Originally posted by sphinx551
Originally posted by BrokenDoll
One thing we all know is that the slightest change in even one person's choices can drastically change events of the future.
What about the past? Can the past be changed?
yep, just remember it differently.
the past and future are in the mind.
only the present moment matters.
in terms of prediciting future, and experiencing it.
there are trends, like those of the movements of the planets and the stars.
some things have more staying power than others.
if for instance there was indeed a cellestial body such an Nibiru heading this way,
it be concievable that you could jump to a multiversal juncture where it not be there.
*shrugs* it may or may not be there.
you are not experiencing it now.
so it doesn't really matter.
the only way I can see us solving the population problem,
while still maintaining everyones good health,
is moving a large portion of people to mars.
perhaps they can plant some forests about it's lakes and such, for abundance of food.
currently most of the hominid martians live underground says Andrew Basiago.
even if we had a forest garden village of 92 people on every 50 acres of land on the planet earth -- including greenland and antarctica. we'd only
have room for 6.7 billion people.
sure maybe we could have people living on the ocean, but most of these people are just copies of mass media programs with no unique identity to
contribute to the multiverse.
And they aren't living in forest gardens,
most people are living in cities which be jewels of the planet,
but sometimes jewels get really heavy and cause deformities in the wearer,
so the wearer takes them off.
So a potential happy solution I could see.
If we start moving millions of people to mars,
aiming to move at least a billion in the next 10 years,
with seedballs of some edible plants that grow on the martian surface.
making plow farming illegal in favour of seedball method,
plowing and chemicals reduces soil quality and fertility,
and moving people out of the cities into forest garden communities.
yes, we can sustain a happy populace.
but it will be on at least two planets,
with some major changes to where people live,
and how people get food (growing their own in their forest garden social village).
this would be like any normal planet does things in most galaxies I've visited.
very stable.
city like infrastructures usually only form around large temples or educational institutions,
with people drifting back into the fur (forest) of the planet once they have learned what they desired to,
living in a jewel (city) always be harder (slippery and hard) than living in fur where life be abundant.
[edit on 15-9-2009 by lowki]
[edit on 15-9-2009 by lowki]