Thursday 17 August 2017

Time Travel

Time travel has always been a thing of the imagination, encouraged by hundreds upon thousands of science fiction TV shows, movies and books. But what is time travel? Surely everyone is travelling through time, just at the same linear rate, with everyone else. What people want is the time travel that Doctor Who and Star Trek exhibit: the almost instant change of time, on a select object, both backwards and forwards on the timeline.
Travelling backwards in time has always been a conundrum for theoretical physicists; it creates paradoxes. The best example for this is the Grandfather Paradox, where you travel back in time and murder your grandfather before he meets your grandmother. Then, since one of your parents are not born neither are you. You would never have existed to create the time machine, so your grandfather lives which means you murder him and the cycle repeats – creating a paradox. This renders the possibility of time travel to the past impossible; or rather not impossible, it would just end the universe, time, and space. There are theories that once the time traveller murders his grandfather he joins a parallel timeline, or an alternate universe, of which he was never born. Other paradoxes such as the autoinfanticide paradox (travelling back in time and murdering oneself as an infant) present the same message: travelling backwards in time is unachievable.
Going forward in time is easily achievable, because everyone is doing it. Going faster than everyone else, however, is slightly more difficult, but possible. According to Einstein’s theory of general relativity, gravity, affects both space and time. This means mass drags on time, slowing time down. Artificial satellites prove this, where they gain one-third-of-a-billionth of a second every day, compared to Earth. This is due to their distance away from a large mass, thus gravity does not drag on time as much on them. To the theory into practise, the largest known mass in the Milky Way is the centre black hole Sagittarius A. It has the mass of four million suns in one dense point. If a spacecraft had the ability to orbit this supermassive black hole, it would experience half as much time as on Earth. So if you had trillions of dollars to spend and a death wish, you could visit this Sagittarius A for five years and ten years would have passed on Earth. So travelling faster in time is possible, it just takes a lot of time.
A much more efficient way of travelling faster in time is to go at almost the speed of light. Reaching the speed of light is impossible, as shown by Einstein, and, because of this, strange anomalies occur when you get close to 300 million m/s, such as the slowing down of time. If, somehow, a train was built to circle the Earth, and get 99.999% of light speed, it would slow down. The train’s speed wouldn’t slow, but time would, meaning everyone on board would be going slower than everyone outside the train. The passengers wouldn’t notice a difference, but if they were on that train for 1 year, 223 years would have passed for everyone else on Earth. However, the implications of living on a train moving at near-light speed for 1 year are a much larger problem. Food and water would quickly run out, and ordering at a McDonald’s Drive-Thru isn’t capable at 299 million m/s.
Jumping through time is a different problem altogether. There is only one real possibility of time jumping being attainable, and this is the Einstein-Rosen Bridge; a wormhole. Imagine space as a sine wave. Time and space travels the curve, take the long route. Wormholes open up a possibility of going straight through the wave taking a much shorter route. The only way to penetrate through the metaphorical sine wave is when two incredibly large masses push against it, such as the case of a supermassive black hole. Theoretically, if anything would be enter this black hole, it would go through each point, and come out of the other side. It would have travelled through time and space.Although not seen before by astrophysicists, the equations of the theory of general relativity have valid solutions that contain wormholes, so they are a possibility. One theory by Stephen Hawking is that these wormholes exist in quantum foam, the smallest environment in the universe.In the simplest of terms, quantum foam is the foundation of the fabric of the Universe, smaller than anything else known to man. These tiny wormholes flash in and out of existence, but momentarily link separate places and times in the universe. As theorised by Stephen Hawking, if it was possible to control and enlarge these wormholes, humans would be able to travel through space and time.
In reality, these are only dreams. Any possibility of these theories being tested in the next century, let alone in our lifetime, remain simply as hopes. However, no one knows when a breakthrough may occur like harnessing the energy to control wormholes, or when the answers suddenly become clear. The great thing about time is that, however permanent the past may be, the future is open to anything.

Wednesday 29 March 2017

Northern Irexit

With Brexit in an ever-looming state, it seems inevitable the country will circle back to its favourite and most controversial issue: Northern Ireland. Since 1997 and the Good Friday Agreement, signed in by Blair, the Northern Ireland has seen significant improvements in both relations with the mainland and its adjoining Republic. However, Brexit may forecast a collapse in this amnesty.

