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originally posted by: makemethink
Where would we all fit if immortality became a reality? I'm too claustrophobic to hope this is a possibility. The unemployment rate is bad enough just image if the population were to quadruple. Don't plan on social security either. đ
originally posted by: Frocharocha
This seems interesting and dangerous. A scientist in Russia claims the secret to âeternal lifeâ is in a 3.5-million-year-old Siberian specimen, this bacteria was first discovered back in 2009 inside a permafrost and since then it showed amazing results on lab rats.
NASA Spent Millions to Develop a Pen that Would Write in Space, meanwhile...the Russian s Used a Pencil.
originally posted by: makemethink
Where would we all fit if immortality became a reality? I'm too claustrophobic to hope this is a possibility. The unemployment rate is bad enough just image if the population were to quadruple. Don't plan on social security either. đ
originally posted by: 3NL1GHT3N3D1
I wouldn't want to live forever, at least not from my current viewpoint, it would get so boring and monotonous. If I'm going to live forever I'd rather it be through reincarnation where I get a fresh start every so often.
That's why I can't see the appeal of what's commonly seen as heaven. Why would you want to be the same for eternity? So boring!
The bacteria were originally found on Mamontova Gora - Mammoth Mountain - in Siberia's Sakha Republic, also known as Yakutia, in 2009 by Dr Anatoli Brouchkov, head of the Geocryology Department, Moscow State University. Similar bacteria were discovered by Siberian scientist Vladimir Repin in the brain of an extinct woolly mammoth preserved by permafrost.