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If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby threadbear » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 16:07:22

Realistically, I wouldn't want to live in an age where a visit to a "doctor/barber" with a twisted intestine, could earn a person the diagnosis of a small demon living inside her stomach. The operation to remove the homunculus without anesthetic, would have most beating it back to the 20th century, pdq.

The future, fast forward about 1000 years, would be pretty interesting. Hopefully the trip would take a few days, slowing down for important events, because I'd want to know how the past shaped the present of 3,000 AD, when I finally arrived

Going very far into the future, Heineken, you'd risk not being able to be there, if the human race was wiped out. If humans make it, there could be complete confusion of understanding, an inability to make sense of what you're experiencing.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby dinopello » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 16:40:56

Back to the garden of eden and kill the stupid snake that is pimpin apples. Or, the Renaissance could be good.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby oowolf » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 17:45:52

I should say the near Paleolithic, about BC 30,000, but I would love just 1 day to walk the Rome of Hadrian's later reign. About the time the Pantheon was finished (AD 125).
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Pops » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 18:19:20

I’ll assume I can know what I know today, as that was not specified.

I’ll go with a similar upbringing with the folks I had; only born a decade or 2 earlier (‘30s – ‘40s).

I would then mature at about the pinnacle of cheap oil fueled manufacturing of quality tools in the US, have a ready supply of well-tried old tools and the folks that knew their workings, access to the beginnings of a supply of the best of oil-fueled farm and chemical science and the ability to acquire the good farmland the Boomers’ parents sweated for but sold in the Estate Sale to buy a Mercedes.

If that were true I would surely not be posting here as a smallholder;

but then if wishes were horses…
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby gampy » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 18:54:50

Oh man...so many choices.

I think I would pick the future. I would like to be placed in my current locale 100 years from now.

2112.

I want to see if that Rush song came true.

Seriously. I think a hundred years in the future would be fascinating.

I think the oil age will be at it's end by then. I think sea level will about 10 m higher. The nation state has ceased to exist. What replaces it is going to be interesting to see.

I imagine a lot of changes. Mostly for the worst, but still interesting.

Could be a nuclear wasteland, or toxic wasteland with death everywhere, or it could be a pastoral, and much slowed down, agrarian environment. No cars. No planes. I see many mules, and oxen. Something similar to rural Afghanistan / Tibet writ large over the North American continent. I don't see Mad Max. I do see the hulking, rusting, rotting remains of the oil age, but people don't live in burned out, and decayed cities, and suburbs anymore. Except for scavengers who brave the roaming gangs looking for recycle-able materiel to trade with the agrarian communities that have sprung up in the spaces between the cities.

I see a world population reduced from war, famine, and disease.

Perhaps 500 million worldwide, and 50 million in North America. Less in Africa, more in India and Asia. Europe is a wasteland.

Who knows? Could be just the same as we have now...but with more gadgets and better drugs?
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Byron100 » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 20:26:25

What a great thread. I love stuff like this. :)

Since the past I can learn about and therefore imagine what it's like in my head, I'd pick to head off into the future....how about the year 2500. Long enough to be away from the cataclysms of the 21st century, but not so far ahead that the human race would be extinct or otherwise unrecognizable.

I relish the idea of seeing a world in which the human population is reduced to sustainable levels, with all the big cities gone, not to mention the lack of cars, planes, factories, etc, etc. The one thing I'm desperate to know is whether humans will finally "get it" and live in harmony with nature and with each other. That means the total elimination of greed and avarice, as well as mistaken beliefs pertaining to religion, although spiritual thinking wouldn't be a bad thing in my opinion. And I'm also dying to know if we'll be able to maintain at least some tech in the post-fossil fuel era...such as trains, solar power and computers. Maybe even develop new skills such as telepathy and biologic manipulation (think giant veggies that require no work except for planting and harvesting, etc). Not to mention maintaining population control...LOL. And *please*, no "economics" in this future era...it's a totally failed "science" that permits some people to have so much more than others....if we're to carry on into the future, we've got to ditch that along with our other shortcomings, such as fighting useless wars.

If us humans can't achieve what I've outlined above, I really do hope we exit stage right and be done with it, and just let the Earth carry on without us, like it has for billions of years. Either way, it'd just be nice to know how it all turns out.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 21:53:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Byron100', 'W')hat a great thread. I love stuff like this. :)

Either way, it'd just be nice to know how it all turns out.
I don't know. People have always been doing this kind of speculation. Pops says he wants to take what he knows with him. That would make the arrival into a new time and place very awkward as one's world view would be so out of place as to be a crippling liability. The people there would think you are crazy. You wouldn't know how to act. If you didn't take what you know with you, then you wouldn't be you. But don't let me spoil the fun. OK, uhm, let me see, uhm, well there's --- but that might suck, and there's --- and that might suck. How about the future, hmm, no, that wouldn't do. Nothing there but Morlocks and Elois.

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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Heineken » Mon 17 Dec 2007, 23:45:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', 'G')oing very far into the future, Heineken, you'd risk not being able to be there, if the human race was wiped out. If humans make it, there could be complete confusion of understanding, an inability to make sense of what you're experiencing.


I know it's a high-risk option, T-bear. Very high-risk. I know that it might even result in my instantaneous death. However, it might also result in my immortality.

