• mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      we’d have to drag some real big rocks out of orbit into the planet to glass it. not sure we ever had enough nukes even in the heyday of bomb production to actually glass the planet. we could cooperate to distribute the strikes uniformly but even then we wouldn’t glass the planet.

      now, humanity might go with such a coordinated program, but the planet will burp, continue to undergo geological changes, and a few million years later there would be hyperintelligent octopi or capybara driving around.

      but a nice rock, say, about the size of rhode island, that might do it. especially if it’s coming at a good clip.

  • medem@lemmy.wtf
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    2 days ago

    Hospitals are dangerous for children, the elderly and immuno-compromised patients not because of risk of contagion, but because the bacteria that have survived the aggressive chemicals hospital surfaces are cleaned with are the strongest ones (shamelessly plagiarised from my 8th-grade chemistry teacher).

    • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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      1 day ago

      Well, it’s a quarter right.

      The bacteria in hospitals generally aren’t surviving cleaning products, most simply can not survive bleach or whatever anymore than you could survive having your skin liquidated.

      They are however often antibiotic resistant both because those tend to be what needs hospitalization in the first place and the resistance developing from treatments.

      Then the real problem happens:

      It is functionally impossible to clean everything that needs to be cleaned in a hospital room to prevent someone immunocompromised, aka basically all sick and injured people, from being at risk of catching it.

      Look at all the nooks and crannies involved on a hospital bed alone and think about what actually needs to happen to clean it.

      Do you think that happens every time?

      The curve of every door handle for every patient for every visitor?

      All the tubing, wiring, and electrical panels on the various monitoring systems?

  • TranquilTurbulence@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    Even if we nuked the whole earth to oblivion, turn the surface into glass, and evaporated the seas, some microbes would still survive deep underground. What we really need is an asteroid impact that turns the whole crust into molten lava and splatters it all over the solar system. Even that method might not work perfectly, but it’s our best chance.

  • plyth@feddit.org
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    2 days ago

    If we go digital and all water is used to store energy, life would become difficult for bacteria.

  • limer@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    I can see how bacteria may have developed our ancestors to be their hosts.

    It’s like cats. People think they are the masters. People also think the gut biome is there to serve them. Silly people