The first issue, the biggest issue, that a Brexit UK faces is citizenship. If you were born in Northern Ireland, or have either a parent or grandparent born in Northern Ireland or The Éire, then you're eligible for a Republic of Ireland passport. This has led to hilarious backlash, such as the Belfast Passport Office running out of dual-citizenship forms on the 24th June. Anyway, this issue is incredible because it ultimately divides sovereignty of NI between London and Dublin. One solution would be border control, whether of NI, Great Britain, or Ireland.

This smugly moves on the next problem - border control. Northern Ireland cannot erect a border, since if would violate the Good Friday Agreement, and certain nationalists would have a problem with that. The Island of Great Britain could also increase their border control between itself and NI, which, amongst other issues, would seem strange between two islands of the same country. Furthermore, this doesn't stop EU citizens living in NI, or moving there, and doesn't even stop U.K. citizens from free movement into Ireland; an EU state. It could be argued, by more extreme solutionists, that Ireland should patrol and increase border security for the United Kingdom. However, considering free movement is allowed between Ireland and the rest of the EU, this is already a failed idea, without even considering if Ireland would do it or not.

The third way, a Greenland-esque division, directing a comparison from when Greenland left the EU, but Denmark didn't. This could work, but would the EU allow it? Considering Northern Ireland doesn't have the GDP, or any other of possible requirements met to join, the EU couldn't possibly allow them to join back. Furthermore, it would seem completely disrespectful to the five candidate countries that have been waiting years to join, only to see part of a country that voted to leave join back.

What possible solution, you may ask, could possibly fix this. A somewhat of a out-of-the-box and optimistic solution is to declare Northern Ireland as an overseas territory. This way, the autonomous region of NI is free to join whichever trade agreements exempt from the U.K., and also consider free movement of people with Ireland without creating too much of an issue. There is precedent, with Gibraltar and Spain, Cyprus and even smaller overseas territories in the Mediterranean from other states in Europe.

This way, with Northern Ireland as an overseas territory, NI would keep everything the unionists want such as the Queen, but also have more independence for the nationalists. It would appease the EU, since they would see it as calming tensions between states, and the U.K. would be pleased since there's no violation of the Good Friday Agreement. It's a win for every side.

Except the Scottish, but that's a far deeper issue.

Tuesday 22 November 2016

The Circle of Hate and Hypocrisy

We seem to be at the pinnacle of the cycle of hatred that exists in politics. Never have two sets of people been so far divided, and only dividing the centre even more. With reference to US politics, this happens every four years, with Republicans spreading hate for Obama, or Democrats spreading hate for Bush. Now, however, with the advent of social media and antidisestablishmentarianism amongst the media conglomerates, we're left with a divide of hate never seen before.

The largest issue I have with this, is when one side is victor, the predictable happens; the losers cry out and protest, whereas the winners comment about the hypocrisy of the losers since the losers complained when the winners protested the years before, when the roles were reversed. So it's a cycle of hate, and has been since, well, wheels have existed. Now however, we're on the verge of anarchy, the peak of this wheel, since Trump has been elected. The left, and anti-right, see him as a symbol of hatred, and use their own hatred to combat him and his supporters. The right, and anti-left, choose to fight fire with fire, and fuel the chaos until something snaps.

Snapping, although, can be prevented. Donald Trump is the human fire extinguisher, who can stop the cycle from grinding down on those with hate but rather tell them to stop. He's already partly done this, but until he's president this wheel will keep turning.

Onto more appropriate issues, such as the legitimisation of the left's accusation that Trump is an idol of hate. He isn't. He's simply the man to those of hate (more specifically, KKK, neo-nazis, [bigots, basically, with no other cause that someone else's pain]) who is more favourable. The same way that Clinton was voted for by extreme socialists, this, surprisingly, doesn't make her the next Lenin. Trump does have a way with words that might be off to some people, too common or not presidential enough; which is a perfectly valid excuse, because of democracy and all. But he isn't a symbol of hate, but rather a suppression of it. Without Trump, Cruz, or Carson was a likely nominee and possible president. This would have been catastrophic. Trump is seen a symbol for hate because the media has propped him up to be this major disaster, this instigator of war. Whereas, a majority of his policies, views and ideals are moderate to left, only a handful are right wing. The media are the one's in control of how Trump is viewed, and they're the instigators of war, and the major disasters, since they are the ones turning the wheel.

