Coming Soon š At the beginning of April, youāll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
Ah yes, spring is here and the ānewsā is full of scare stories. Volcanoes, the epidemic du jour, the strange black feline stalking the moors (a blurry photo of a house cat) and donāt forget the asteroid!
Except thereās no evidence that supervolcanos are anywhere near erupting, thatās dependent upon the amount of magma and the pressure itās under and we monitor that.But thereās extremely strong evidence that weāre driving climate change by greenhouse gas emissions
Also thereās been around 10 supervolcano eruptions since the first human typed hominid species evolved, so while a supervolcano eruption would kill a lot of people itās unlikely to be civilization ending
The world has already survived many predictions of its end. Some by scientists, some by prophets, poets, priests, rabbis, indigenous tribes, ancient calendars, and network executives.
The wonderful bluegrass band The Hotmud Family released an in-concert album some decades ago. The cover was a black & white cartoon of a bar with thought balloons; the bartenderās had a clock, one drinkerās had breasts, anotherās had bottles, and so forth. In the background was a stage with on it playing, and speech balloon with a full-color scene of an Appalachian mountains.
Just watched āSupervolcanoā a 2005 movie. Interesting. One thing amused me was that when they showed a map of the destruction, it completely stopped at the Canadian border! Never mind that Alberta is right next door. Guess it couldnāt get past our Customs.
Thereās a game of statistics here and a less than informative game at that. Spervolcanoes and asteroid impacts are not very likely but when they happen they kill more people. In any case you are much more likely to die of a heart attack, cancer, auto accident, ā¦ any number of other things. You are 100% guaranteed to die of something.
Or the ozone could utterly collapse from the more than 2,000 bombs exploded in the atmosphere and every rocket launched; or from forever chemicals; or from the superheating of the planet due to ionospheric interference; or from the complete disappearance of insectsā¦become informed, Rat, before itās too late.
The thing I keep saying that no one likes isā¦Ā natural catastrophes are always a matter of āWhenā not āIfā ā living in the midwest Iām still waiting for the overdue New Madrid fault to shake up things again.
Olā Ratās wrong on his calculations == the odds that one of those volcanoes will go off any time soon are pretty tiny ā āone supereruption takes place every 857,142 years or so. Modern humans have only been around for about 350,000 years or so, so it looks like itās fairly unlikely that we may ever see one in our lifetime.ā <- All the while, the chance of civilization destruction due to viruses, climate shifts, and/or nuclear war within the next couple of decades is approaching unity. forbes. com/sites/robinandrews/2017/08/31/here-are-the-odds-of-you-seeing-a-supervolcano-erupt-in-your-lifetime/
āFortunatelyā just like jbruins84341 , I live close enough (New Mexico) that a āboomā is probably all I would hear when Yellowstone blows then itās over ā and I refuse to worry about ANYTHING over which I have no control ā Iām in my seventies and the world is going to hell, anyway,,, as I grow older, Iām beginning to appreciate my grandmotherās attitude more and more, which was essentially, āscrew itā¦ā
The chances of a super volcano erupting within oneās lifetime is perhaps 1 in 1000. Global warming chances are 1 in 1. It happens as we speak. It started to become actually measurable 50 years ago, it is scientifically undeniable for 20 years, and it is utterly stupid to deny as a fact for 10 years now.
Not to act on it was stupid all along. But it was profitable to make people stay stupid since forever.
drivingfuriously Premium Member 1 day ago
Eternal darkness and cold from all the ash, who wants to think about that?
BasilBruce 1 day ago
What if we fill them all with Tums?
sirbadger 1 day ago
Will we be better off after we end life as we know it? Life as we donāt know it might be better.
ronaldspence 1 day ago
āIt starts with an earthquake, birds snakes and airplanes, Lenny Bruce is not afraidā¦ā
orinoco womble 1 day ago
Ah yes, spring is here and the ānewsā is full of scare stories. Volcanoes, the epidemic du jour, the strange black feline stalking the moors (a blurry photo of a house cat) and donāt forget the asteroid!
