Anonymous
11/07/2022 (Mon) 22:52
Id: 0c5cbb
[Preview]
No. 89226
del
Time Travel is a technology worth pursuing, imagine if we developed it.
We could escape into the past and create a better future, one were the NSDAP was victorious in WW2.
How? By getting America into the war against the axis early.
There's this historical theory that if we were to prevent the Titanic from sinking then the USA would've entered the war along with the other allied powers, rather than sitting it out for a time until Pearl Harbor.
This simple change would mean that America would not be the military powerhouse that it was, and without that full might behind the western allies, the Germans would've cleared up the West a lot quicker, there'd be no D-Day, and then they could focus a lot more on the Eastern front of the war.
The Soviets were running full steam with a tank that was almost dry, the leaders would never surrender, but it wouldn't take long for the people to turn against their masters and actually help the Germans to victory.
Tis was an idea that was made popular by mathew patrick on youtube in his shitty series, everything in his videos is stolen BTW.
Another move would be to give the victory to the South in the American civil war, Abraham Lincoln was the first bad president because he ignored the founding documents recognition of the the state's rights to vacate the union, and by doing that you undermine the strength of the USA before WW2 breaks out, in so doing you achieve much the same effect.
Alternatively, go back all the way to ancient Iraq and Egypt, preventing the Jews from coming into existence and destroying the first great civilization, forming an alliance between the two "cradle" civilizations of the fertile crescent, and keeping the MENA regions to remain the exclusive territories of White and Aryan Men. You'd also be preventing the origin of the arab race as well.
We could empower this empire to dominate the entire planet and make the whole world into just one race, the White Aryan race.
Time Travel is unironically a technology we should be developing, from what I've seen it a lot more possible and a lot more achievable than you might think it is at first glance, at least from the current understanding of the science around it, either we invent the more powerful technology in human history or we completely overturn physics with our discoveries, either way its a win.
The only thing we need to do is ,establish ourselves a dogma that we are working under the assumption that it is possible for human beings to move backwards in time, and that all we need to do is figure out a way to make it happen for ourselves.
We must also establish the dogma that there are no such things as paradoxes of causality, nor any risks relating to causality, this is because we could solve any problem not relating to causal paradoxes, for example, sending someone back in time might plant them out in the middle of outer space, we can avoid that by first making it so that we move them in the spacial dimension as well as in the temporal one, and second, we can map out the adjustments we'd need to make by sending out some sort of measuring device back in time by very miniscule amounts (approaching planck time), then having our past selves measure out the position that the device ended up in against the position it was sent from, and with that we can calculate the differences we should expect from the pattern our measurements would've established. From there we know what adjustments to posotion in space we would need to make to ensure that the traveller shows up where they should with respect to the Earth.
We could start easy by sending back information into the past, find ways to send our time travellers back in time to a point before the machine was created (possibly by harnessing some cosmic phenomena that is still around despite having existed since the time we want to send our traveler back to), and so on.
At the very worst we end up just corroborating the state of modern physics, which is a great achievement in itself, especially given the current state of monolithic aca