I’ve long been fascinated by science and the structure and nature of the world. In our modern, technologically advanced age, is a pure blessing that we all over the world from a chair, eating pizza while walking in short, one-hour segments, each of which is it, we have the appetite for it.This is what the BBC documentary series works: Planet Earth. And there is no shortage in Episode 6 – Ice Worlds of considerable gravity and all Stark carnal nature of life.
Watch this episode, I’m through the feeling of remorse cruelty of nature. A polar bear literally starve to death because he had to swim for days to find food, and he lacks the strength to kill his prey. A vast majority of us sees this bear so tiny in the context of the huge walrus who stabbed him to try with their defense, steal their young. You can not blame the walrus, but one can not help hungry bear, which lost half its weight in less than three months. Demi. Can you imagine what it be? I weigh 300 pounds and every time I’m still a hint of hunger, I am in the kitchen and get something to eat (that’s why I weighs 300 pounds.) Following the discovery that this bear was literally starving months seems his roar desperate and frustrated cries of anguish as he is dying of hunger.
I ask again: why nature is so cruel? If God created the universe and the world in which we live and everything about her, why did he create such a terrible system of death and torture and depravity. Of course, it did not. The Bible says that our fallen nature, the world and everything in it was submitted. The ground was literally cursed the man. So at the end, I defy the curse of Adam is no longer live off the land, he was handcuffed, as I live and breathe, and the world approaches the end, I am – the humanity in me – is responsible for this massacre. » Read more: Documentary Review – Planet Earth – Episode 6 – Ice Worlds