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Not just them. 'In a nuclear attack on London the destruction of Clapham Junction will entail London Transport providing a shuttle bus service between the London Centre and the undamaged part of the railway line south of Clapham. It is estimated that 500 buses could be withdrawn for the removal of the homeless. This could cause severe delay in getting workers home.' :blink:

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The most commercially successful film produced by Hammer Film Studios was the feature film version of 'On The Buses'.

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hmmm ... not so sure.

Suppose that estimate of 100bn people who have died is correct, and that there are 7bn people alive today. For the sum of the ages of people alive today to be greater than the sum of the people's death ages, it would mean that the average life expectancy across history would have to be 1/15th of the average age of the current world's population. I find that very unlikely

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hmmm ... not so sure.

Suppose that estimate of 100bn people who have died is correct, and that there are 7bn people alive today. For the sum of the ages of people alive today to be greater than the sum of the people's death ages, it would mean that the average life expectancy across history would have to be 1/15th of the average age of the current world's population. I find that very unlikely

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agreed. especially when now you still get a lot of infant deaths in third world countries. or developing or whatever they're called now. plus you're counting the deaths of people who have died in the past 50 years where expectancy was hardly 40 in developed countries. sceptical.co.uk

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hmmm ... not so sure.

Suppose that estimate of 100bn people who have died is correct, and that there are 7bn people alive today. For the sum of the ages of people alive today to be greater than the sum of the people's death ages, it would mean that the average life expectancy across history would have to be 1/15th of the average age of the current world's population. I find that very unlikely

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The ratio has been approximated in this thread at 6 billion out of 90 billion people being alive right now. That's 1:15.

So out of the 90 billion dead people, you're saying that a huge number were infants and that a massive proportion didn't even make it to 40.

Do you see?

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It's 67, already googled it.

Just played with my spreadsheet at work I can't get the figures to work on 67 x 7 billion (although that was be too high as not all people are old yet) it would be 469 billion compared to if the appox. of 106 billion that lived averaged out to live for 10 years it would still be over at 1060 billion (or 1 trillion?) so people how use to live need an average of 4 years.

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OK, so with those figures you can approximate the total time lived by the dead to be about 550 billion, say. That would mean the average age of a person alive today is 78!

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