The common theme isn't the presidents, the bias, the scandals or the public's response. The common theme is the system we live in, either in the UK or US. The issue is that the public isn't voting for who they want to lead, but rather they're voting against the person they want to see lose. It's a wheel because of the electoral systems we live under and they control who stays in power. Democrat or Republican, Labour or Conservative, it doesn't matter anymore since either one will always be in power. Voting reform is the biggest issue with any election, but instead of protesting against first past the post, the media swings the attention of hate towards the winner. But in this scenario, no one is the winner, and we hate them anyway.




Thursday 17 November 2016

The American Dream 2: Starring Donald J. Trump

Winston Churchill was a genocidal colonist. Mother Teresa made thousands suffer. Martin Luther King Junior had a mistress, JFK had many more. Ernest Hemingway was abusive to his wives. Theodore Roosevelt hated the natives, Christopher Columbus enslaved and butchered them. Lincoln was racist. So was Gandhi. These are some of the greatest minds, people, idols. Our heroes are measured on who they are, but what they achieve. I’m not endorsing horrific behaviour, but saints are made through suffering and change, not by tradition.

Donald J. Trump will be the one of the best presidents the United States have ever seen. He will divide the country, he will alienate some, and he will be an idol of hatred. But after his initial spiral downwards, he will create a unity amongst the country never seen before. This partisanship of the people will be brought out by his one main message; fighting the system. The system that had brought down so many, has destroyed lives and fought against change. The middle class of America is no more, what was once a vibrant prosperous nation is a void of personal debt, dead-end lives and hatred. The people, however, used the only thing they had, and on the 8th of November, the people of America realised that the American Dream is dead.

It's not what he's promised, but him as an idea; a never-elected before candidate won over a former First Lady, first woman candidate, Secretary of State. It's that he is the change people needed not because of what he says, but who he is. Now both parties are in disarray and complete malfunction because there's nothing stopping Trump 2.0 coming in 2020/2024. The parties, the government, Wall Street, the media now have to actually care about the working class, otherwise they will face demise.

His ideals, his policies do not matter, his ideas and engagement are just a medium for the people to actually get their voice heard. He won, not on hate, but for love of the American people who have nothing, but used to have everything. Trump, as a concept, will change politics forever, will change people's lives forever; and for most people, any change can only be good.

Trump is the American Dreams resurrection. It’s the notion that anyone can do anything. That the people can rise up and stop this cyclic system of capitalistic fascism. President-Elect Trump will pave a way for those outsiders and believers for years to come. Candidates like Sanders, like Stein, those who think differently than what the DNC or GOP want them to think, will have an actual change. Now is not the time for protests or violence. Now is the time for American Heroes, who will push the boundaries of the system, and begin a new wave of prosperity. Too long have the majority been pushed down, and now they know it. Donald J. Trump is not an idol of hatred, but an inspiration for how the hatred can change. He is the hope people need and he is the light to end their darkness. 


There is no knowing whether he will achieve greatness, the only thing we now is, at the end of his tenure, how influential Barack Obama has been. He’s been a substantially good president, through criticism from the House and Senate, and he achieved not what was great, but what was hard. Now we carry on his message from one president to the next: Hope.

Tuesday 6 September 2016

The Classnessless of Schools

Education is the crux of humanity. It's the simple concept that lets us as a species grow into something that isn't just troglodytic grunting but instead leave the cave and discover fire. It's humanity's way of making the children of the world catch up with the history of everything we've invented, conquered and achieved. If there was a ladder of importance in the world of human concepts then education would be at the top, only rung above politics, and about seven billion rungs above the 2016 US presidential election. 

So why is it, that as such an important concept, it's hated by most who attend. This is obviously a generalised statement, but if you can imagine any movie, TV show or book about a student enjoying school, there are a hundred about hating it. It's because schools aren't the same as education. Education happens in any walk of life, at any point or time, when you learn or grow as a person. School is simply a vessel for education, the main-stream, government-corrected education that's deemed most important than the rest of history. Schooling, especially in the United Kingdom isn't about learning, or education, it's about passing an exam. Exams that include subject matter that might one might never see again, but it makes sense as these exams don't show what we know, but what we can know. It's a test, not of intelligence, but of memory - then again, what's the difference. Intelligence is the capability that ecompasses that memory, but isn't the entirety of it. Intelligence is common sense +, it's the way we behave without education, it's who we are as people - how we solve problems or end crisis. This is why IQ tests don't have factual information to relate to, but rather mental obstacles to show raw intelligence. Schools do this through exams, whether it's history or physics, the exams we go through are IQ tests with factual information, to show off our potential, not our knowledge. Many students don't like school because what they learn won't be used at all later in life, and maybe it won't; the only reason it's used is to show if you can bear learning useless information to show you can.

