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Could Comets or Meteors be used to Combat Global Warming?
Impact Winter: light as a commodityHow to naturally maintain a Earth-sized Planetary Ring System and the possible periodic bombardment that can ensue?Asteroid Impact Details = Impact winter? how long & how severe?What is the quickest way to perfect global warming?Increasing Earth's orbital radius to stop global warmingIs it possible for a planetary ring to exist beyond a planet's Rochelimit?Maintain atmosphere on moon using global warmingCan the pitch and speed of an asteroid cause a less catastrophic results?Is this sudden global cooling scenario plausible?Can satellites decrease global warming?
$begingroup$
The running theory is that if the Earth is hit by a sufficiently large meteor, that the impact would create an ice age from all the dust it would put into the atmosphere. While this has been historically seen as a bad thing, this has me wondering if people might one day want to intentionally steer a large asteroid or comet at the Earth as a way to combat global warming.
Could such an impact permanently (or semi-permanently) reverse global warming without causing so much secondary environmental damage that it would make the outcome worse than letting global warming take its course?
science-based climate-change meteor
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The running theory is that if the Earth is hit by a sufficiently large meteor, that the impact would create an ice age from all the dust it would put into the atmosphere. While this has been historically seen as a bad thing, this has me wondering if people might one day want to intentionally steer a large asteroid or comet at the Earth as a way to combat global warming.
Could such an impact permanently (or semi-permanently) reverse global warming without causing so much secondary environmental damage that it would make the outcome worse than letting global warming take its course?
science-based climate-change meteor
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
Relevant: Futurama's giant-ice-cube solution.
$endgroup$
– user535733
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please read impact winter before you suggest this as recommended policy.
$endgroup$
– Gary Walker
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Maybe the comet could take out the number one reason we suffer from Global Warming: spineless politicains.
$endgroup$
– Gregroy Currie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please note that while moving asteroids around is a science-fiction staple, doing this for real would be enormously expensive. (See NASA DART mission).
$endgroup$
– Jens
22 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The running theory is that if the Earth is hit by a sufficiently large meteor, that the impact would create an ice age from all the dust it would put into the atmosphere. While this has been historically seen as a bad thing, this has me wondering if people might one day want to intentionally steer a large asteroid or comet at the Earth as a way to combat global warming.
Could such an impact permanently (or semi-permanently) reverse global warming without causing so much secondary environmental damage that it would make the outcome worse than letting global warming take its course?
science-based climate-change meteor
$endgroup$
The running theory is that if the Earth is hit by a sufficiently large meteor, that the impact would create an ice age from all the dust it would put into the atmosphere. While this has been historically seen as a bad thing, this has me wondering if people might one day want to intentionally steer a large asteroid or comet at the Earth as a way to combat global warming.
Could such an impact permanently (or semi-permanently) reverse global warming without causing so much secondary environmental damage that it would make the outcome worse than letting global warming take its course?
science-based climate-change meteor
science-based climate-change meteor
edited 13 hours ago
Nosajimiki
asked 14 hours ago
NosajimikiNosajimiki
1,880115
1,880115
1
$begingroup$
Relevant: Futurama's giant-ice-cube solution.
$endgroup$
– user535733
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please read impact winter before you suggest this as recommended policy.
$endgroup$
– Gary Walker
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Maybe the comet could take out the number one reason we suffer from Global Warming: spineless politicains.
$endgroup$
– Gregroy Currie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please note that while moving asteroids around is a science-fiction staple, doing this for real would be enormously expensive. (See NASA DART mission).
$endgroup$
– Jens
22 mins ago
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
Relevant: Futurama's giant-ice-cube solution.
$endgroup$
– user535733
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please read impact winter before you suggest this as recommended policy.
$endgroup$
– Gary Walker
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Maybe the comet could take out the number one reason we suffer from Global Warming: spineless politicains.
$endgroup$
– Gregroy Currie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please note that while moving asteroids around is a science-fiction staple, doing this for real would be enormously expensive. (See NASA DART mission).
$endgroup$
– Jens
22 mins ago
1
1
$begingroup$
Relevant: Futurama's giant-ice-cube solution.
$endgroup$
– user535733
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Relevant: Futurama's giant-ice-cube solution.
$endgroup$
– user535733
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please read impact winter before you suggest this as recommended policy.
$endgroup$
– Gary Walker
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please read impact winter before you suggest this as recommended policy.
$endgroup$
– Gary Walker
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Maybe the comet could take out the number one reason we suffer from Global Warming: spineless politicains.
$endgroup$
– Gregroy Currie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Maybe the comet could take out the number one reason we suffer from Global Warming: spineless politicains.
