On Tue, 28 Jul 2009 18:11:15 GMT, Richard the Dreaded Libertarian <freedom_guy@example.net> wrote:>On Tue, 28 Jul 2009 07:08:05 -0700, John Larkin wrote: >> On Tue, 28 Jul 2009 05:46:50 -0500, "Andrew" <andyvbel@yahoo.com> >>> >>>Should we also make food and housing free for all and paid for by taxation? >>>How about entertainment? Cars? >>>Oh, I forgot it is called socialism and has been tried in Soviet Union and >>>Eastern block countries. >>>Guess how did it end? >> >> You should move to a suitable low-government, voluntary-economy, >> defend-yourself country. Botswana comes to mind. >> >Actually, I've heard that Kenya is doing pretty well with private >property ownership and free markets. > >Thanks, >RichYes, but would you actually want to live there?
Re: One thousand years from now
Started by ●July 28, 2009
Reply by ●August 10, 20092009-08-10
On Mon, 10 Aug 2009 07:09:10 -0700 (PDT), gabydewilde <gdewilde@gmail.com> wrote:>Rowads, hospitals and skools in the sense of buildings you mean right? > >Rowbats can build houses and roads just fine.Go back to the kook group, you retarded piece of shit.
Reply by ●August 11, 20092009-08-11
On Tue, 11 Aug 2009 08:24:17 +0100, Martin Brown <|||newspam|||@nezumi.demon.co.uk> wrote:> >Moron. You set a *very* low value on infinity. > >100 years is nothing like infinity. Even if you count time in seconds it >doesn't overflow a 32bit unsigned register. > >>To think even close to infinite, imagine sub-atomic particles. Consider that even a small object like a one inch ball bearing contains gazillions, so if all the matter in the universe is made up of atoms, and they all have sub-atomic particles, then thinking of what that number must be, is about as close to infinite that you can imagine. All of the particles that make up all the grains of sand on the Earth, is a mere drop in the bucket. Or a fleck on the end of a molecular probe compared to the matter in the Universe, and the number of particles that all contains.






