[General] you still hear versus you'll still hear

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Flogger

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Mar 2, 2016
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Persian
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Hello,

I assume that the attack of people to bread, pasta and potato is a common practice even after his death, so why the author has used the future tense for describing the attack? why not a present simple?


The original:
A decade after his death you'll still hear people attacking bread, pasta and potatoes as the root of all rotundity.
My version:
A decade after his death you still hear people attacking bread, pasta and potatoes as the root of all rotundity.
 
"A decade after his death you'll still hear ...." is in the nature of a prediction. The other one isn't.

(The "I assume" sentence is ungrammatical.)
 
A decade after his death you'll still hear people attacking bread, pasta and potatoes as the root of all rotundity.

This has two possible meanings:
1. Now, ten years after his death, it is quite normal to hear people ...
2. Ten years after his recent/future death the prediction is that people ....
A decade after his death you still hear people attacking bread, pasta and potatoes as the root of all rotundity.

This has one meaning:
Now, ten years after his death, the situation is that people ...
 
Please provide the source and author of the original sentence.
 
Thank you. Please remember to provide the source in post #1 in future.
 
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