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'Warned 2000 tech slide; predicted 2008 meltdown in 2007. Forecasted 2020 global economic collapse in 2011, AND NOW- BY 2050 - THE MOTHER OF ALL CRASHES"

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#TROUBLE AHEAD AS #ICE SHELF DEVASTATED IN #ANTARCTIC

 REUTERS Thinning Antarctic ice shelf finally crumbles after heatwave By  Isla Binnie March 25 (Reuters) - An East Antarctica ice shelf disi...

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Saturday, June 12, 2021

FINALLY, WE ARE SENDING JEFF #BEZOS - IN #DRAG -WITH #AMAZON BACK HOME

HOME SWEET HOME

HE'S BACK 


Trip to space with Jeff Bezos sells for $28 mn


·3-min read

A mystery bidder paid $28 million at auction Saturday for a seat alongside Jeff Bezos on board the first crewed spaceflight of the billionaire's company Blue Origin next month.

The Amazon founder revealed this week that both he and his brother Mark would take seats on board the company's New Shepard launch vehicle on July 20, to fly to the edge of space and back.

The Bezos brothers will be joined by the winner of Saturday's charity auction, whose identity remains unknown, and by a fourth, as yet unnamed space tourist.

"The name of the auction winner will be released in the weeks following the auction's conclusion," tweeted Blue Origin following the sale.

"Then, the fourth and final crew member will be announced -- stay tuned."

Saturday's successful bidder beat out some 20 rivals in an auction launched on May 19 and wrapped up with a 10-minute, livecast frenzy.

Bidding had reached $4.8 million by Thursday, but shot up spectacularly in the final live auction, rising by million dollar increments.

The proceeds -- aside from a six percent auctioneer's commission -- will go to Blue Origin's foundation, Club for the Future, which aims to inspire future generations to pursue careers in STEM -- science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

Taking off from a desert in western Texas, the New Shepard trip will last 10 minutes, four of which passengers will spend above the Karman line that marks the recognized boundary between Earth's atmosphere and space.

After lift-off, the capsule separates from its booster, then spends four minutes at an altitude exceeding 60 miles (100 kilometers), during which time those on board experience weightlessness and can observe the curvature of Earth.

The booster lands autonomously on a pad two miles from the launch site, and the capsule floats back to the surface with three large parachutes that slow it down to about a mile per hour when it lands.

- Lifelong dream -


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HUGE CELEBRATION PLANNED FOR WHEN BEZOS ARRIVES



NO TIME - GO TO FIVE MINUTES ON VIDEO - USE YOUR IMAGINATION - HILARIOUS

THIS CLASSIC PARODY WORKS PERFECT FOR BEZOS' AMAZON

TOO FUNNY

Friday, June 4, 2021

OUR PLANET; OUR FUTURE - Nobel Prize Laureates Call For G7 Action

 

126 Nobel Laureates Issue Urgent Call Ahead of G7 Summit, Demanding ‘Decade of Action’ to Combat Global Crises

in Climate Change  by   04/06/2021

Editors Comments

What these leaders fail to disclose is that we are running out of all the NNRs materials and non-metallic minerals needed to maintain our industrial way of life by 2050. At that point, the global economic system will collapse. (see BLIP below) -  Editor



A group of 126 Nobel laureates and other experts on Thursday called on the leaders of the G7 nations and the United Nations secretary-general to help put the global community on a path to establishing “a new relationship with the planet,” as the world continues to battle the Covid-19 pandemic and faces a coming decade which will be “decisive” in determining whether the Earth remains habitable.

Nobel Prize laureates including Leymah Gwobee, May-Britt Moser, and Joseph Stiglitz signed a statement titled “Our Planet, Our Future: An Urgent Call to Action” ahead of the G7 Summit and following the first-ever Nobel Prize Summit, where winners of the annual awards discussed what can be done between now and 2030 “to put the world on a path to a more sustainable, more prosperous future for all.”





The laureates met amid the pandemic, a global crisis of inequality which was exacerbated and brought into stark relief by the public health emergency, ecological and climate crises, and an “information crisis.”

“These supranational crises are interlinked and threaten the enormous gains we have made in human progress,” said the signatories. “It is particularly concerning that the parts of the world projected to experience many of the compounding negative effects from global changes are also home to many of the world’s poorest communities, and to indigenous peoples.”

At the G7 Summit taking place in Cornwall, England starting on June 11, the laureates said, the leaders of some of the world’s wealthiest and most powerful nations must consider how all the current global crises are intertwined and how they can be mitigated during the Anthropocene—the current geological epoch in which “human societies are now the prime driver of change in Earth’s living sphere” and which is “likely to be characterized by speed, scale, and shock at global levels.”



Blip: Humanity's 300-year self-terminating experiment with industrialism





Wednesday, June 2, 2021

‘Mindboggling’ #Arctic# heatwave breaks records




Profound heatwaves’ in region will be more common, warns meteorologist





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