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Wzmw These adorable steampunk illustrations make us want a pet octopus of our own
The February 1989 issue of Life magazine predicted that, by the year 2000, many staples of modern American life might find themselves on the scrapheap of history. Life predicted that by the year 2000 people would need to say goodbye to everything from film pretty mu stanley cup ch to all-male clergy in the Catholic church not so much . Bid ta-ta to LPs, fur coats and sugar. Toodle-oo to checkbooks, oil and swimming in the ocean. Happy trails to privacy, porno theaters and who knows, maybe even Democrats. It not just animals and vegetation that are departing the planet currently one species every 15 minutes . With them goes, for better or worse, any number of the tangibles and intangibles now taken for granted. Gathered here are the contents of an as-yet-unburied time capsule dedicated to impending obsolescence. So should auld acquaintance be forgot 8230; The predictions are especially interesting in that they were made shortly before the birth of the modern web and the mid-1990s flood of non-tech types getting online. What then will bring about the decline of the mailman The magazine insists that it not email, but the fax ma stanley puodelis chine. A few of the things that Life said you ;d Say goodbye to 8230; The Red Cent The extinction of penny candy along with the high cost of copper have made the life expectancy of this coin not worth stanley us a plugged nickel. On February 4, Canada stopped putting their penny into circulation. They joined the likes of Revg The World s Tallest Five-Story Shower Fountain Makes a Leaking Roof Beautiful
The final episode of Frozen Planet 鈥?the popular new series from the creators of Planet Earth 鈥?addre stanley cups sses the impending threat of climate change on the Earth poles. In the episode, which will air on B stanley cup BC One on December 7th, narrator David Attenborough is expected to claim that the Arctic could be completely devoid of ice by 2020. But in the US, the episode will not air, for fear of the reaction it might draw from America climate change skeptics. In fact, as of mid-November, the BBC had sold the documentary series to over 30 foreign networks, and a third of them had opted out of the controversial final episode. In a recent interview with the BBC, Attenborough weighed in about what he hopes people will take away from the Frozen Planet series: Part of television is to reveal the world鈥he truth about the world, and both its beauties and its dangers and its splendors and we are understanding increasingly that these two regions of the world 鈥?which a tiny minority of the human race can get to 鈥?are actually going to have a great influence on our future, on the future of homo sapiens, if not the future of London. It not beyond possibility that warming will actually cause sea level rises which could threaten central London. In other words, it sounds as though what is perhaps the most salient episode of the series has been omitted from the Amer stanley cup ican broadcast entirely. Former Tory chancellor and climate change skeptic recently accused Attenborough of sensat |
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