$endgroup$
– Gregroy Currie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please note that while moving asteroids around is a science-fiction staple, doing this for real would be enormously expensive. (See NASA DART mission).
$endgroup$
– Jens
22 mins ago
$begingroup$
Please note that while moving asteroids around is a science-fiction staple, doing this for real would be enormously expensive. (See NASA DART mission).
$endgroup$
– Jens
22 mins ago
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
You're trying to cure the sickness by alleviating a symptom.
You can't cure global warming by putting more pollution into the air. You may temporarily bring the patient's temperature down, but humanity will respond by turning up the heat. In the end, you'll make global warming much, much worse.
Please keep in mind that global-warming/climate-change/name-d'jour is a technological problem. Humanity industrialized. The act of industrialization is having a complex effect on our world and one symptom of that effect is the planet getting warmer.
Another symptom of that effect is my respiratory distress due to pollution. Not surprisingly, you can't solve the problem of pollution by making me wear a surgical mask all the time, either.
Yes, you can force the world to cool down by dropping a meteor on it.
You can also do it by detonating enough nuclear bombs. Both alleviations of the symptom are temporary. Once the material thrown into the sky settles, you're worse off than you were before because not only did you fail to fix the technological problem, you created greater dependency on the technology for humanity to survive the effects of dropping a big rock on the planet or blowing up a bunch of nukes.
And that's not even accounting for the damage you'd cause by dropping a big rock on the planet. Think "Tunguska blast" a thousand times over.
There are really only two ways to fix the human contribution to global warming:
Stop using the technology (hah!)
Improve the technology so that it has a lower impact.
Most activists work toward #1 with completely predictable results (it doesn't work). The rest of us (well, some of the rest of us, there are many who don't care) are working toward #2 as quickly as we can.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
3 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
It would be much, much worse than anything climate change does to us. Any impact large enough to create a global cooling effect would cause catastrophic damage over a huge area, kill a ton of people outright, and cause unpredictable changes to nearly every climate.
It would take an immense amount of effort to steer the asteroid into us, and would only ADD energy to our planetary system. A lot of energy.
We would be MUCH better mining an asteroid for metals and making an orbiting field of reflectors to limit the sunlight reaching Earth.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'm going the misanthropist way here: you can, by killing most humans and civilisation.
If you throw a lot of tiny meteor (big enough to go through the atmoshpere and still exist) during a long period (a few days).
By removing (most of) humanity/civilisation, you'll surely stop man-made climate change.
However, this doesn't go without affecting the environment:
- You'll also destroy flora/fauna with the meteors.
- Some infrastructures are dangerous to destroy (nuclear power plants).
- Letting civilisation unsupervised might (will) cause additional damages (dams will break, spontaneous explosions cause wild fires).
Note that humanity doesn't cover a big % of earth; you'll either need to aim your meteors on cities, or randomly cover a lot places (which will surely have more impact on environment than letting global warming continue).
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
A solid yes, but...
In theory, a sufficiently large meteor would throw up enough dust to cause a significant effect on the climate. Science has studied enough vulcano eruptions (e.g. the Pinatubo, Philippines, in 1991) to understand and measure the effects and make a reasonable prediction that yes, this approach would cause a cooling effect.
Now for the but (and in the words of Ben Goldacre: It's a big but):
There is no way to estimate the precise size of meteor you need to throw up the precise amount of dust in the precise way (and height) needed, nor steer it to a precise enough impact location to make a prediction even reasonably appropriate. You could easily hit something you don't want to hit. Either a city, or arable land, or the ocean (causing a floodwave). With the size of meteor required, you could easily do massive damage or cause chain-reactions that dwarf the effect of your meteor.
You also would have no guarantee that you're not doing either not enough cooling to make the whole thing worth it, or are overdoing it and cause a lot more cooling than you wanted and then you'll do what, exactly?
$endgroup$
add a comment |
Your Answer
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
You're trying to cure the sickness by alleviating a symptom.
You can't cure global warming by putting more pollution into the air. You may temporarily bring the patient's temperature down, but humanity will respond by turning up the heat. In the end, you'll make global warming much, much worse.
Please keep in mind that global-warming/climate-change/name-d'jour is a technological problem. Humanity industrialized. The act of industrialization is having a complex effect on our world and one symptom of that effect is the planet getting warmer.
Another symptom of that effect is my respiratory distress due to pollution. Not surprisingly, you can't solve the problem of pollution by making me wear a surgical mask all the time, either.
Yes, you can force the world to cool down by dropping a meteor on it.
