification


    Stretching our resources too far is causing Ecological Stress

    NASA thinks the Elite will consume more than we have, thus allowing the commoners to enjoy famine before our total collapse

    Not a doomsday threat, just a downward spiral until 'P-0-0-F' all gone ( Humanity )

    NASA bases this on history - similar decline of other empires


    Having failed to come together and live for each other , we will instead , all perish slowly , but surely !
    Last edited by Hic; 03-25-2014 at 09:17 AM.
    Viewing Smilies , you trying to access privileged system?¤Somewhere 0ut There¤}]

  2. Back To Top    #2
    Noob Notloudenuf's Avatar
    Real Name
    Kendal
    Location
    Eastern NC
    Vehicle
    '02 330Ci & '20 Tacoma
    Posts
    1,417
    Join Date
    Jan 2014

    Re: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    If we can't, live together; we're gonna die alone. -Jack Shephard (Lost)

  3. Back To Top    #3
    ~Paw~Paw})]<^>¥ Hic's Avatar
    Real Name
    Hic
    Location
    Michigan
    Vehicle
    99 Contour SVT
    Posts
    3,164
    Join Date
    Jul 2013

    Re: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    http://www.bing.com/videos/watch/vid...257c%257c%257c

    http://blog.seattlepi.com/bigscience...5=0&17757107=0

    Why is that controversial? Well, tell someone making money for their kids’ future by pumping oil out of the ground in their own backyard (think North Dakota) that what they are doing is destroying the future of life on this planet … then try to get out of that bar without a lump on your face.

    But that’s what happened to these three scientists
    (description by the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC)): Safa Motesharrei, a Ph.D. candidate in applied mathematics and public policy at the University of Maryland; Jorge Rivas of the department of Political Science at the University of Minnesota and now the Institute of Global Environment and Society; and Eugenia Kalnay, distinguished university professor in the department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science and the Institute for Physical Science and Technology at Maryland.
    Last edited by Hic; 03-26-2014 at 09:16 AM.
    Viewing Smilies , you trying to access privileged system?¤Somewhere 0ut There¤}]

  4. Back To Top    #4
    Perpetually dissatisfied tRidiot's Avatar
    Real Name
    Danny
    Location
    Oklahoma
    Posts
    209
    Join Date
    Aug 2013

    Re: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    Anyone surprised by this?

  5. Back To Top    #5
    ~Paw~Paw})]<^>¥ Hic's Avatar
    Real Name
    Hic
    Location
    Michigan
    Vehicle
    99 Contour SVT
    Posts
    3,164
    Join Date
    Jul 2013

    Re: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    http://www.top100arena.com/news/741/...-civilizations

    10 The Maurya
    9 The Phoenicians
    8 The Babylonians
    7 The Sumerian
    6 The Ancient Egyptian
    5 The Minoans
    4 The Mayans
    3 The Inca
    2 The Aztec
    1 The Toltec
    Viewing Smilies , you trying to access privileged system?¤Somewhere 0ut There¤}]

  6. Back To Top    #6
    ~Paw~Paw})]<^>¥ Hic's Avatar
    Real Name
    Hic
    Location
    Michigan
    Vehicle
    99 Contour SVT
    Posts
    3,164
    Join Date
    Jul 2013

    Re: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    $1 trillion student loan debt widens US wealth gap

    Unfortunately, as people further themselves , there is a contingent that attaches to their blood system ( like an eel or bloodsucker ) and sucks them dry as they move along on their way !


    Every payment toward their student loans is $900 they aren't putting in their retirement savings account.

    They believe they'll eventually climb from debt and begin using their earnings to build assets. But, like the roughly 37 million others in the U.S. saddled with $1 trillion in student debt, they may never catch up with wealthy peers who began life after college free from the burden.

    The median 2009 net worth for a household without outstanding student debt was $117,700, nearly three times the $42,800 worth in a household with outstanding student debt, Allen Aston is one of the lucky ones, having landed a full academic and financial-need scholarship at Ohio State University. The 22-year-old software engineer from Columbus estimates it let him avoid about $100,000 in debt.

    Without loans to repay, Aston is already contributing 6 percent of his salary to a retirement fund that is matched in part by his employer and doesn't have the same financial concerns his friends do.

    "I'm making the same money as them, but they have student loans they're paying back that I don't. So, it definitely seems noticeable," he said.

    At the other end of the spectrum is Zbylut, an accountant-turned-attorney in Glendale, Calif. He's been chipping away at nearly $160,000 in student debt since graduating in 2005 from law school at Loyola University in Chicago. Now 48, the tax attorney estimates he could have $150,000 to $200,000 in a 401(k) had the money he's paid toward loans gone there.

    "I'm sitting here in traffic. I've got a Mercedes behind me and an Audi in front of me and I'm thinking, 'What did they do that I didn't do?'" Zbylut said by cellphone from his Chevrolet. He's been turned down twice for the type of mortgage he needs to buy a home big enough for himself, the fiancee he would have married already if not for his debts and her 10-year-old son.

    "I have more education and more degrees than my father, as does she than her parents, and yet our parents are better off than we are. What's wrong with this picture?" he said.

    Student debt is the only kind of household debt that rose through the Great Recession and now totals more than either credit card or auto loan debt, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Both the number of borrowers and amount borrowed ballooned by 70 percent from 2004 to 2012.

