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In the freezing vastness near the North Pole, there’s a hidden vault tucked away that has the capacity to conserve 4.5 million seeds. (You can get a sneak peek inside the Doomsday Vault in the video above.) The $9 million dollar structure was funded 100% by the Government of Norway and its mission is to collect & preserve seeds from all over the world in case of global catastrophe. (The “Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation” spent about $750,000 to assist with seed collections and shipments from various parts of the world to the Seed Vault.)
Call us conspiracy theorists, but we suspect that the Doomsday Vault is probably just one such structure in a larger network of contingency planning. It wouldn’t make sense to just collect all these seeds unless there was also a plan on how to use them in case of global disaster, right? And if all the seeds everywhere suddenly dry up and are worthless, who will protect the Seed Vault when the armies of the world converge on the only viable seeds left on the planet? We humans barely get along when resources are plentiful, let alone scarce.
It’s also entirely possible that we’re completely wrong and the opposite is true. There is no larger plan, and in case of global emergency the “MacReady Option” from John Carpenter’s “The Thing” will be invoked:
Childs: What do we do now?
MacReady: Why don’t we just wait here for a little while… see what happens…
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(Cue music)
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