You can also do it by detonating enough nuclear bombs. Both alleviations of the symptom are temporary. Once the material thrown into the sky settles, you're worse off than you were before because not only did you fail to fix the technological problem, you created greater dependency on the technology for humanity to survive the effects of dropping a big rock on the planet or blowing up a bunch of nukes.
And that's not even accounting for the damage you'd cause by dropping a big rock on the planet. Think "Tunguska blast" a thousand times over.
There are really only two ways to fix the human contribution to global warming:
Stop using the technology (hah!)
Improve the technology so that it has a lower impact.
Most activists work toward #1 with completely predictable results (it doesn't work). The rest of us (well, some of the rest of us, there are many who don't care) are working toward #2 as quickly as we can.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
3 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You're trying to cure the sickness by alleviating a symptom.
You can't cure global warming by putting more pollution into the air. You may temporarily bring the patient's temperature down, but humanity will respond by turning up the heat. In the end, you'll make global warming much, much worse.
Please keep in mind that global-warming/climate-change/name-d'jour is a technological problem. Humanity industrialized. The act of industrialization is having a complex effect on our world and one symptom of that effect is the planet getting warmer.
Another symptom of that effect is my respiratory distress due to pollution. Not surprisingly, you can't solve the problem of pollution by making me wear a surgical mask all the time, either.
Yes, you can force the world to cool down by dropping a meteor on it.
You can also do it by detonating enough nuclear bombs. Both alleviations of the symptom are temporary. Once the material thrown into the sky settles, you're worse off than you were before because not only did you fail to fix the technological problem, you created greater dependency on the technology for humanity to survive the effects of dropping a big rock on the planet or blowing up a bunch of nukes.
And that's not even accounting for the damage you'd cause by dropping a big rock on the planet. Think "Tunguska blast" a thousand times over.
There are really only two ways to fix the human contribution to global warming:
Stop using the technology (hah!)
Improve the technology so that it has a lower impact.
Most activists work toward #1 with completely predictable results (it doesn't work). The rest of us (well, some of the rest of us, there are many who don't care) are working toward #2 as quickly as we can.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
3 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You're trying to cure the sickness by alleviating a symptom.
You can't cure global warming by putting more pollution into the air. You may temporarily bring the patient's temperature down, but humanity will respond by turning up the heat. In the end, you'll make global warming much, much worse.
Please keep in mind that global-warming/climate-change/name-d'jour is a technological problem. Humanity industrialized. The act of industrialization is having a complex effect on our world and one symptom of that effect is the planet getting warmer.
Another symptom of that effect is my respiratory distress due to pollution. Not surprisingly, you can't solve the problem of pollution by making me wear a surgical mask all the time, either.
Yes, you can force the world to cool down by dropping a meteor on it.
You can also do it by detonating enough nuclear bombs. Both alleviations of the symptom are temporary. Once the material thrown into the sky settles, you're worse off than you were before because not only did you fail to fix the technological problem, you created greater dependency on the technology for humanity to survive the effects of dropping a big rock on the planet or blowing up a bunch of nukes.
And that's not even accounting for the damage you'd cause by dropping a big rock on the planet. Think "Tunguska blast" a thousand times over.
There are really only two ways to fix the human contribution to global warming:
Stop using the technology (hah!)
Improve the technology so that it has a lower impact.
Most activists work toward #1 with completely predictable results (it doesn't work). The rest of us (well, some of the rest of us, there are many who don't care) are working toward #2 as quickly as we can.
$endgroup$
You're trying to cure the sickness by alleviating a symptom.
You can't cure global warming by putting more pollution into the air. You may temporarily bring the patient's temperature down, but humanity will respond by turning up the heat. In the end, you'll make global warming much, much worse.
Please keep in mind that global-warming/climate-change/name-d'jour is a technological problem. Humanity industrialized. The act of industrialization is having a complex effect on our world and one symptom of that effect is the planet getting warmer.
Another symptom of that effect is my respiratory distress due to pollution. Not surprisingly, you can't solve the problem of pollution by making me wear a surgical mask all the time, either.
Yes, you can force the world to cool down by dropping a meteor on it.
You can also do it by detonating enough nuclear bombs. Both alleviations of the symptom are temporary. Once the material thrown into the sky settles, you're worse off than you were before because not only did you fail to fix the technological problem, you created greater dependency on the technology for humanity to survive the effects of dropping a big rock on the planet or blowing up a bunch of nukes.
And that's not even accounting for the damage you'd cause by dropping a big rock on the planet. Think "Tunguska blast" a thousand times over.
There are really only two ways to fix the human contribution to global warming:
Stop using the technology (hah!)
Improve the technology so that it has a lower impact.
