Option 2:joshuaayt said:Risk it.
Option 1: Kill half of human race
Outcome: Half of human race dies, and I get to live with the knowledge that I made a decision, knowing what would happen.
Option 2: Take the risk
Outcome 1: No one dies, all is well.
Outcome 2 Everyone dies, I don't have to deal with anything, because I, too, am dead.
But that would only result in the deaths of 75 percent of the original human population, so you'd basically be doing option 1 over and over until the human population got so small it could no longer support itself and maintain genetic diversity.Vrex360 said:I'm going to go with option number 2.
But only because as the Mighty Vrex, I would actually be hoping that it fails and the entire human race goes extinct.
Alternatively, I could just do option number 1 but do it twice.
My thinking to a tee. I would rather take the 100% chance of 50% of people living.crudus said:Do I get to choose who doesn't die? If not I would risk it. I wouldn't risk people I care about dying.
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/natural_resources/article4193017.eceTurigamot said:http://www.realclearscience.com/articles/2011/07/20/the_world_is_not_overpopulated_106247.htmlLordOmnit said:What nonsense is this? And who are these crackpot scientists?Turigamot said:There's really no such thing as a global population problem. Scientists have explained this already.
http://www.agricultureinformation.com/forums/shout-box/19818-overpopulation-myth.html
I was thinking the same thing. It would be a great starting point to get back on track and learn from past mistakes.Randomeaninglessword said:Kill half. As much as I dislike the idea of killing rougly 3.5 billion people, overpopulation is a very large problem.