    Of the nearly 20 million Americans who attend college each year, about 12 million borrow, according to the Almanac of Higher Education. Estimates show that the average four-year graduate accumulates $26,000 to $29,000 in loans, and some leave college with six figures worth of debt.

    The increases have been driven in part by rising tuition, resulting from reduced state funding and costlier campus facilities and amenities. Compounding the problem has been a trend toward merit-based, rather than need-based, grants as institutions seek to attract the higher-achieving students who will boost their standings.

    "Because there's a strong correlation in this country between things like SAT scores or ACT scores and wealth or income, the (grant) money ends up going disproportionately to students from wealthier families" who tend to perform better on those tests, said Donald Heller, dean of the Michigan State University College of Education.

    Those factors, along with stagnating family incomes and declining savings, have made student loans a much bigger part of funding higher education, Elliott said.

    Harvard Business School's Michael Norton wonders whether greater public awareness of the widening wealth gap in the United States would hasten policy change. Norton conducted a 2011 survey that found that people tend to think wealth is more equally distributed than it is.

    But with elected officials from President Barack Obama on down now talking about the wealth gap as an urgent public problem, a more complete picture seems to be emerging, he said.

    "Both parties are now saying, perhaps inequality has gotten to the point where it's not fair when people don't have a chance to rise, and we need to do something about it," Norton said.

    Targeting the soaring cost of higher education, Obama in August proposed the most sweeping changes to the federal student aid program in decades. His plan would link federal money to new college ratings and reward schools if they help low-income students, keep costs low and have large numbers of students earn degrees.

    Lawmakers in Congress also are debating how to address the issue, including proposals to

    allow graduates with high-interest loans to refinance at lower rates.


    The American Medical Student Association supports expanding the National Health Services Corps, which provides loan forgiveness in exchange for service in underserved areas.

    Nida Degesys, AMSA's president, graduated in May 2013 from Northeast Ohio Medical University with about $180,000 in loans. The amount has already swelled with interest to about $220,000.

    "There were times where this would make me stay up at night," Degesys said. "The principal alone is a problem, but the interest is staggering."

    Yet, as costly as medical school was, Degesys sees it as an investment in herself and her career, one she thinks will pay off with a higher earning potential.

    College degrees can pay off. College graduates ages 25 to 32 working full time earn $45,500, about $17,500 more than their peers with just a high school diploma, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of census data.

    Elliott says the country needs to re-think college financing options to bring debt down and graduation rates up.

    "We can't," he said, "let debt hinder a whole generation of people from beginning to accumulate wealth soon after graduating college."
    Last edited by Hic; 03-28-2014 at 08:23 AM.
    Viewing Smilies , you trying to access privileged system?¤Somewhere 0ut There¤}]

  7. Back To Top    #7
    ~Paw~Paw})]<^>¥ Hic's Avatar
    Real Name
    Hic
    Location
    Michigan
    Vehicle
    99 Contour SVT
    Posts
    3,164
    Join Date
    Jul 2013

    Re: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    You name it and the price is probably rising or increasing !

    1] Beef
    2] Pork
    3] Milk and other dairy products
    4] Nuts and nut butters
    5] Veggies ( lettuce, tomatoes , etc..,
    6] Grapes
    7] Salmon
    8] basically , everything you eat is goin through the roof !
    Viewing Smilies , you trying to access privileged system?¤Somewhere 0ut There¤}]

  8. Back To Top    #8
    ~Paw~Paw})]<^>¥ Hic's Avatar
    Real Name
    Hic
    Location
    Michigan
    Vehicle
    99 Contour SVT
    Posts
    3,164
    Join Date
    Jul 2013

    Re: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    http://www.numbeo.com/food-prices/co...=United+States

    Monthly recommended minimum amount of money for food per person
    (assuming 31 days per month) $287.51
    Viewing Smilies , you trying to access privileged system?¤Somewhere 0ut There¤}]

  9. Back To Top    #9
    ~Paw~Paw})]<^>¥ Hic's Avatar
    Real Name
    Hic
    Location
    Michigan
    Vehicle
    99 Contour SVT
    Posts
    3,164
    Join Date
    Jul 2013

    Re: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    Viewing Smilies , you trying to access privileged system?¤Somewhere 0ut There¤}]

  10. Back To Top    #10
    ~Paw~Paw})]<^>¥ Hic's Avatar
    Real Name
    Hic
    Location
    Michigan
    Vehicle
    99 Contour SVT
    Posts
    3,164
    Join Date
    Jul 2013

    Re: Has NASA Predicted The End of Civilization?

    Prices are unlikely to drop anytime soon
    Food prices have been on the rise for most of the year and it’s unlikely they’ll drop anytime soon.

    The Agriculture Department expects meat prices to rise 6.5 percent in 2014, up from a 5.5 percent forecast earlier this year and well ahead of the 20-year average increase of 2.9 percent.

    The trend is similar when it comes to milk and other dairy products, as well as vegetables, fruits and nuts.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hic View Post
    You name it and the price is probably rising or increasing !

    1] Beef
    2] Pork
    3] Milk and other dairy products
    4] Nuts and nut butters
    5] Veggies ( lettuce, tomatoes , etc..,
    6] Grapes
    7] Salmon
    8] basically , everything you eat is goin through the roof !
    Viewing Smilies , you trying to access privileged system?¤Somewhere 0ut There¤}]

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Back To Top