Most activists work toward #1 with completely predictable results (it doesn't work). The rest of us (well, some of the rest of us, there are many who don't care) are working toward #2 as quickly as we can.
answered 14 hours ago
JBHJBH
45k696212
45k696212
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
3 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
3 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
It would be much, much worse than anything climate change does to us. Any impact large enough to create a global cooling effect would cause catastrophic damage over a huge area, kill a ton of people outright, and cause unpredictable changes to nearly every climate.
It would take an immense amount of effort to steer the asteroid into us, and would only ADD energy to our planetary system. A lot of energy.
We would be MUCH better mining an asteroid for metals and making an orbiting field of reflectors to limit the sunlight reaching Earth.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
It would be much, much worse than anything climate change does to us. Any impact large enough to create a global cooling effect would cause catastrophic damage over a huge area, kill a ton of people outright, and cause unpredictable changes to nearly every climate.
It would take an immense amount of effort to steer the asteroid into us, and would only ADD energy to our planetary system. A lot of energy.
We would be MUCH better mining an asteroid for metals and making an orbiting field of reflectors to limit the sunlight reaching Earth.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
It would be much, much worse than anything climate change does to us. Any impact large enough to create a global cooling effect would cause catastrophic damage over a huge area, kill a ton of people outright, and cause unpredictable changes to nearly every climate.
It would take an immense amount of effort to steer the asteroid into us, and would only ADD energy to our planetary system. A lot of energy.
We would be MUCH better mining an asteroid for metals and making an orbiting field of reflectors to limit the sunlight reaching Earth.
$endgroup$
It would be much, much worse than anything climate change does to us. Any impact large enough to create a global cooling effect would cause catastrophic damage over a huge area, kill a ton of people outright, and cause unpredictable changes to nearly every climate.
It would take an immense amount of effort to steer the asteroid into us, and would only ADD energy to our planetary system. A lot of energy.
We would be MUCH better mining an asteroid for metals and making an orbiting field of reflectors to limit the sunlight reaching Earth.
edited 13 hours ago
answered 14 hours ago
abestrangeabestrange
723110
723110
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'm going the misanthropist way here: you can, by killing most humans and civilisation.
If you throw a lot of tiny meteor (big enough to go through the atmoshpere and still exist) during a long period (a few days).
By removing (most of) humanity/civilisation, you'll surely stop man-made climate change.
However, this doesn't go without affecting the environment:
- You'll also destroy flora/fauna with the meteors.
- Some infrastructures are dangerous to destroy (nuclear power plants).
- Letting civilisation unsupervised might (will) cause additional damages (dams will break, spontaneous explosions cause wild fires).
Note that humanity doesn't cover a big % of earth; you'll either need to aim your meteors on cities, or randomly cover a lot places (which will surely have more impact on environment than letting global warming continue).
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'm going the misanthropist way here: you can, by killing most humans and civilisation.
If you throw a lot of tiny meteor (big enough to go through the atmoshpere and still exist) during a long period (a few days).
By removing (most of) humanity/civilisation, you'll surely stop man-made climate change.
However, this doesn't go without affecting the environment:
- You'll also destroy flora/fauna with the meteors.
- Some infrastructures are dangerous to destroy (nuclear power plants).
- Letting civilisation unsupervised might (will) cause additional damages (dams will break, spontaneous explosions cause wild fires).
Note that humanity doesn't cover a big % of earth; you'll either need to aim your meteors on cities, or randomly cover a lot places (which will surely have more impact on environment than letting global warming continue).
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'm going the misanthropist way here: you can, by killing most humans and civilisation.
If you throw a lot of tiny meteor (big enough to go through the atmoshpere and still exist) during a long period (a few days).
By removing (most of) humanity/civilisation, you'll surely stop man-made climate change.
However, this doesn't go without affecting the environment:
- You'll also destroy flora/fauna with the meteors.
- Some infrastructures are dangerous to destroy (nuclear power plants).
- Letting civilisation unsupervised might (will) cause additional damages (dams will break, spontaneous explosions cause wild fires).
Note that humanity doesn't cover a big % of earth; you'll either need to aim your meteors on cities, or randomly cover a lot places (which will surely have more impact on environment than letting global warming continue).
$endgroup$
I'm going the misanthropist way here: you can, by killing most humans and civilisation.
If you throw a lot of tiny meteor (big enough to go through the atmoshpere and still exist) during a long period (a few days).
By removing (most of) humanity/civilisation, you'll surely stop man-made climate change.
However, this doesn't go without affecting the environment:
- You'll also destroy flora/fauna with the meteors.
- Some infrastructures are dangerous to destroy (nuclear power plants).