Kitty Queen 1 day ago
I feel the same Pig!
h_laws 1 day ago
Except thereās no evidence that supervolcanos are anywhere near erupting, thatās dependent upon the amount of magma and the pressure itās under and we monitor that.But thereās extremely strong evidence that weāre driving climate change by greenhouse gas emissions
Also thereās been around 10 supervolcano eruptions since the first human typed hominid species evolved, so while a supervolcano eruption would kill a lot of people itās unlikely to be civilization ending
Nuke Road Warrior 1 day ago
Why worry about something you canāt control? BTW Iām living next to Yellowstone.
iggyman 1 day ago
And donāt forget the odd asteroid heading this way!
iggyman 1 day ago
āGloom, Despair, and Agony on me, deep dark Depression miseryā, Pig must like Hee Haw, the TV show!
Zykoic 1 day ago
Coincident that Iām studying those set backs in civilizations.
scpandich 1 day ago
On the plus side, one of the super-volcanoes erupting would take care of global warming for a while.
win.45mag 1 day ago
Egrayjames 1 day ago
Like Alfred E. said, āWhat, me worry?ā.
akachman Premium Member 1 day ago
Reality check, please.
Ichabod Ferguson 1 day ago
Advances in the science of volcanology show that the magma chamber of the Yellowstone caldera is thousands of years from collapsing if ever.
Ellis97 1 day ago
The world has already survived many predictions of its end. Some by scientists, some by prophets, poets, priests, rabbis, indigenous tribes, ancient calendars, and network executives.
elbow macaroni 1 day ago
Less informed, like most Americans.
Goat from PBS 1 day ago
Can a supervolcano actually destroy all life on Earth? I kinda find that hard to believe considering how big the Earth is.
fjc007 1 day ago
Itās the end of the world as we know it and I feel fineā¦
Jimvideo 1 day ago
Asteroids. You left out asteroids. Then again Preparation H will help.
old_geek 1 day ago
Can listen to hours of National Dingbats Radio every day and still be uninformedā¦
Gameguy49 Premium Member about 24 hours ago
Forget about things you cannot change, live for today. Every day is precious if you take the time to enjoy something.
Zebrastripes about 24 hours ago
Too much informationā¦..
VICTOR PROULX about 24 hours ago
Comics are not the place to get your science.
jbarr68407 about 24 hours ago
Iām just biding my time ātil the asteroid hits.
Cozmik Cowboy about 24 hours ago
The wonderful bluegrass band The Hotmud Family released an in-concert album some decades ago. The cover was a black & white cartoon of a bar with thought balloons; the bartenderās had a clock, one drinkerās had breasts, anotherās had bottles, and so forth. In the background was a stage with on it playing, and speech balloon with a full-color scene of an Appalachian mountains.
They called it Live As We Know It.
Slowly, he turned... about 23 hours ago
Letās take a trip to Yellowstone firstā¦ oh yeah, nevermind.
ladykat Premium Member about 23 hours ago
Or, given the way the world is going, we could all blow ourselves to smithereens!
cellodude1990 about 23 hours ago
Iām looking at you, Yellowstone Caldera!
Diat60 about 23 hours ago
Just watched āSupervolcanoā a 2005 movie. Interesting. One thing amused me was that when they showed a map of the destruction, it completely stopped at the Canadian border! Never mind that Alberta is right next door. Guess it couldnāt get past our Customs.
Brian Collis about 23 hours ago
rooting for Yellowstone
rat with a bat about 23 hours ago
Anybody watched 2012?
rshive about 23 hours ago
If Yellowstone blows, it may drive the mountain goats in my direction.
mindjob about 23 hours ago
Who wants to spend years waiting for a super volcano to end civilization when weāre already waiting for a super earthquake?
Chris about 23 hours ago
sameā¦ in the worrying department anyways. :j
whelan_jj about 23 hours ago
Thereās a game of statistics here and a less than informative game at that. Spervolcanoes and asteroid impacts are not very likely but when they happen they kill more people. In any case you are much more likely to die of a heart attack, cancer, auto accident, ā¦ any number of other things. You are 100% guaranteed to die of something.
