Tuesday, October 18, 2016

25 PHOTOS THAT PROVE THE WORLD IS ENDING

Source: WARPED SPEED
Warning! Serious and sad images ahead!
There should be no “debate” on global warming. The science proves it. Do people really think that all the chemicals, waste, and runoff factories expel every day isn’t going to have a deep and devastating impact on our environment? Yes, and there are still people out there who don’t know the difference between weather and climate. There are people who don’t care about our environment, whether it’s global warming, overfishing, or deforestation.
Even aside from climate change, there are other social factors that are wreaking havoc on our planet. While it’s easy to enjoy our comfortable lifestyles, complete with air conditioning, smartphones, and unlimited buffets, many humans don’t have those luxuries. And these people are easy to ignore unless you see them living in squalor. Planet earth and its inhabitants, animals, waters, and plants are being ravaged and ignored. See the proof.
legs-on-drought-land
Is there hope for us? Check out these heartbreaking photos that show how hard we have used and abused Earth.
Polar Icecaps
polar-bear-on-tiny-iceberg
It’s been proven again and again that temperatures are rising across the planet. One of the problems with this is that the icecaps are melting. Not only is this bad news for the animals that inhabit polar regions, but it will cause ocean levels to rise, which can destroy islands and coasts.
No Games
lots-of-dead-fish-in-rio-brazil
A big concern about the 2016 Summer Olympics being in Rio de Janiero, Brazil was the pollution. Here are hundreds, if not thousands of delicious dead fish in Rodrigo de Freitas lagoon in Rio.
Concentration
new-delhi-photo-of-pollution
India’s population is almost 1.3 billion people (and growing), which makes it the most populated country in the world after China. This aerial photo of New Delhi shows how congested and polluted the city is due to overcrowding.
Leather Goods
two-bangladeshi-children-playing-in-garbage
In Bangladesh, little children play next to a severely polluted canals. While some parents here worry about giving their kids non-organic foods, imagine living in the one of the most polluted cities on earth. Every day local tanneries dump over 20,000 cubic liters of toxic waste into the capital Dhaka’s main river and key water supply, the Bugiganga.
Breath It In
air-pollution-in-chinese-city
No, this isn’t a romantic fog settling into Changsha, in the Hunan Province of China. It’s awful smog due to pollution. We all know that China has a population problem, causing them to make a one-child per couple law, but they continue to produce copious amounts of pollution. China has many of the most polluted cities in the world. In Beijing, coal and cars are the two main sources of air pollution.
Built to Spill
thailand-oil-spill
While this is a photo of an oil spill off the coast of Thailand, they happen all over the world. And one of the saddest things is that most of them don’t get media coverage because they happen so often. Oil spills affect marine life and other animals, as well as beaches.
A Whole Lotta Rubbish
river-of-garbage-in-phillipines
Manila has a river of garbage. It is estimated that discarded plastic will outweigh fish in the oceans by 2050. Maybe we should think twice before using plastic bags at the grocery store. Do you ever wonder what happens to all that garbage you throw away on a daily basis?
Above the Sea
polluted-yamuna-river
This looks beautiful, like clouds or sea foam but it’s deadly toxic runoff in New Delhi. This is The Yamuna river, holy to Hindus and accounts for 70% of the the city’s water supply. Delicious.
Slick
bird-covered-in-oil-from-lousiana-oil-spill
This bird is covered in oil from a spill in Louisiana this year.
Into the Woods

