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re: Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (Thoughts with Spoilers; Fricking fantastic)

Posted on 7/11/14 at 1:33 pm to
Posted by prplhze2000
Parts Unknown
Member since Jan 2007
51642 posts
Posted on 7/11/14 at 1:33 pm to
The wipe them out thing was stupid. even at survival rate of 1 in 500, that still means 10-20 million humans, based on 5 billion people. Figure more deaths due to disease etc. But still. Concentrate as many as you can in a few areas. Already have the technical knowledge. Apes don't have that and won't on their own for some time. Not every group has a Ceasar who was raised and trained by humans. So take some time, get civilization going again, and then start wiping them out or reducing their population.
Posted by athenslife101
Member since Feb 2013
18634 posts
Posted on 7/11/14 at 2:26 pm to
Ok. Let's break it down.

1/500. That's a .002. There are roughly 300,000,000 people living in this country. At a .002 survival rate, that means 600,000 survived the infection in the entire big arse country and people would be migrating south to warmer climates. Then you take in apocalyptic issues and it's even less. In the entire country.I can go on from there if need be. I found it very hard to believe that a group was coming south to help them in the movie.
This post was edited on 7/11/14 at 2:28 pm
Posted by Volvagia
Fort Worth
Member since Mar 2006
51963 posts
Posted on 7/12/14 at 5:27 pm to
quote:

The wipe them out thing was stupid. even at survival rate of 1 in 500, that still means 10-20 million humans, based on 5 billion people. Figure more deaths due to disease etc. But still. Concentrate as many as you can in a few areas. Already have the technical knowledge. Apes don't have that and won't on their own for some time. Not every group has a Ceasar who was raised and trained by humans. So take some time, get civilization going again, and then start wiping them out or reducing their population.


You aren't thinking things though, and you are taking a lot of big steps for granted.

You aren't really thinking of the fallout of a pandemic like that. What scares administrations about pandemic flus isn't the direct death toll of it. Its the complete societal collapse that occurs.

And a death rate of 500 to 1 is more lethal than fricking Ebola. And its super contagious.

20 million humans that survive the virus means that on the planet there is one person for every 7,500,000 square kilometers.

To put that in perspective, that is larger than all states Gulf Coast, INCLUDING Texas, combined.


Oh, and multiply that area by three.

On average, one person for all that area.


Now where are these people concentrating exactly?

Also factor in that people aren't evenly distributed on the planet. They are concentrated in cities that can't hope to sustain themselves, that depend on a national logistics network to run. And as resources run scarce, they will turn on each other to fend off starvation.

Between the virus, starvation, and murder its not a surprise to wonder if they are the only ones left. That beleaguered group of humans were probably the only ones left in all of California.

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