Comments by "Charles Brightman" (@charlesbrightman4237) on "Conservative Pundits Demand Bill Nye Stop Bullying Them on Climate Change" video.

  1. If there is not at least one truly eternally consciously existent entity in actual factual reality, then all of existence ceases to matter one day, of which then, did anything and/or anyone ultimately and eternally matter in the first place?  "Life" would all just be an "illusion".  Yes, how do we, individually and as a society of individuals want to exist while we do exist, but then one day, it appears we all die and no conscious entity would apparently be left except maybe "God", of which, if "God" is truly eternally consciously existent, the only way of how "God" could experience a personal and total cessation of conscious existence is by how "God" is apparently doing it.  Create separate entities who exist, and then cease to exist.  One day, the Sun is supposed to become a red giant and will most probably burn up the Earth and all still upon it.  (Why a very pro-active space program is so vitally important, and it's not getting any cheaper to do either, so the sooner the better).  The solar system is more probably being pulled into our galactic center's black hole, so we have to get out of the galaxy as well.  But if the universe is truly expanding and it is also true that energy cannot be created nor destroyed, then energy in the universe would continue to become less and less dense and one day cease to flow.  The universe would most probably end in a "big freeze".  Any life not dead by then, would probably die then, possibly frozen in time for eternity.  And why exactly haven't the laws of nature "evolved" by now?  They came into existence in supposedly a blink of an eye and are supposedly the same throughout the entire universe, but yet, in an expanding universe whereby energy is getting less and less dense, why haven't they changed by now?  And more importantly, what happens to everything in this universe, including us, probably when not if, that day occurs, possibly even in the very next moment of time.  Climate change, huh, we have bigger problems than that.
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