deforestation-in-indonesia
Save the trees. Why? Greenpeace says there is an significant increase in greenhouse gas emissions. This kills off animals like sumatran tigers causing them to be severely endangered. Local communities also suffer for people’s need of paper and palm oil. Greenpeace says, “[Indonesia] is home to between 10 and 15 percent of the world’s known plants, mammals, and birds.”
Mexico
mexico-city-pollution
Here is Mexico City covered in smog. The city is overcrowded and also considered one of the most polluted cities in the world. In 1992, the United Nations named it THE most polluted city in the world.
Stings
bees-on-honey-comb
If you keep up with the news at all, you’ve heard about the bee problem over the past few years. Such little creatures have a BIG impact on our environment. The problem is that bees help fertilize 1/3 of our planet’s food. No bees means people starving.
Pristine?
sherpa-collecting-trash-on-mount-everest
Brave climbers often attempt to ascend the great Mount Everest. Unfortunately many of them leave behind their garbage on the natural wonder. This sherpa is helping clean up his beloved Everest. There are little things all of us can do to help our planet and properly disposing of our waste and this is one.
Trashy
rubbish-on-uk-beach
Even in more developed nations, garbage dumping is an issue. Most of the UK’s beach debris is from beachgoers. Way to ruin it for the rest of us.
Float Away
garbage-river-in-phillipines
This little raft is made from styrofoam. This father and son in the Philippines are paddling through a river of trash to collect plastic bottles to sell. They make $3US a day.
Does Not Compute
garbage-computers
E-Waste is also a concern that is growing as technology is advancing and expanding. Smartphones, computers and the like are trashed and can contain potentially harmful components that can seep into groundwater.
Chernobyl
inside-of-chernobyl
In 1986 in the city of Pripyat, in the former USSR, there was a horrific and catastrophic nuclear accident. There is still residual radioactivity in the surrounding environment and even in other countries. The deaths caused by the Chernobyl disaster is debated. While most of the victims developed or will develop cancer from the radiation. Nuclear power is a cheap and efficient source of electricity compared to fossil fuels. Some say that nuclear energy is less environmentally harmful, but Chernobyl proves otherwise.
Atomic Bomb
atomic-bomb-child-victim
Everyone learns about the Japanese bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II. The total people killed directly is in the hundreds of thousands. The residual effects harmed even more people who died from the effect of burns, radiation sickness, and more.
Tired
tire-dump-in-spain
Thankfully we no longer burn used tires. But this eyesore is a dump along the Spanish countryside. Since 2003, they have be claimed illegal. Worn tires and now be recycled for building materials, surfacing for roads, sports tracks and children’s playgrounds.
Greasy
athabasca_oil_sands
The Athabasca Oil Sands in Alberta, Canada can be seen from space. Of course, this and other oil sands have a negative impact on the environment and well as human welfare. Thankfully many environmentally conscious people are becoming less dependent on crude oils and choose to buy electric cars and invest in solar power.
Migration
dead-bird-being-held-up-avian-flu
Migrating birds who go South for the winter are getting confused because of climate change. They are either starting their journey too early or too late. This means they can’t feast at the appropriate time, leading to the diminishing of several species.
Dead and Gone
carcass-of-baby-seal
Let’s not forget the amazing animals that once roamed the Earth before we got involved due to hunting or destroying their habitats. No more West African black rhinos, Javan tigers and hundreds more.
Mir Mine
mir-mine-in-russia
Over in East Siberia sits this former diamond mine. It’s over 1500 feet deep and has a diameter of almost 4,000 feet: it is the second largest excavated hole in the world. Our greed for diamonds made us put a huge gaping hole in the earth that hasn’t been used for over ten years. The airspace over Mir is off limits for flying because there have been reports of helicopters being sucked in by the airflow.
Death by Fire
fire-in-amazon-forest
Here’s another example of deforestation in the Amazon. Controlled fires destroy the flora and fauna living in these forest to make way for cattle. Another reason to guilt you into eating well-source meats.

Pete Rose has filed an appeal directly to baseball's Hall of Fame asking to be eligible

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Pete Rose is appealing directly to baseball's Hall of Fame to restore his eligibility, arguing the lifetime ban he agreed to in 1989 was never intended to keep him out of Cooperstown.
A seven-page letter to Hall president Jeff Idelson on Tuesday makes the case that the settlement agreement reached by Rose and then-Commissioner Bart Giamatti didn't include a provision that he be ineligible for election to the Hall of Fame.
"At the time Pete agreed to the settlement, the consequences of being placed on the ineligible list were clear and specific — and did not include a Hall of Fame prohibition," according to the letter, signed by Rose's longtime attorney Raymond C. Genco and attorney Mark Rosenbaum.
The Hall of Fame changed its bylaws two years after Rose's banishment to make permanently banned players ineligible for the Hall, which shut out the career hits leader as long as he remained barred from baseball.
Genco is asking the Hall to amend that bylaw specifically to allow Rose to be eligible for baseball writers to elect at their discretion. He makes the point that the banishments of Mickey Mantle and Willie Mays for their association with casinos didn't affect their Hall status, and even Shoeless Joe Jackson had remained eligible after he was banned from the game for accepting money to throw the 1919 World Series.
"We believe that the institution of Baseball will be strengthened by this act of grace — an act that would give Pete Rose the same treatment that every other Major League Baseball player and manager received throughout the first 55 years of the National Baseball Hall of Fame," the letter said.
In a statement, Idelson said, "Pete Rose remains ineligible for Hall of Fame consideration, based on the Hall of Fame's bylaws, which preclude any individual on baseball's ineligible list from being considered for election."
New baseball commissioner Rob Manfred in December denied the 75-year-old Rose's latest petition for reinstatement, but Genco said Manfred "opened the door" by also stating that it wasn't Manfred's responsibility to determine whether Rose should be eligible for the Hall. Petitioning the Hall to change the rule, Genco said, was the next logical step.
Genco noted that Manfred had allowed Rose to participate recently in some ceremonial activities, including the retirement of his number by the Cincinnati Reds and his induction into the Reds Hall of Fame in June.
"This play may only bring further scrutiny to Pete," Genco said. "He may not get in. It may open a magnifying glass on Pete Rose's transgressions, but if you look at it from a fundamental fairness point of view, I think we have good footing. We have a very reasonable argument where the board can take very reasonable action in their power to bring real closure to this."
An MLB spokesman did not immediately return a message seeking comment.