Your last comment is rather brilliant (and typical of your lateral thought pattern).

It's possible, even likely, that the Earth of 250,000 AD would be as alien as any planet we've read about in science fiction novels.

Still, I'd be up the challenge of trying to make sense of what I encountered. (I'm used to that situation from my own time!)
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 00:00:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '[')b]I’ll assume I can know what I know today, as that was not specified.


Yes, Pops, you will time-travel as the person that you are at the time of the trip. Same knowledge base, same history, same everything. You go from now . . . to then, forward or backwards, through the portal, never to return. You take with you whatever you can carry in both arms and a backpack. You are free to do whatever you are capable of doing in the new time. Kill Hitler in 1915, invent the automobile in 500 B.C., whatever. You can change the future (if this is possible), but you will be stuck in the time you choose, so you won't be around to see that altered future.

Choose wisely, board.

It's interesting to reflect on what our choices of a new "home time" say about ourselves. Anti-techno, neoprimitivist type that I am, I choose the distant future and not, say, the year 450 AD. This surprises me. (Granted, the distant future might be even lower-tech than 450 AD. For that matter, it would probably be NO tech!)

I suppose the reason is that, at heart, I'm an explorer. And the distant future represents the ultimate frontier, not history that has already been written and lived, albeit by others and not me. Too, the distant future will be stripped of any lingering trappings of the present, an era I've had a bellyfull of by now. It will be entirely new.
Last edited by Heineken on Tue 18 Dec 2007, 00:13:21, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Pops » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 00:08:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', ' ')Pops says he wants to take what he knows with him.

Actually the Rules say I can’t choose today - which is my preference.

So as not to convolute the topic with more fantasy than necessary, I would still choose to be born a couple of decades earlier than I was - even with no knowledge of the future.

I know, not very romantic…
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Pops » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 00:41:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'Y')es, Pops, you will time-travel as the person that you are at the time of the trip. Same knowledge base, same history, same everything. You go from now . . . to then, forward or backwards, through the portal, never to return. Y

Yea, just a few decades back seems nice considering the ability to prepare for current and potential events.

But after further thought I decline the offer - I kinda like some of the folks not born then.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 01:01:32

"Staying in the present is not an option in this game."
"Actually, humans died out long ago."
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Pops » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 01:21:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '"')Staying in the present is not an option in this game."

Ah crap!

I’ll then elect to go into the future a generation or two and see about my kids.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 01:28:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '"')Staying in the present is not an option in this game."
Alright, I'd go off and make Yvette Mimieux mine. I'd show her how 'they wear their hair in our time.' We'd kill all the Morlocks and then Yvette and I would repopulate the world. Then the whole bloody mess could start all over again.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 11:04:56

Ha! Pretty funny, PMS.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby MadMarcus » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 11:26:02

England in the 18th century. I don't know if seeing the Empire or getting in on the scientific advances going on would be the bigger draw.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 11:26:36

Okay, just to pi$$ Byron100 off, I have decided to go back 1000 years ago, and found a brand new world religion based on fiscal conservatism, social liberalism, libertarian principles and sound economics.

In the context of its time it will have no competition, so it will be the most successful religion of all time, and then man can finally live sustainably in his natural environment adjusting his demands to available supply, while observing responsible reproduction strategies. I'll call it the Church of MrBill.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Byron100 » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 11:27:35

I know I said I'd go into the future, which could very well suck for me, I'd consider jumping back into the past as well, specifically the year 1930. Since everyone seems to have the idea of knocking off Hitler, I'd leave that for someone else to take care of...and I'd focus my efforts to saving Huey Long from being assassinated in September 1935. If that man had gone on to be President of the United States (which he would have, for sure), our life today would be very, very different than it is now, and I seriously doubt that Peak Oil would even be on the horizon. His "share the wealth" programs would have effectively ended capitalism for good, and he would have undoubtably shifted this country towards a sustainable economic paradigm.

His last words before dying were "God, please don't let me die. I have so much left to do." Indeed. Truer words never spoken.

I could then live out the rest of my life through the middle of the 20th Century, watching America settle into an easygoing pastoral lifestyle, enjoying the lack of consumerist culture that is the cause of so many problems today. And no wars either...as the government would be too busy actually doing things for the people instead of fighting useless wars. And I'd take great pleasure knowing that everyone has equal access to health care, education and good-paying, rewarding jobs, as well as enjoying a crime rate incredibly low by modern standards. In other words, I'd get to see the America we were meant to be, not the utterly depressing dystopia we have now.

Oh well, if I can't have my Utopia, I can at least dream about it, huh? :)
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby dinopello » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 11:35:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '"')Staying in the present is not an option in this game."


Part of these choices involve what you position would be in life when you travelled to the past (or the future). Who would you be, where would you be, what would your job be etc. If I were DaVinci, I would really like the 15th century I think.

What consitutes 'staying in the present'? Can you go back to when you were 13 ? That could be interesting... How about going back to this past weekend ?

I'm not trying to be difficult.
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Re: If You Could Escape into the Past . . .

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 18 Dec 2007, 11:36:31

The only, thin chance for utopia would be 250,000 years in the future. After all memories of the stink of humanity have dissipated.
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