Millennial Week in Review: Museum of the World That Was, AK-47 Reprocessing, Dead Sea Fishermen, and More

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Millennial Week in Review: Museum of the World That Was, AK-47 Reprocessing, Dead Sea Fishermen, and More

All you need to know about everything in the news this week—100 years from now

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Top Stories:

Grand opening of the Museum of the World That Was

  • A museum of the pre-war world opened to the public in the famous idyllic city of Tannoudj, Algeria on Monday.
  • The edifice is framed by the elegant saponite stone post office on the left and a bold baobab-wood art gallery to the right. The verdite-stone museum itself is of earthly greens, tans and browns—with inclusions of reds and blues and flecks of calcite, mica and quartz, ruby and silver.
  • The museum’s complexly incised exterior and densely staked six stories hint at the six thousand years of human experience represented within.
  • City patriarch Miloud Tannoudji, museum curator Edwige Bonobo and museum visitors from the Trumpet explain more.
  • From Kalashnikovs to cultivators

  • The Prince of Russia announced New Moscow’s online purchase of its fifth AK-47 reprocessing plant.
  • Rifles are not the output—they’re the input.
  • Plant volunteers Dimitry Grebenschikov, Marco Kandinsky and Olga Lavrov explained in an interview the individual processes—from component disassembling to gunpowder neutralization, geothermal smelting to plow manufacturing.
  • Farmers in the Sahel region of Africa are the plant’s primary customers.
  • Germany’s scientific advancement

  • A research group in the state of Assur, Germany, unveiled a brand new line of fully autonomous terraforming machines. It uses variations in the earth’s magnetic field to calculate its position on the Earth’s surface to within half a cubit.
  • The apparatus can operate at incredible speeds, and it’s engineered to lower mountains, open up valleys, redirect rivers and burrow irrigation trenches.
  • Educator Hans Tzswieble took us behind the scenes of the German industrial and scientific miracle. It all starts in the home, he explains, and it starts with spiritual education. But it includes material education as well.
  • Dead Sea fishing

  • A second-generation fisherman in the former Dead Sea, Dayag Abner, describes life and work in the Salt Sea fishing village of Ein Gedi.
  • He describes the sea’s pre-war condition and how it changed dramatically when the fresh, living waters from the Gihon Spring surged in volume and flowed eastward into the then-Dead Sea.
  • Revolutionary healthcare in America

  • The last remaining American suffering from cancer was healed this week.
  • The Health Department in Jerusalem announced that there no longer is any record of cancer anywhere!
  • The cancer therapy was right nutrition, exercise and years of spiritual growth and faith.
  • Other news:

    Children in Germany competed in their first Feline 500, where they raced leopards, cheetahs, cougars, tigers and lions.

    Japan is now entirely free of radioactive waste after cleansing its final nuclear waste site in Gomer-Salem.

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