Stephen
Hawking Warns Humanity: Leave Earth Before the Ruling Class Destroys
It
Claire
Bernish
20
Janauary, 2016
(ANTIMEDIA) United
Kingdom — Humanity’s
future is in peril thanks to so-called advancements in science and
technology, claims Professor Stephen Hawking, who cited “nuclear
war, global warming, and genetically-modified viruses” as
deadly threats to our existence.
Hawking
described various “things
that could go wrong” to
an audience of hundreds attending the first in a series of BBC Reith
Lectures, which pertain to research about black holes. He asserted
the necessity for colonization of other planets to ensure survival of
the human species. According
to the BBC,
Hawking cautioned:
“Although
the chance of a disaster to planet Earth in a given year might be
quite low, it adds up over time, and becomes a near certainty in the
next thousand or ten thousand years.
“By
that time, we should have spread out into space, and to other stars,
so a disaster on Earth would not mean the end of the human race.
“However,
we will not establish self-sustaining colonies in space for at least
the next hundred years, so we have to be very careful in this
period.”
Though
it would seem counterproductive for such a well-respected scientist
to decry scientific progress as humanity’s most existential threat,
this isn’t the first time Hawking has advised us to exercise
caution, as Anti-Media has reported
several times.
Last summer, the theoretical physicist was among over 1,000
artificial intelligence experts who signed
an open letter about
the weaponization of robots and the ongoing “military
artificial intelligence arms race” among
the world’s military powers.
In
October of last year, Hawking warned
scientists at
the European Center for Nuclear Research (CERN) about the potential
for the Higgs Boson “God
Particle” to
initiate “catastrophic
vacuum decay” —
the formation of a quantum bubble that expands at the speed of light
and could decimate the entire universe. Concern over the automation
of the world’s workforce coupled with capitalist greed also earned
the scientist’s stern alarm.
In
fact, taken collectively, Hawking’s numerous warnings are aimed
directly at the careless hubris of the ruling elites and their
tendency to act in favor of profit — in a variety of fields —
without consideration given to long-term consequences resulting from
such hastily implemented projects.
Despite
the numerous cautionary scenarios Hawking has proffered,
he claims society
will likely discover the means to cope.
“We
are not going to stop making progress, or reverse it, so we have to
recognize the dangers and control them,” he
stated. “I’m
an optimist, and I believe we can.
“It’s
important to ensure that these changes are heading in the right
directions. In a democratic society, this means that everyone needs
to have a basic understanding of science to make informed decisions
about the future.
“So
communicate plainly what you are trying to do in science, and who
knows, you might even end up understanding it yourself.”
The BBC will
broadcast this first lecture with Stephen Hawking on January 26 and
February 2. It will also be found online here.
Hawking’s
theories, of course, haven’t escaped criticism; yet he does
maintain a healthy enthusiasm, which was evidenced in this advice he
offered young scientists:
“From
my own perspective, it has been a glorious time to be alive and doing
research in theoretical physics. There is nothing like the Eureka
moment of discovering something that no one knew before.”
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