Intelligence, however, cannot be defined, labelled or controlled. In society those who know more are deemed smarter, compared to those of incredible artistic talent. The problem with intelligence exams is that it is only academic, and it becomes of elitist. This elitism is evident in grammar schools around the United Kingdom today, and has been in the news recently with May's recent ascendance into Number 10. The grammar school ban to end their creation passed 18 years ago, with Labour solidifying that this would stop elitism, and create equality. With the comprehensive system coming into play, everyone should get basic level of education no matter of creed, race or colour. Instead, the number of grammar schools dwindled, which only made them more elitist. If you have a constant production line of a sports car, it's price will stay steady and fluctuate slightly around an affordable price.. If, however, you decide to stop the production of this car, and destroy half of them, they're price will only go up. Grammar schools have appreciated in value, and it's made a more elitist system than ever before. What we need is change to the system, an allowance of grammar schools. But again, we'd have the same elitism problem. There should be an equal three-tier educational system, based on vocational, mixed and academia. This three-way system will mean students of any ability, of any passion, can strive in their field, and get the education they deserve. 


Equality with elitism is always a difficult issue to tackle, especially when it comes to further education. Universities have become so overrun with students that a bachelor's degree is now the equivalent of A levels 20 years ago. Universities have become over saturated by students who don't need to learn more to achieve their passions and goals in life. But since Thatcher, students have seen unviersity as a way to become rich and famous, through no help of their own. This wave of students coming to university has lead to the infamous tuition fees, currently at £9000 a year. Which, in turn, means underprivileged students and children from working class backgrounds are less likely to go to university. It's elitism, again, from the Blair-era. Fortunately for him a lot of the flak of his flaws to the education system are misguided because of some illegal war he started somewhere. Anyway, university is now a negligible issue, where students are becoming smarter, and no one is getting richer. So what's the solution? I believe that increasing tuition fees is the only way to go, to discourage the students who shouldn't go to university. Then, for those who really wish to go to university, and have the academic skills to show, can get a scholarship or bursary. This way, the überrich still get to let their children get to have the best further education, but they in-turn are paying for five worthy yet underprivileged students. And those in the middle class, who are worthy (maybe worthy isn't the right word when talking about tackling elitism, but we'll go with it) can still strive in their field, but doing actually useful studies or vocational work subsidised by the government. That way, it's a win-win-win for all classes, creeds and colours. Obviously, this is just a concept, and there are almost definitely many flaws that will cripple the idea, but not here. I've effectively solved any education crisis, whilst also educating you. And it's only a Tuesday.

Tuesday 30 August 2016

The President of the United States, in 2020?

2020 seems a long time away, but since candidates start campaigning four decades prior to an election, it's really just around the corner. So, who will win?


Some say there's actually more than 3 trees

The first contender is, obviously, the current (in 2020) president. Now, since we have no idea who that would be, and no matter what they'll be hated, we'll go for Hillary Clinton. She's the highest in the polls right now at 44%, and the NY Times estimates she has an 89% chance of winning. But that's for 2016. So much can happen in 4 years, and there's surely no way of predicting how well she will do for the next election.

Let's begin with her 'criminal record'. Although not charged, or prosecuted, it seems like Hillary's email scandal is getting worse and worse as time goes on. It's only time until WikiLeaks produces something that the US government (the guys who aren't Bill, Hillary and Monica) will care about. Assuming she doesn't get impeached, but the public opinion decreases somehow, she'll have a tougher time getting into the 2020 spot. 

Another fun-loving-happy-topic is both the rising debt of the US and its citizens. Tuition fees and housing costs are already crumbling the economy, especially in the youth, yet it seems unlikely that Clinton will change these. Getting (legal, somehow) money from big banks and corporations for her campaign, she will side with Goliath in this fight, and I don't see her doing much for poor Dave any time soon. Unless the US economy dies, or its people do, she will stay in office until 2020.

