00:00Imagine waking up tomorrow and realizing that the world isn't ending because of a war.
00:05by a meteor or by a pandemic.
00:07The cities remain standing, the buildings intact.
00:11The roads were empty, separated only by an eerie silence.
00:14The end doesn't come with explosions, but with empty cradles.
00:19What seems like a simple, almost harmless choice,
00:22It begins to echo like a whisper that crosses generations.
00:26What if each couple only had one child?
00:29It may seem insignificant, almost irrelevant, but that's precisely where the danger lies.
00:34Because some extinctions don't scream, they accumulate, they wait.
00:39At first, nobody notices anything.
00:42Children are still playing in the parks, and schools remain open.
00:46Hospitals are operating normally.
00:49Life goes on, seemingly the same.
00:51But something invisible begins to move beneath the surface.
00:56like a gear that slows down without making a sound.
01:01A decision made today begins to cast long shadows on tomorrow.
01:05And these shadows grow faster than anyone imagines.
01:11Thirty years pass in the blink of an eye.
01:13The generation that was born when this unspoken rule was adopted is now an adult.
01:18There are fewer young people on the streets, fewer voices in the hallways of universities.
01:24Less laughter in schoolyards.
01:26Nothing seems catastrophic, but the world is beginning to feel a strange weariness.
01:31The economy is losing momentum, and retirement systems are creaking.
01:35And the questions begin to arise, tinged with concern.
01:39Who will support all of this tomorrow?
01:4160 years pass.
01:44Cities are no longer growing, they are shrinking.
01:46Buildings that were once crowded now have empty floors.
01:49Entire neighborhoods seem to have stopped in time.
01:53Hospital waiting lists are getting longer, not because of outbreaks,
01:56But that's because there are too many elderly people and not enough young people.
01:59The hands that care for us are starting to run out.
02:02Essential professions are becoming rare.
02:05The world doesn't collapse all at once; it folds slowly.
02:08Like a fatigued metal that has lost its ability to support its own weight.
02:1490 years later, the global population is now just a shadow of what it once was.
02:18The planet, paradoxically, seems both quieter and more fragile at the same time.
02:24Technology has advanced, but not enough to replace the absence of humans in everything.
02:30Robots help.
02:31Automated systems keep structures functioning.
02:34But there is something that no machine can recreate.
02:37The natural continuation of life.
02:40The sense of urgency sets in too late.
02:44The problem now is not choosing, it's surviving.
02:48And then comes the turning point that almost no one predicted.
02:51It's not a lack of food, nor a scarcity of resources.
02:55It's collective loneliness.
02:57Entire populations grow old together.
02:59Cultures are beginning to disappear.
03:01because there are no young people to learn them,
03:04preserve them, reinvent them.
03:06Languages are lost in just a few decades.
03:10Traditions become records in digital archives.
03:14accessed by people who are no longer around to experience them.
03:18120 years later, the world is unrecognizable.
03:22Humanity still exists, but it is clearly in retreat.
03:26There is no more growth.
03:28There will be no more renewal.
03:29Each birth is celebrated as a rare event.
03:33Each death weighs like a deep blow.
03:36Because there is no replacement.
03:38Genetic diversity is starting to become a real problem.
03:42Diseases that were once easily controllable,
03:45They become a serious risk.
03:47Because the population is too small to absorb the losses.
03:50Time continues to move forward, indifferent.
03:53150 years pass and the word civilization begins to lose its meaning.
03:59Large urban centers are abandoned.
04:01Because there aren't enough people to support them.
04:04Nature advances, silently.
04:06Taking up space that was once human.
04:09Forests grow where avenues once stood.
04:12Animals inhabit ghost towns.
04:15The planet breathes,
04:16But human beings suffocate under their own past decisions.
04:20200 years later,
04:21History ceases to be progress.
04:23and it becomes resistance.
04:25Small isolated communities
04:28They try to maintain some kind of social organization.
04:31But the lack of young people is a relentless enemy.
04:34There is no energy to rebuild.
04:37just to hold on to what hasn't fallen yet.
04:39Knowledge accumulated over millennia.
04:42It starts to get lost.
04:44Not because it was destroyed,
04:46But because there aren't enough people to transmit it.
04:49And what's most disturbing is realizing that,
04:52even now,
04:53The end has not yet come.
04:54He simply approaches with firm steps.
04:57300 years later,
04:58The world's population is smaller.
05:00than that of many cities of the past.
05:02The planet is too big for so few humans.
05:06Each new birth carries an overwhelming expectation.
05:10Each child grows up with symbolic weight.
05:13to represent the continuity of the species.
05:15It's not a fulfilling life.
05:17It's prolonged survival.
05:19400 years pass.
05:21The world no longer talks about the future.
05:23Only in memory.
05:25Stories about billions of people
05:27living at the same time
05:28These seem like exaggerated legends.
05:31Almost impossible to believe.
05:33The concept of a crowd becomes something abstract.
05:37There are no more nations as they once were.
05:39Only human groups
05:41trying to stay alive.
05:42Extinction doesn't arrive as an event,
05:45but as a permanent state of decline.
05:47500,
05:49600,
05:50700 years.
05:52The numbers are dropping to almost symbolic levels.
05:55Thousands,
05:55then hundreds.
05:57Every death is a statistic.
05:59Impossible to ignore.
06:01There is no more room for error.
06:03An accident,
06:04a disease,
06:05a genetic defect
06:06It could mean the end of an entire lineage.
06:10Humanity, which once dominated the planet.
06:12now struggles to justify
06:15his own permanence in it.
06:17And then,
06:18at some point between 800 and 1000 years ago,
06:21Silence wins.
06:22Not because someone decided to press a button,
06:25but because no one else was born
06:27to take the place of the one who left.
06:29The extinction was not quick.
06:31Not dramatic at all.
06:32It was logical,
06:33mathematics,
06:34cold.
06:35It started with a choice that seemed too small to matter.
06:39This story is not a distant apocalyptic warning,
06:42Nor is it a pointless exercise in fiction.
06:45She is a powerful reminder of how collective decisions...
06:50They shape entire destinies.
06:52Humanity wouldn't disappear due to lack of space.
06:56not due to lack of resources,
06:58but due to a lack of continuity.
07:00The future isn't just about technology.
07:03or scientific advances.
07:05It's about people existing to live that future.
07:08If this narrative has held your attention so far,
07:11It's because, on some level,
07:13She awakens something profound.
07:15The notion that time
07:17It does not forgive poorly understood choices.
07:20And that's exactly why.
07:22reflections like that
07:24need to be discussed,
07:26shared and understood.
07:28Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
07:30that follows the channel
07:31knowing the truth
07:33that goes all the way to the end,
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07:35It reflects and seeks to understand.
07:37The world beyond superficial headlines.
07:40A special thank you.
07:42to the channel members,
07:43that make possible
07:44the continuation of this work
07:46and help keep discussions alive
07:49that really matter.
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