December 10, 201015 yr Walking around today, seeing someone with a serious unibrow it got me thinking...was he just not quite as evolved as most people? Is the single eye-brow a throwback to earlier days that is becoming more and more rare with each passing generation? Is that also why some people are hairy like bears? Our appendix is something left over that scientists believe humans needed long ago when our diet consisted of more plants. Some babies today are born with an elongated tail bone. So what is the next thing to become a victim of evolution? The pinkie finger? The wisdom teeth? What are things that people are using less and less of that could disappear in future generations?
December 10, 201015 yr Author the extinction of the white people Thanks, forgot to mention that. Interesting how in movies futuristic humans are usually tall and thin with large heads - and WHITE. But with racial mixing ever increasing, white skin will become like white paint when mixed with various colors. The white disappears.
December 10, 201015 yr before or after marriage? i had a good friend who told a story of a tribe of stone carriers and after time the whole village was delivering new borns with one sholder large than the other, maybe the unibrow is good for keeping the sand away from the eyes?
December 11, 201015 yr Men's feet will get longer, to help them balance when pissed and they will develop webbed hands, so they can hold more salted peanuts. Women's feet will get smaller, so they can stand closer to the kitchen sink.
December 11, 201015 yr Men's feet will get longer, to help them balance when pissed and they will develop webbed hands, so they can hold more salted peanuts. Women's feet will get smaller, so they can stand closer to the kitchen sink.
December 13, 201015 yr Pockets will get larger to carry the necessary for a round of drinks. Drinker buys record round A NOTORIOUS record of ostentatious drinks-buying by Tokyo's flush brokers, traders and hedge fund managers was smashed on Saturday - by a humble civil servant and a $36,400 round of shots. Kaz Miura, an architect working for the United States Government, achieved the unlikely feat in brazen defiance of a sour market mood and relentless exodus of big-spending foreign bankers from Japan in a dismal quarter for the Japanese economy. The 3011 shots he bought in the Geronimo Shot Bar challenge is unlikely to be beaten until Tokyo's bankers start receiving decent bonuses again - a potentially long wait. http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/executive-lifestyle/drinker-byus-record-round/story-e6frg9zo-1225970072891
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