- Letting civilisation unsupervised might (will) cause additional damages (dams will break, spontaneous explosions cause wild fires).
Note that humanity doesn't cover a big % of earth; you'll either need to aim your meteors on cities, or randomly cover a lot places (which will surely have more impact on environment than letting global warming continue).
edited 2 hours ago
answered 2 hours ago
AsoubAsoub
329312
329312
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
A solid yes, but...
In theory, a sufficiently large meteor would throw up enough dust to cause a significant effect on the climate. Science has studied enough vulcano eruptions (e.g. the Pinatubo, Philippines, in 1991) to understand and measure the effects and make a reasonable prediction that yes, this approach would cause a cooling effect.
Now for the but (and in the words of Ben Goldacre: It's a big but):
There is no way to estimate the precise size of meteor you need to throw up the precise amount of dust in the precise way (and height) needed, nor steer it to a precise enough impact location to make a prediction even reasonably appropriate. You could easily hit something you don't want to hit. Either a city, or arable land, or the ocean (causing a floodwave). With the size of meteor required, you could easily do massive damage or cause chain-reactions that dwarf the effect of your meteor.
You also would have no guarantee that you're not doing either not enough cooling to make the whole thing worth it, or are overdoing it and cause a lot more cooling than you wanted and then you'll do what, exactly?
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
A solid yes, but...
In theory, a sufficiently large meteor would throw up enough dust to cause a significant effect on the climate. Science has studied enough vulcano eruptions (e.g. the Pinatubo, Philippines, in 1991) to understand and measure the effects and make a reasonable prediction that yes, this approach would cause a cooling effect.
Now for the but (and in the words of Ben Goldacre: It's a big but):
There is no way to estimate the precise size of meteor you need to throw up the precise amount of dust in the precise way (and height) needed, nor steer it to a precise enough impact location to make a prediction even reasonably appropriate. You could easily hit something you don't want to hit. Either a city, or arable land, or the ocean (causing a floodwave). With the size of meteor required, you could easily do massive damage or cause chain-reactions that dwarf the effect of your meteor.
You also would have no guarantee that you're not doing either not enough cooling to make the whole thing worth it, or are overdoing it and cause a lot more cooling than you wanted and then you'll do what, exactly?
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
A solid yes, but...
In theory, a sufficiently large meteor would throw up enough dust to cause a significant effect on the climate. Science has studied enough vulcano eruptions (e.g. the Pinatubo, Philippines, in 1991) to understand and measure the effects and make a reasonable prediction that yes, this approach would cause a cooling effect.
Now for the but (and in the words of Ben Goldacre: It's a big but):
There is no way to estimate the precise size of meteor you need to throw up the precise amount of dust in the precise way (and height) needed, nor steer it to a precise enough impact location to make a prediction even reasonably appropriate. You could easily hit something you don't want to hit. Either a city, or arable land, or the ocean (causing a floodwave). With the size of meteor required, you could easily do massive damage or cause chain-reactions that dwarf the effect of your meteor.
You also would have no guarantee that you're not doing either not enough cooling to make the whole thing worth it, or are overdoing it and cause a lot more cooling than you wanted and then you'll do what, exactly?
$endgroup$
A solid yes, but...
In theory, a sufficiently large meteor would throw up enough dust to cause a significant effect on the climate. Science has studied enough vulcano eruptions (e.g. the Pinatubo, Philippines, in 1991) to understand and measure the effects and make a reasonable prediction that yes, this approach would cause a cooling effect.
Now for the but (and in the words of Ben Goldacre: It's a big but):
There is no way to estimate the precise size of meteor you need to throw up the precise amount of dust in the precise way (and height) needed, nor steer it to a precise enough impact location to make a prediction even reasonably appropriate. You could easily hit something you don't want to hit. Either a city, or arable land, or the ocean (causing a floodwave). With the size of meteor required, you could easily do massive damage or cause chain-reactions that dwarf the effect of your meteor.
You also would have no guarantee that you're not doing either not enough cooling to make the whole thing worth it, or are overdoing it and cause a lot more cooling than you wanted and then you'll do what, exactly?
answered 1 hour ago
TomTom
5,148727
5,148727
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1
$begingroup$
Relevant: Futurama's giant-ice-cube solution.
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– user535733
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
Please read impact winter before you suggest this as recommended policy.
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– Gary Walker
14 hours ago
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Maybe the comet could take out the number one reason we suffer from Global Warming: spineless politicains.
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– Gregroy Currie
8 hours ago
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Please note that while moving asteroids around is a science-fiction staple, doing this for real would be enormously expensive. (See NASA DART mission).
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– Jens
22 mins ago