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Times feel rough - with natural disasters, major political conflicts and uncertainty
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about the future.
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But as the memes roll in about it being a horrible time to be alive, you might be surprised
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to see your life now vs what it would have been in the past.
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Much of history actually involves humans succumbing to malnutrition and hunger.
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In Ancient Egypt, a severe drought could hit and 5-10% of the entire population would die.
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Of course, things aren't perfect today with 11% of even France suffering from food insecurity
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- which means their diet is limited due to socio-economic status and they eat less nutritious
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foods and excess amounts of carbohydrates and salt - but compare this to the years of
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1692-1694 when 15% of France's population literally died because food was simply too
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expensive.
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Today, while millions do suffer from malnutrition, advancements in technology, government agencies
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and NGOs help to ensure that most are not dying.
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In fact, for the first time in human history, more people are overweight than suffering
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from malnutrition.
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As homo sapiens began to live in cities, there was a massive increase in disease.
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In the 1330's a horrifying outbreak of what they believed were demons, bad air or angry
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gods killed 75-200 million people.
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We now realize it was the flea dwelling bacterium Yersinia Pestis, known historically as the
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black plague.
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But at the time, people really had no idea what was killing them.
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In 1520 a spanish flotilla heading to Mexico had an individual on it, carrying an early
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case of smallpox virus.
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Within 2 months, the disease had killed 1/3rd of Mexico' population.
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In the years following, there were so many infectious disease outbreaks in Mexico, that
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the population fell from 22 million to 2 million over the course of only 60 years.
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People were constantly dying of diseases and nobody knew how to cure them.
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Remedies at the time included praying, having cold baths, or rubbing black beetles on sores.
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Even as recently as 1918, the Spanish Flu spread internationally and within a few months
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1/3rd of the entire world population was infected, and 3-5% of the world died.
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Today, most of our flu worries are based around the pain of needles.
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Modern medicine saves millions of lives.
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The smallpox vaccine fully eradicated the disease from our planet.
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When diseases like SARS or Ebola appear and the world prepares for a severe public health
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emergency, far fewer people die due to international organization, modern technology and continued
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advancements in medicine.
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When Europe colonized the Americas, an estimated 100 million people died, though pre-colonization
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populations of indigenous people is not well documented making some estimates millions
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higher.
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As many as 85 million people died in WWII and in ancient agricultural societies, human
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violence caused 15% of all deaths.
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Today, human violence accounts for around 1% of deaths.
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In 2012, only 120,000 died in war, whereas 1.5 million died of diabetes.
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For the first time in human history when most people consider the future, they don't assume
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war.
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As we look to this year, while there is still starvation, disease, war and inequalities,
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it is drastically better than most of human history.
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But we must continue to be critical of our government's, challenge companies and rethink
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the way human society is structured in order to continue progress.
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By acknowledging the successful human efforts in medical research, economic reform, peace
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initiatives and governmental support to decrease starvation, disease and violence, we can find
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hope for the future.
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Hope is a valuable notion to focus on as we look for a way to be content in a world that,
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at times, can seem so overwhelmingly bad.
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If you could use a little light hearted fun, check out our latest T-shirt “The rotation
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of the earth makes my day” which we just launched and is available for the next 2 weeks
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only at asapscience.com/merch.
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without you!
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