If we hear from an alien civilization, should we send a message back? Or stay silent?
This issue has stirred argument among scientists. But this really shouldn’t be a decision for scientists alone — the entire world should be involved trib.al/v6XJWAA
If alien civilizations exist, the chances we'll make contact are probably growing faster than ever before given advances in our ability to study planets orbiting other star systems, and to search with telescopes for signals indicating intelligent life trib.al/v6XJWAA
So far, nearly every such signal detected has eventually been traced back to our own satellites or interference coming from other human activity.
But one day — next week, in a century, maybe longer — that may change trib.al/v6XJWAA
If life is a natural occurrence, then it is truly puzzling why we haven’t yet seen signs of alien life.
As Enrico Fermi pointed out in 1950, there are so many stars in our galaxy that other civilizations should have colonized our entire galaxy by now trib.al/v6XJWAA
Since then, people have proposed possible answers to the Fermi paradox:
👽Aliens are already here
🛸They’re letting us get used to them slowly via UFOs
🚨Any civilization that exposes itself has been annihilated by a super-advanced, predatory group trib.al/v6XJWAA
Scientists are searching for alien signals. SETI researchers look for signals that seem to have no natural origin.
So far, after some 60 years, they’ve found nothing trib.al/v6XJWAA
Some are therefore pushing for a more active approach known as METI, or Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence.
If passive listening isn’t working, maybe we should send powerful signals toward target stars to see if we get a response trib.al/v6XJWAA
This may be deeply risky: Stephen Hawking noted that in human history, more technologically advanced cultures have tended to enslave or massacre less-advanced cultures.
Would it be any different with humans facing a far more advanced group of aliens? trib.al/v6XJWAA
But the METI supporters argue, for example, that highly advanced civilizations probably already know about us from the radio and television emissions we’ve been generating for the past century.
So sending out signals poses no further risk trib.al/v6XJWAA
All of this remains highly speculative.
But actually sending out powerful signals toward other worlds would be a definitive, irreversible act, potentially affecting the future of everyone on Earth trib.al/v6XJWAA
For this reason, some scientists say it’s time to think about developing laws or international treaties to regulate such activity, so no one party — a rogue nation or eccentric billionaire — can take the future of the planet into their own hands trib.al/v6XJWAA
If humanity ever receives authentic signals from an alien civilization, should it respond? 👽 trib.al/v6XJWAA
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💦 Planning to float around in your pool this summer? A shortage of chlorine tablets threatens to make that difficult trib.al/UjeOUhg
The chlorine squeeze is especially acute because Americans are more pool-happy than ever:
➡️ Demand for pool upgrades and new construction skyrocketed during the Covid-19 pandemic
➡️ Pool owners who didn’t do any extra work started using their pools more trib.al/UjeOUhg
The chlorine market likely would have been able to keep up were it not for a fire at a BioLab chemical plant last year.
The damage took out a facility responsible for a significant portion of the popular chlorine tablets produced for the U.S. market trib.al/UjeOUhg
The job market recovery is looking better for 2023 and 2024.
The best evidence for the optimistic outlook is coming from a surprising place: teenagers trib.al/UhfE1Ke
Teenagers are less affected by the factors holding back labor supply than any other demographic.
🚫They weren't eligible for economic impact payments while living at home
🚫They'd be ineligible for unemployment insurance as full-time students twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
A full employment recovery to pre-pandemic levels is going to take longer than we thought.
But booming employment trends among teenagers suggests that strong demand for workers should flow through into higher levels of labor-force participation teenagers trib.al/UhfE1Ke
By now, we’ve all heard about the gender gaps in pay and wealth.
But what’s not often spoken about is the ambition penalty, which punishes women who try to close these gaps trib.al/5fl82a0
On average, for every $1 earned and owned by a man, women in the U.S.:
💵 Earn $0.82
💵 Own $0.32
The disparities are even wider for women of color trib.al/5fl82a0
Women themselves tend to be blamed for these gaps. These are examples of real headlines:
“Women don’t pursue high paying jobs”
“Women drop out of the workforce”
“Women let their partners manage their money”
“Women don’t invest” trib.al/5fl82a0
What if we never learn whether the virus that causes Covid-19 escaped from a lab or jumped to humans from animals?
The public is still entitled to a closer look at what’s going on in virology labs trib.al/dHZ7Htj
Some scientists worry that laboratory scientists are getting too little oversight on projects that could potentially start pandemics.
Others worry about the global proliferation of labs that work with dangerous viruses and other pathogens trib.al/kwok8bt
SARS-CoV-2’s closest relative appears to be in horseshoe bats — yet there are no horseshoe bat colonies close to Wuhan, China, where the pandemic was first identified.
However, Wuhan hosts a lab holding the world’s largest collection of bat coronaviruses trib.al/kwok8bt