However, fortunately for her, she'll be the sitting president. This means that, just because she already is, it's more likely she'll both get the a) Democrat nomination and b) a second term. Purely because it seems like other contenders will be dead, Trump, or pop icon, I'm going to say she has a 65% chance of becoming the President in the year 2020. (Unless any of the [somewhat likely] bad things come true, then it's only a 10%)

Two flags is overcompensation








Really, who decides Clinton's presidency for the second term will be her rivals. With Trump's ambitious and groundbreaking presidential campaign for 2016, it seems likely he will run again in 2020. He (hopefully) would have seen the errors which led to his possible defeat, and might even promote more of his liberal ideas. Not getting too stuck up on policies, what he really needs to change to get a grasp of the White House is the middle class.

Trump, right now, is blowing it away with supporters who are of working class. He tells them what they want to hear, and blames their failing American Dream on things that, well, aren't him. Whether it's illegal immigration, the Clinton Foundation or Chinese productivity, the working class love him. If he's able to push for a more middle class vote, whilst keeping his working-class-yet-lovable policies, he'll do charmingly. 

The slight hiccup is that, although in theory this works, he's still Donald Trump. As much as we wish he'll turn around and become this sensible, moderate God-Emperor that we would all adore, he still would make outrageous remarks that puts him in the news cycle for three weeks of hilarity. So, since the Donald never changes, and the USA definitely won't for him, he's at a 15% chance of winning. If Donald decides to become a president for everyone, however, I'd up him to a solid 25%. 

Skin texture of a grilled cheese sandwich, but one which has been left in the fridge for one day too long

Now, for the short and sweet outsiders. There's a third option, of course, from the 2016 election. Bernie Sanders: globally loved, politically admired, really old. He'll be 78/79 by the time the next election comes around. Not only will this endanger his chances just because of the vigorous campaign trail, but it would also be used as slander by his opposition. The oldest president to be elected was Reagan at 69. As much hope as Sanders says he can bring, we don't want another FDR on our hands. For this reason, and because he isn't a Colonel (which would increases definitely in the South-East), he has a 1% chance.

Worst ever puppeteer

Who else, who can save us from these political woes? Of course, there's the one and only, the greatest, the Cruz. Ted Cruz is like a bright light at the end of the tunnel. Unfortunately for America, this bright light is a towering inferno accelerating and encompassing everything in its path for destruction. 

This is a real tweet. Just think about that.

Ted Cruz is what's making the GOP bipolar. Before the nomination, he was hated, an extreme outcast for his anti-establishment views but also for more extreme ideas, like starting an abortion war against women. So apart from his charm, what's he got? Well, since Donald Trump has clinched the nomination, Cruz has done spectacularly well in unifying the Republicans against the Donald. He's used a scare tactic to promote himself and has set him up for the 2020 election. Unfortunately for him, and fortunately for us, he's still crazy. Therefore, no matter how much unifying he does, the public, government and GOP will still see his insanity and his chances of winning dwindle. 2%, and that's generous considering his hate towards everyone who isn't a hetrosexual, white, Christian, married, middle-class Texan.

...the Zodiac Killer was never found...

But wait, what about those who didn't run this year. I know what you're thinking, and you're right. 

Kanye West.

Millionaire rapper, husband, entrepreneur and gold digger investigator extrodinarie Kanye West. He announced his runnings in mid-2015, and since then the world has been on the verge of everything he hasn't said, because the world doesn't really care. Maybe a little harsh, but the man has no political background. Yes, he could be the Ronald Reagan of our generation, but I'm sure the mums of the 70s knew who Reagan was. My parents think Kanye West is a type of detergent, but not the expensive kind. 

Celebrities have one advantage, (most) people know them, and their fanbase makes it easier to spread information and policies. In this information age, celebrities can trend and become famous in seconds, nothing is possible to be kept a secret. So Kanye has that going for him. However, he doesn't have the political awareness that he needs in the campaign. Assuming it's not a joke, he would have to begin now to create himself as a political idol in Washington, otherwise he'll be laughed at. Trump, although many disagree with his political attitude, has been in the realm of politics for decades, sponsoring and donating thousands of dollars to political heavyweights. Since Kanye is unlikely to grasp this political intelligence anytime soon, he has a 1.5% chance of winning, upped only because of his fame. If, however, he becomes politically aware, then I'd see him being the dark horse of the 2020 election, and he then has a 20% chance of winning.

That don't kill me, can only make me stronger
-
Kelly Clarkson
Of course, we're forgetting this a two horse race, as always. So with that in mind, there's a prominent icons missing in this list.

