Do you believe in God?
Posted: 05 Dec 2024, 16:39
Yes, then you are a good man or woman!
Else you are unbeliever, a faithless!
This was in past, today you are no more asked if you believe in God or not, it is something else!
Do you believe if there is a climate change in the world?
If you think there is not, then you are condemned, dubbed a denier!
They found out that Ethiopians are deniers!
At the time they can only tell you, if temperature will rise or not, they can only say for now it could rise. Uncertainty is inherent in itself, the same way no one could say how God would look like, if we were to meet Him on the streets, as an example.
God could exist, or not, said the late Stephen Hawking at one time, I remember. If he were still around, I am not sure what he could say with regard to climate change. It exist, or could exist?
Be careful not to be dubbed a denier!
The Human Climate Horizons platform shows that the average annual temperature in Ethiopia could rise from 20°C (68°F) to as high as 24°C (75°F), with 71 days a year above 35°C (95°F) by the end of the century. This increase in temperature could exacerbate the well-documented drought conditions often experienced in the country.
Else you are unbeliever, a faithless!
This was in past, today you are no more asked if you believe in God or not, it is something else!
Do you believe if there is a climate change in the world?
If you think there is not, then you are condemned, dubbed a denier!
They found out that Ethiopians are deniers!
At the time they can only tell you, if temperature will rise or not, they can only say for now it could rise. Uncertainty is inherent in itself, the same way no one could say how God would look like, if we were to meet Him on the streets, as an example.
God could exist, or not, said the late Stephen Hawking at one time, I remember. If he were still around, I am not sure what he could say with regard to climate change. It exist, or could exist?
Be careful not to be dubbed a denier!
The Human Climate Horizons platform shows that the average annual temperature in Ethiopia could rise from 20°C (68°F) to as high as 24°C (75°F), with 71 days a year above 35°C (95°F) by the end of the century. This increase in temperature could exacerbate the well-documented drought conditions often experienced in the country.