Steve3007 wrote: ↑July 24th, 2020, 9:58 am I remember that the thing I most liked about the song "In The Year 2525" was that, unlike most futuristic fiction, it placed its predictions a sensibly long way in the future. At about the same time, "2001: A Space Odyssey" was making far fetched predictions about what would happen only 32 years later. I've always found it surprising that futuristic fiction tends to be so short-sighted. After all, it's easy enough to cover yourself by adding an extra zero or a few hundred years.Another futuristic song, this time without dates:
"Space 1999", made in the 70's, was the most ridiculous example of this. They might as well have called it "Space a week on Tuesday".
So, when the song says "in the year 4545 you won't need your teeth of your eyes", that's much more believable. A sensible, modest prediction.
― Marcus Tullius Cicero