To Love That Which Doesn’t Love You
posted by July 3 at 12:24 PM
onAfter the Earth came into being, it rained for thousands of years…
…But that only gave the Earth half of its water. The rest came from space. Comets brought water to the Earth. It was a series of life-blows. That which we now fear, a deep impact, is also that which made living (fearing) beings possible.
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Obviously rain doesn't give the Earth water. And your block quote looks pretty dumb.
Um, no. According to Ghosts of Vesuvius, the Earth is actually ridiculously dry for a planet its size. The theory put forth in the book is that when the sun ignited, it blew off most of the water and gas collected around the rocky cores of the four inner planets; all the water we see now bubbled up through the crust after that event.
Restraint. I'm just not goin' there.
And then God said, let there be milk and cookies.
And it rained milk--directly from Natalie Merchant's legendary planets of lactation--upon The Earth, for forty days and forty nights.
And then a giant cookie slammed, with Deep Impact indeed--into The Earth, splintering into billions and billions of bite-sized chunks.
And then God said to the cosmic chunks, go forth and multiply.
And that is the story of how The Earth, as well as milk and cookies, came into BEING.
What we fear is our demise. The planet will "heal" itself. There is water all over the universe. It's another element made by stars. Water greases the "wheels" on Earth. It helps the continental drift and subduction. It creates volcanoes by pouring down into magma chambers and building steam pressure. It's also what circulates heat around the planet. Without it, apparently, there is no life. And the earliest life we know of lived in water.
Yes!!! A link!!! Let's see where Charles is getting his... Wha....?!?!? It's to IMDB?!?!? I think I only read these posts so I can comment on how vacant they are.
Living =/= Fearing.
aye laddies, the Aerth is a bloody grreat place, like Scotland!
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