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Like 9/11 or any thing else back in time. Like you could go back in time and inform the people to stop that event from happening. How would you do that? What would you change?

2006-12-13 12:02:52 · 9 answers · asked by finalkeyblade 2 in Arts & Humanities History

9 answers

To change the past contemplates that there is no further
interaction with other planets. The people that changed the
course of the planets is by mistake, and also what is the course
is determined by the service of histories intellects. I really say
that here is a good clue, to fly to dry without flying the planet
course with total consideration of the perfect planet as designs
show model life in Bible faith. To do this I think you would change the day that competition for female started with injury to
small, ineffective, remote, rare, mutant study, and ministers.
To prevent the area of inhumane or brutal behavior could in
pure solutions set the bar higher that heavens had a more
justified coexistence with poor and simple making haunts and
demons a much smaller report.

2006-12-13 12:10:45 · answer #1 · answered by mtvtoni 6 · 1 0

If I could change anything in the past, besides 9/11, I would go back in time and definitely campaign to the Jewish people to inform them of the atrocities that were happening at the time (please read "Night" by Elie Wiesel. In his book, the Jewish people did not believe that the Nazis were using Jewish babies for target practice, on their way to conquer Eastern Europe countries, such as Poland. ) I also would inform them of the horror that was to come, I feel that many in the Holocaust might have been saved, if only these people would have been less trusting. I shudder in horror on the thought of how many of these people, such as children got on a train destined to a death camp and therefore the ovens. To achieve this, there are two things I would do, if I was permitted, one is take pictures and documents in their own languages for them to believe me, and the other is, God forgive me; I should not say this as a Christian, infiltrate and assassinate Hitler.

2006-12-13 12:33:31 · answer #2 · answered by lovesherchina 2 · 0 0

The Black Death was an outbreak of bubonic plague that entered Melcombe Regis in 1348, and within a year had killed nearly half the population.

The Black Death, began with a minor outbreak of bubonic plague, medical term Yersinia Pestis, which started in the Gobi Dessert. It was transmitted throughout China and reached Europe when a Kipchak army, besieging a Crimean trading post, catapulted plague-infested corpses over the city walls. Plague spread throughout Europe, carried by fleas in the fur of rats, and eventually reached the Dorset coast on 24th June 1348.

Contagion carried quickly, and about two thirds of the population became infected. The morbidity rate was about 66%, i.e. if you caught it, you had a two to one chance of dying. Chroniclers relate how the disease raged in a town for about a month and then left. It moved gradually northwards until it had burnt itself out. Within twelve months, nearly half the population was dead.

After the problem of burying the dead in plague pits was over, people tried to get back to normality. But life was never the same again. The decreased population meant a shortage of labour and workmen demanded and received pay increases. The government of Edward III tried to cap pay increases by an Act of Parliament, The Statute of Labourers, the first government attempt to control the economy. Workmen who demanded too much were placed in the stocks, that is trapped in a wooden gadget for a day, and employers who paid over the odds were fined. The Act was largely unsuccessful as employers coaxed workers from other employers, with promises abundant pay increases, and wages kept on rising. One recorded case shows that a joiner who built the stocks for the punishment of greedy workers was paid three times the legal rate for his labour.

The government also passed The Sumptuary Act of 1367, making it illegal for the lower classes to spend their new wealth on new apparel of ermine or silk. Only the aristocracy and some senior gentlefolk were allowed to wear these items. Today when barristers are raised to the rank of Queen’s Council, they are said to ‘take silk’, indicating their elevation in status. The Act has never been repealed, so if you wear silk, and if any of Edward III’s commissioners are still alive, you could get put in the stocks!

By the reign of Richard II, the economy had settled down and landowners switched from labour intensive methods, grain production, to low labour processes, particularly sheep farming. Increased wool production boosted the economy and became the nation’s chief export, making England a major economic power.

2006-12-14 10:01:20 · answer #3 · answered by Retired 7 · 0 0

I would have to say 9/11. Not only is it the most recent event, it was one of the most horrific events to ever happen. America never was the same after that. The happy moments, the joy, all seemed to go away after that horrific day.

2006-12-13 12:10:07 · answer #4 · answered by ravensfan172003 3 · 0 0

Fighting with anyone and harboring any anger.

I just saw my old friend today. I thought he was treated for lung cancer. Last night he sent an email, yes an email and said no.
He just finished 3 weeks of full brain radiation because he has brain tumors, adrenal glands, left lung and back. He warned me that he has no hair and his skin was badly burned. HUH?!

So I went from my state to his and spent the day with him going to the hospital for results and I tried to be supportive. He wore a knit cap and his skin flakes terribly. I used my good face cream to give him a facial to stop some of the bad flaking.

He was very cold and distant. When I was worn out, he said I was not allowed to go to his home because he was still mad at me because our 3 year relationship did not work.
I got very lost trying to come home.

I can't believe at this stage his heart is so full of anger. I wonder how he can carry that weight of so much anger.

Oh well, I finally made it home after going on the road for 15 hours straight, with stops at doctors and hospital appts.
I offered to take him to his leg shunt appointment tomorrow, but he said he has a cancer support person who will meet him there.

I honestly believe life is too short to carry the burden of anger, and hate. I refuse to carry that burden even though I can honestly say now on Dec. 13th that he was abusive again. He would not even allow me to rest, so I had to try to rest in my car after he left me outside of the cancer center.

I would change this day, and would have stayed home. I believe he resents it that even though I have battled many health problems by myself, that it's not me that was given a year at the most for the "life sentence".

He wastes so much of his life carrying anger, instead of forgiving everyone.

I believe in love and forgiveness.
You asked so I decided to get this out, and I feel better and I even wrote this without leaky eyes (well almost, just a few tears).

GOD bless.

2006-12-13 12:20:10 · answer #5 · answered by May I help You? 6 · 0 0

I would change wherever and however cancer came to be then alot more people would not have suffered and be with us today, I think pollution altered the genetic pools and have made us all alot unhealthier and suseptible to diseases that could have never been. I also think that would change other things too a chain reaction event that would alter many lives.

2006-12-13 12:07:58 · answer #6 · answered by Tina of Lymphland.com 6 · 0 1

Lol, biblically speaking I'd slap Adam's hand away from that apple. In real life, solid history though...I'd try really hard to prevent the witch burnings of the middle ages. I probably die in the process, being that I'm a strange left handed female, but still...

2006-12-13 12:12:18 · answer #7 · answered by Le Petit Fleur 3 · 0 0

I would tell Marty not to buy that Sports Almanac. It caused his dad to be murdered, and the principal to become a gun-toting NRA dude; even though later everything went back to normal except for Doc Brown's flying train.

2006-12-13 12:11:13 · answer #8 · answered by Pi-Guy 2 · 0 0

I'd go back about 250,000 years, and I'd say to whatever carnivores were roaming about then, "you see those funny-looking upright-walking creatures, kill them all".

2006-12-13 12:21:58 · answer #9 · answered by mooglebugle 1 · 0 0

probably would kill hitler or disrupt WWII some how

2006-12-13 12:05:16 · answer #10 · answered by Jimmy 3 · 0 0

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