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Planet of the Humans
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2020-04-25 at 1:27 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 1:32 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 1:51 PM UTCI don't pay much attention to American politics, I just like to share full length movies I find on youtube.
I appreciate that you finally actually watched it before giving a well thought out reply.
I do honestly hope you're right, either in the sense that pollution isn't really a problem, or that the problem is just an american one, unfortunately I have not become as convinced as you. -
2020-04-25 at 2 PM UTCits what you do that matters.
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2020-04-25 at 2:03 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 2:13 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 2:14 PM UTCCovid is culing the masses. Just like the flu and pneumonia and Sars and anti-vaxers
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2020-04-25 at 2:16 PM UTC
Originally posted by vindicktive vinny well because if the world is messed up as you believe it is its not going to unmess itself while you continue to ply more mess on top of it.
thats what you believe isnt it ? the world is messed up.
I like to think I do my part, however I'm not sure it matters at all. -
2020-04-25 at 2:30 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 2:54 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 2:56 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 2:57 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 2:58 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 2:59 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 3:03 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 3:11 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 3:21 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 3:47 PM UTC
Originally posted by vindicktive vinny just as i thought, utter retardation.
blaming over population is retarded. the real problem as always is distribution.
just like income inequalities are caused by poor income distribution, resources inequality are due to poor resources distribution.
all the foods and drinks that the first world throw out due to a variety of reasons can feed all the third world a few times over.
first world consumers are the problem.
the audiences are the problem.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/04/23/fixing-food-dumping-food-banks/Farmers in the upper Midwest euthanize their baby pigs because the slaughterhouses are backing up or closing, while dairy owners in the region dump thousands of gallons of milk a day. In Salinas, Calif., rows of ripe iceberg, romaine and red-leaf lettuce shrivel in the spring sun, waiting to be plowed back into the earth.
Drone footage shows a 1.5-mile-long line of cars waiting their turn at a drive-through food bank in Miami. In Dallas, schools serve well north of 500,000 meals on each service day, cars rolling slowly past stations of ice chests and insulated bags as food service employees, volunteers and substitute teachers hand milk and meal packets through the windows. -
2020-04-25 at 3:48 PM UTC
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2020-04-25 at 4:01 PM UTC