Mel-T-Pass Premium Member about 22 hours ago
Actually the items in panel 1 are far, far more likely to occur or, in some cases, will get worse than they are. So relax.
DaBump Premium Member about 22 hours ago
How many people (since I didnāt look) have already posted the old saying, āIgnorance is blissā?
desertinutah1951 about 22 hours ago
Or the ozone could utterly collapse from the more than 2,000 bombs exploded in the atmosphere and every rocket launched; or from forever chemicals; or from the superheating of the planet due to ionospheric interference; or from the complete disappearance of insectsā¦become informed, Rat, before itās too late.
GraceFaith about 22 hours ago
What, me worry?
serial232 about 22 hours ago
Like roaches, we will survive.
Radish... about 22 hours ago
We are the dancers at the end of time.
Otis Rufus Driftwood about 21 hours ago
Just what you want to hear on a Wednesday.
ncorgbl about 21 hours ago
The ālavanadoā in Hawaiāi was something to see.
ronlouisscholl about 21 hours ago
Climate change caused by humans IS happening, ya dumb rat.
KEA about 21 hours ago
not to mention the asteroids
KEA about 21 hours ago
The thing I keep saying that no one likes isā¦Ā natural catastrophes are always a matter of āWhenā not āIfā ā living in the midwest Iām still waiting for the overdue New Madrid fault to shake up things again.
whawn about 20 hours ago
Olā Ratās wrong on his calculations == the odds that one of those volcanoes will go off any time soon are pretty tiny ā āone supereruption takes place every 857,142 years or so. Modern humans have only been around for about 350,000 years or so, so it looks like itās fairly unlikely that we may ever see one in our lifetime.ā <- All the while, the chance of civilization destruction due to viruses, climate shifts, and/or nuclear war within the next couple of decades is approaching unity. forbes. com/sites/robinandrews/2017/08/31/here-are-the-odds-of-you-seeing-a-supervolcano-erupt-in-your-lifetime/
marilynnbyerly about 20 hours ago
I have a friend like that. A birthday lunch at a diner isnāt much fun when she harps on Yellowstone.
zeexenon about 20 hours ago
Well, I, for one, am glad we went to Yellowstone early.
John Lamb Premium Member about 20 hours ago
That would be the perfect ending to the Trump presidency. Everybody dies.
RGSMO about 19 hours ago
Who all is rooting for the volcanoes?
Bilan about 19 hours ago
Supervolcanoes, pandemics and nuclear wars are big IFs. But climate change is very real.
[Unnamed Reader - 14b4ce] about 19 hours ago
Did you ever think the day would come when youād pray for a measles epidemic at the White House?
jbruins84341 about 18 hours ago
We live close enough to Yellowstone that when it blows, we will have time to see a flash.
John Jorgensen about 17 hours ago
Thatās as realistic as the others but I donāt know that Iād call it more realistic.
wildlandwaters about 17 hours ago
thereās something to be said for thatā¦.
wellis1947 Premium Member about 17 hours ago
āFortunatelyā just like jbruins84341 , I live close enough (New Mexico) that a āboomā is probably all I would hear when Yellowstone blows then itās over ā and I refuse to worry about ANYTHING over which I have no control ā Iām in my seventies and the world is going to hell, anyway,,, as I grow older, Iām beginning to appreciate my grandmotherās attitude more and more, which was essentially, āscrew itā¦ā
Buoy about 12 hours ago
Ignorance is bliss.
George C. Hopkins about 11 hours ago
Thatās a very trenchant and pertinent observation, Rat!
sincavage05 about 11 hours ago
Lava flowing in Iceland again. At least itās nature and not some sadistic dictator. Somehow I can live with that.
greenlynn Premium Member about 10 hours ago
Ignorance is bliss where tis folly to be wise.
unfair.de about 4 hours ago
The chances of a super volcano erupting within oneās lifetime is perhaps 1 in 1000. Global warming chances are 1 in 1. It happens as we speak. It started to become actually measurable 50 years ago, it is scientifically undeniable for 20 years, and it is utterly stupid to deny as a fact for 10 years now.
Not to act on it was stupid all along. But it was profitable to make people stay stupid since forever.