innervision961
Member
Scientific facts are just social constructs bros, dont worry about any of it!
Remember going on long car journeys as a kid in summer?
There would be loads of squashed bugs on the windscreen at the end of the journey.
Make a similar journey these days (area, duration, season) and the windscreen is completely free of bug corpses at the end.
"All my friends are dead".jpg
welp time for Black Mirror
I hate bugs, good riddance, I don't care if a certain Ultimate Entomologist would cave my face in for that
Lol, sure. Whatever you say. Our lives will go on if we don't have shit eating insects being shit eating insects. We pollen, plant, and harvest much more then they ever could do for us.So, you're ignoring that insects make up a huge part of our ecosystem and without them, we die? But hey, at least those nasty bugs are gone, right?
I drive to Ohio frequently from buffalo ny and can say that I kill tons per trip still.
I hate bugs, good riddance, I don't care if a certain Ultimate Entomologist would cave my face in for that
Insects are doing just fine down here in Florida
It depends on whether we can continue to harvest enough food. We are levelling off before the food crunch hits. Once weather and a lack of pollinators disrupts harvests for multiple years and our industrial food supply collapses, we will see how smoothly it levels off.
Lol, sure. Whatever you say. Our lives will go on if we don't have shit eating insects being shit eating insects. We pollen, plant, and harvest much more then they ever could do for us.
We have been manufacturing and pollinating for years, if not decades already. Even "organic" farmers don't even rely on insects. Are you saying every fruit and plant that's sprouted in the last 10 years have been the work of bees, mosquitoes, and Flys? No, they became irrelevant.We pollinate using bees.. you know, a flying insect.
75% of them are splattered all over the front of cars.
Nah. The solution is to do vertical indoor farming. It improves production, creates less waste, and doesn't affect ecological habitats.This shouldn't even be that difficult, but it seems there is little interest because people aren't interested in having something like Soylent being the basis of our nutrition, keeping traditional foods for special occasions only. It would also stop the current massive amounts of food waste.
Either that, or massively reduce earth's population. Or both.
Nah. The solution is to do vertical indoor farming. It improves production, creates less waste, and doesn't affect ecological habitats.
Don't know why you suddenly go fo the most extreme solution when there's alternatives.
We need a revolution in food production, so we can massively reduce the amount of pesticides going into the environment and protect land from being exploited for farming.
Remember going on long car journeys as a kid in summer?
There would be loads of squashed bugs on the windscreen at the end of the journey.
Make a similar journey these days (area, duration, season) and the windscreen is completely free of bug corpses at the end.
"All my friends are dead".jpg
Nah. The solution is to do vertical indoor farming. It improves production, creates less waste, and doesn't affect ecological habitats.
Don't know why you suddenly go fo the most extreme solution when there's alternatives.
Uhm, last time an extinction event actually caused a significant reduction of insects it was also pretty much game over for most vertebrates too and that was before the evolution of polinating insects.Even if it causes a catastrophic extinction event, the closer towards a 100% reduction of bugs the better.
So your telling me there use to be even MORE insects around????!???
We pollen
I guess Ill wait and see if we do want to have kids...