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The sky won't be worth looking at in 2026.
What happened?
The Eta Aquarid meteor shower is coming, but with cities expanding like crazy, it might as well be a rain of dust from streetlights. The real action—bright streaks across the sky—is drowned out by artificial glow every night in most places now. So what's left to watch? A few faint dots that barely register?
Some folks still hold onto hope for clear skies and natural beauty, arguing there’s always a chance something spectacular could break through even with all these lights.
Looking ahead, expect more and bigger cities blotting out the stars year after year unless serious efforts are made to combat light pollution now. By then, the annual meteor shower might just be a memory for those in urban areas who once dreamed under starry skies.
People will either ignore it entirely or complain about how much worse stargazing has become compared to years past. The split? Those nostalgic enough versus pragmatists focusing on practical matters like sleep and safety over celestial beauty.
Pulse Insight
AI Insight is generated based on real-time global trends and contextual data analysis.
Hidden Trade-off
While the meteor shower may offer fleeting moments of wonder to those in remote areas or committed stargazers, for most people it's just another night under an increasingly artificial sky. The silent price? Losing touch with one of nature’s grandest spectacles.
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