There are an amazing series of flaws that constitute the universe,
from its appalling celestial waste to its meagre and slipshod powers
of sustaining life. The uselessness of satellites, their sole function
being to whirl incessantly around their parent bodies in aimless
revolutions, does not speak of intelligent design. Neither does the
incalculable stellar wastage caused by undirected forces -- damaged
moons, smashed planets, burst stars due to overly-rapid rotation --
point to the possibility that there is a "Celestial Engineer" in
charge.

Earth's cosmic clock is ticking as our sun radiates away its energy
into desert space (thereby losing its weight also), squandering
360,000 million tons of energy every day of which only 160 tons reach
our planet, or less than one two-thousand-millionth part of the total
radiation. The energy not wasted is greatly misdirected, with not
enough to sustain life in our polar regions, and too much in the
burning deserts of Mongolia and Africa. As the sun loses its weight at
the rate of 4 million tons a second, so it correspondingly loses its
gravitational hold on the earth. Slowly but steadily, our planet is
drifting away from the sun and there is no escaping the inevitability
of earth's destiny -- to become just another of the billions of
lifeless globes carrying nothing but the frozen remains of what were
once living beings.

But oh how beautiful the universe is! Hubble's photographs show
incredible random abstract beauty. In a universe that contains so much
that is the same as that from which we arose it is absurd to think
that we are alone. I think the universe is teeming with life.
Intelligent like us, less so, and moreso. There are civilizations that
have been around for 100 times as long as we and have undoubtedly
discovered the secrets that we dream of. Have grown away from the
monsters in childhood closets that are the gods. There are also surely
those younger than us who are still inventing their gods to explain
what they experience around them.

We have one thing in common. We are all stardust. From stars we came
and to stars we will return. Our molecules drifting towards and beyond
this beautiful universe that we call home. Stare at the stars and see
your past and your future.

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