Kang, although an outsider, and fictional, has extreme political sway in Washington, with the use of disguise, spaceships and mind control. Seriously, however, The Simpsons has actually calculated many correct things for the future, predicting smart watches, Farmville, Siri's failure of communication, and the horsemeat scandal. What are the chances they'll be wrong on this one? Since it's an almost certainty, the real aspect of chance is in the existence of alien life; the universe is infinite, which means it has to be true. So Kang has a 100% chance of winning, depending on his inevitable existence. But don't blame me, I'll be voting for Kodos.

It was either this or talk about another factory-made plastic politician and sometimes you just can't get enough of Kang.

Now, not everyone can be included in such a strenuous list, and there is still 5 years for political heavyweights to come out of the fray. Who knows who will decide to run? To narrow it down, he's a comprehensive list of those most likely to run, and their chances of winning.

Hillary Clinton       60 %
Donald Trump        15 %
Elizabeth Warren     9  %
Cory Booker            3  %
Marco Rubio            3  %
Andrew Cuomo      2.5 %
Tom Cotton               2  %
Ted Cruz                   2  %
Kanye West             1.5 %
Bernie Sanders          1  %

As the observant of you notice, there's still 1% left. That's for the other 322,762,008 US citizens eligible to run. If you are, good luck. You'll need it.

Monday 29 August 2016

It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)

Every so often, we're told the world will end. Whether the Mayan's calendar will eventually end, or it's the second coming of Jesus, a year doesn't go by where humanity isn't confronted with an obscure obstacle that eventually becomes comical. The comedy of something so impractical becoming even improbable makes the notion of the world's implosion just... embarrassing. We're taught that no such thing could ever happen, and instead of choosing to wait for doom, we are taught about the advancements and the history of space, time and us. In an ironically depressing way, it may be that these advancements are what lead us to the dusk of humanity.

Since the dawn of humanity, the most important aspect of our survival, of our development as a species, has been education. Without learning, teaching, reciting and reading, we would never have technologically evolved into the space-invading, life-creating, innovating creatures we are today. Schools and university's have been the way forward for every generation, and rightly so, since we are the age where everything is achievable and possible.

But not today. Today, education has taken a back-seat, and fallen off the podium. Education has failed us for the past 40 years. It has jested with lives, and joked about our future. Today, the end of the world is coming, and we're too busy laughing at ourselves to see it

Climate change is the most serious problem our species has ever faced, and is unfortunately an amazing alliteration I didn't come up with. Global warming has been seen as a political debate for too long, it's divided parties and divided hearts. But not for whether to save the planet or not, but whether the weather is actually weathering the planet. Some politicians, especially those in the US, see climate change as a political tool to compromise and morph into negotiations that don't matter. Or they just down-right don't believe it is happening.

But it is. Climate change has taken its toll already, thinning the Arctic and Antarctic's ice, and making 2016 have the hottest months ever recorded. Humanity needs to act fast, to change its gluttonous ways of fuel use of oil poison to stop the inevitable and undeniable devastation it may have caused. Since the start of the century, there has been cause for concern; recycling increases, awareness of change and basic every-day help towards the environment. However, it isn't enough anymore. The government, every government, need to step in and control what is becoming a horrific turn of events. The Kyoto Protocol in 1997 had an amazing concept, except no one kept to their Carbon Dioxide limits. There was no punishment for doing worse and no reward for good since every government is independently run. This isn’t enough; this will end up being the Hail Mary that humanity threw but instead tripped over it's own feet because it had it's shoes on the wrong feet. We need to do better, and we need to do it now.

The other argument that I left out was that the climate change we are experiencing today is merely natural, and can be seen in patterns from millions of years of Earth's history. This is a valid argument, and there is no disproving that a pattern is emerging. and we're just in the wrong place at the wrong time. What matters, however, is that this argument still means the basic end of the world; the end of humanity and the end of our lives. This argument, however, doesn't stop our activism for the environment, but propels it even more. It shows that if this pattern is natural, we need to do everything possible to stop Mother Nature. We need to act more, act fast and act now.

Education is still important, and always will be. But would you rather give the best education for the last days of your great-great-grandchildren, or save the world and leave a legacy for their great-great-grandchildren. This isn't about whether if we should act; climate change has already begun. The question now is, how do we stop it? How do we save the world?