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Red Planet — 28 January 2004 |
This week is one where newspaper deadlines and politics conspire against me.
By the time you read this, the Government will have survived or been defeated over the higher education Bill and Lord Hutton will have published his report.
Either or both of these events has the potential to make or break Tony Blair�s premiership.
But this column had to be with the Express and Echo sub editors by Tuesday morning, before both big events.
So, I will return next week with my thoughts on Hutton and higher education funding.
Blessed relief for me from the build up to these events was provided by the incredible reports of the discovery of water on Mars.
I was amazed by the photographs of the �red planet�, as well as the reports suggesting that Mars might once have sustained life.
The claim that this discovery ranks among the most important � like the earth being round and circulating around the sun � is no exaggeration.
Because if two planets so close together as Earth and Mars have, or have had, the ability to sustain life, then the likelihood that other life exists somewhere in the vastness of the Universe is greatly increased.
These are the sorts of thoughts that take one out of the humdrum concerns of daily life.
Some people find them scary others strangely reassuring.
I�ve always drawn comfort from contemplating the infinite nature of existence. The idea that Earth is but a grain of sand in the scheme of things certainly helps put life�s trials and tribulations in perspective!
The technological advances made by man in recent years have been astonishing. And we are told we will make more progress in the next hundred years than in the last thousand.
We have the power to destroy the world through environmental degradation or weapons of mass destruction or continue the progress � albeit with ups and downs � since life began. It�s in our hands.
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