I don't know how I missed this the first time (I apologize for not spending enough time reading it), but this stuff stuck out just now:
erikj1508 wrote...
...take Chernobyl for instance, a sabotage attack on the soviet union, which appeared man-made, however that was not the case, it is rather obvious that it was a sabotage attack in order to create a chain reaction within the soviet union which eventually caused the end of the cold war, and the fall of USSR.
Can you really talk about pseudo-science (which has still not been defined; to me, pseudo-science is stuff meant to appear truly scientific when it is not, such as diets that claim to understand body chemistry but actually don't, but it appears to be something very different in this thread) while throwing out a theory such as this? Many 9/11 theories hold more water than the theory that the US caused the Chernobyl disaster.
erikj1508 wrote...
It is fair to say that the increasing numbers of autism and add, is directly correlated with man made pollutants like Chernobyl, and radioactive medicine widely distributed during the interwar period, to be frank.
No, that isn't fair. Do you have even one scientific study that suggests that the increased rate of autism diagnoses are related to pollutants, let alone what happened at Chernobyl? That's even crazier than saying that vaccines cause autism, which itself is a major misconception due to people believing that correlation equals causation.
erikj1508 wrote...
I would say that, people born after this disaster should not be allowed to have children due to its degenerate effect on future generations
So, the human race should be allowed to end? Because that's how reproduction works, one generation produces another generation, and that generation produces another generation, and so on. If every member of a generation stopped having kids, there'd be no next generation and no continuation of the human race.
[quote="erikj1508"]Not only that but humanity has smoked every harmful plant on the fucking planet for thousands of years, the creation of civilization has only contributed negatively on the human genome, during the last 10000 years our brains have shrunk drastically, the very center of human complexity.[quote]
First, if we smoked every bad thing on the planet for thousands and years yet continued to exist, doesn't that mean that those things aren't very bad? Or maybe they are bad, but the entire human race doesn't smoke them to a detrimental degree, so it doesn't actually affect the human race as a whole.
Second, civilization could be said to be a product of evolution. It is, after all, what we've worked towards over the course of many, many centuries.
Third, if our brains have shrunk, is that really a bad thing? Maybe they're more complex and can thus take up less space. I think that'd be good. Whatever the reason, I doubt modern-day humans are less intelligent than cavemen. It boggles my mind that anyone could even suggest that people 10,000 years ago had it better than modern-day people.
Finally, is there an ideal genome or genetic structure? You seem to be implying that there is, but you never define it. If we're so shitty, then what is better? If modern-day society is degrading, then what would upgrading be like?