90s science Memes

Posts tagged with 90s science

From Cloning Sheep To Defending Spheres

From Cloning Sheep To Defending Spheres
The scientific progress pendulum has swung wildly! In the 90s, we had Dolly the sheep (first cloned mammal in 1996) and the Sojourner rover cruising Mars (1997) - groundbreaking achievements that expanded our understanding of genetics and space exploration! Fast forward to today, and scientists are having to repeatedly explain that the Earth isn't flat to a growing community of conspiracy theorists. The asterisks around "round" perfectly capture that exasperated tone of someone who's explained this basic fact for the thousandth time. It's the perfect encapsulation of how scientific communication sometimes feels like taking two steps forward and one giant leap backward. From cloning mammals to debating shapes we've known since ancient Greece... what a time to be alive!

The Microbial Revenge Tour

The Microbial Revenge Tour
Remember that 90s optimism when scientists thought we were winning against infectious diseases? Fast forward to today where superbugs and zoonotic diseases are basically snipers hiding in the bushes waiting to take us out! The microbial world said "Hold my petri dish" and evolved faster than our antibiotics. Nature really pulled the ultimate "no u" card with antibiotic resistance and animal-to-human transmissions. Every time we get cocky about conquering microbes, they just level up like they're playing some twisted evolutionary game. Hubris, meet microscopic reality check!

From Cloning Sheep To Defending Spheres

From Cloning Sheep To Defending Spheres
Remember when science was all about groundbreaking achievements? The 90s gave us Dolly the sheep (first cloned mammal!) and Mars Pathfinder rolling around the red planet. Fast forward to today, and scientists are stuck explaining that the Earth isn't actually flat to people with internet access and high school diplomas. It's like watching Nobel Prize winners argue with someone who thinks gravity is "just a theory." The scientific regression is real—we went from splitting atoms to debating shapes!