Could this be how the world ends in 2012?

I believe the world will end on December 21, 2012..

  • Yes

    Votes: 4 1.3%
  • No

    Votes: 158 51.3%
  • Not 100% Sure Either Way.

    Votes: 39 12.7%
  • Not if the Super Soft Feathered Brown Australian Emu saves the day!

    Votes: 31 10.1%
  • The foil hats will save us by reflecting the flares.

    Votes: 31 10.1%
  • only if idiots try to bomb us out of existence to make it happen on that day

    Votes: 21 6.8%
  • only if it's also Superman's day off.

    Votes: 2 0.6%
  • Not sure but kinda hoping it does.

    Votes: 9 2.9%
  • Only if the zombies get us

    Votes: 5 1.6%
  • Only if pigs fly

    Votes: 3 1.0%
  • It's only going to be a cleansing of the gene pool

    Votes: 1 0.3%
  • ...tap..tap..tap..is this mic on?..hello, is anybody else here?..tap..tap

    Votes: 4 1.3%

  • Total voters
    308
I added my opinion of "It's only going to be a cleansing of the gene pool "

:laughcry: That's awesome!!


From the article, bolding by me;

"Sure, I was looking forward to it, but it's actually a blessing to reconnect with family and friends," said Exley, who is writing a screenplay about her experience. "I think it was good for Mr. Camping to humble himself and admit he was wrong and take the heat for that ... but I should have done more careful studying and been more cautious about what I was proclaiming myself."

I'm gonna bet right now that if that movie gets made it will be the funniest movie of all time, but unintentionally so. :laughcry:
 
...tap..tap..tap..is this mic on?..hello, is anybody else here?..tap..tap

:floorlaugh:
 
Aw shucks, the end of the world has been postponed. Again.

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/story/2012-05-08/maya-apocalypse-calendar-2012/54879760/1

Newly discovered wall writings found in Guatemala show the famed Maya culture's obsession with cycles of time. But they also show calendars that go well beyond 2012, the year when the vanished civilization, according to popular culture, expected the end of the world.

"So much for the supposed end of the world," says archaeologist William Saturno of Boston University, lead author of a study in the journal Science, which reported the discovery on Thursday.

2012.jpg

http://www.comedycentral.com/tosh.0/files/2009/12/2012.jpg
 
The thing about this end of the world thing is that the Mayans never once said the world was going to end. Not that I would believe it if they did state it, but they didn't. It was just when their calendar stopped.

Day before yesterday I was watching several youtube video's on JFK and JFK Jr. assassinations and came across the following. It scared the :bad word: out of me. I told my mum about it and she said, "Oh you are such a conspiracy theorist?" Maybe so, but all the same what if?

Sorry guys'and gals' it is long but I couldn't help but finsih it:
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAE0Zox1QjM&feature=related"]2012 The Truth You're Not Being Told Part 1 (Full 95min) - YouTube[/ame]
 
1297343631925_ORIGINAL.jpg


It looks wrong. The world would end more neatly on 21.12. 2112 so it'd be a palindrome. Where can I complain?

Hmmm good thinking! Maybe they're all a day late in their calculations and the end of the world will really be on 20.12.2012. :what:
 
I guess it depends on the time zone you're in. Does that mean half of indiana will disappear an hour later? I need to ponder this. :)
 
I guess it depends on the time zone you're in. Does that mean half of indiana will disappear an hour later? I need to ponder this. :)

Well, considering most of us are in the US, I'll be watching for our Aussie friends to post up and let us know if something is happening.

Kinda like Y2K...I waited until I knew Australia was all right before relaxing.

LOL.

Best-
Herding Cats
 

Hee hee! Made me recall an episode of Wifeswap I saw recently. This family are doomsdayers. They had a countdown clock on their wall for their poor kids to enjoy. Fully into the Mayan calendar thing. Then an expert in Mayan history or archeology came over and educated them. It actually worked and they were stunned that "Anyone can say anything on the internet. It's not all true."

Day before yesterday I was watching several youtube video's on JFK and JFK Jr. assassinations and came across the following. It scared the :bad word: out of me. I told my mum about it and she said, "Oh you are such a conspiracy theorist?" Maybe so, but all the same what if?

Sorry guys'and gals' it is long but I couldn't help but finsih it:
2012 The Truth You're Not Being Told Part 1 (Full 95min) - YouTube

No "what if's". Like it's stated above, anyone can say anything on the internet. It doesn't mean it's true. And when I see some dude in front of a chalk board with a bunch of nonsense scribbled on it and then worse, I play two seconds (all I watched) and hear, "The date is being given by the illuminati", I know instantly that the guy is a huckster out to make money off people who do not know better.

Trust me, by the time the world "ends", life on the planet will have slowly fizzled out long before. But that won't be for several million to billions of years. And that's science, which more of us should study - not nonsense, which more of us should ignore. :twocents:
 
Hee hee! Made me recall an episode of Wifeswap I saw recently. This family are doomsdayers. They had a countdown clock on their wall for their poor kids to enjoy. Fully into the Mayan calendar thing. Then an expert in Mayan history or archeology came over and educated them. It actually worked and they were stunned that "Anyone can say anything on the internet. It's not all true."

No "what if's". Like it's stated above, anyone can say anything on the internet. It doesn't mean it's true. And when I see some dude in front of a chalk board with a bunch of nonsense scribbled on it and then worse, I play two seconds (all I watched) and hear, "The date is being given by the illuminati", I know instantly that the guy is a huckster out to make money off people who do not know better.

Trust me, by the time the world "ends", life on the planet will have slowly fizzled out long before. But that won't be for several million to billions of years. And that's science, which more of us should study - not nonsense, which more of us should ignore. :twocents:

Quoting myself to say, Flatlander, that I guess you figured all that out already! I decided to watch a bit more of that video. About a minute in, he stated that on 9-26-11, that's 2011, the entire Pacific Rim would be destroyed and disappear, New Zealand would disappear, all from massive earthquakes.

I loved the horrified gasps by the audience and the scary, reverberating undertone note that the video was set to, to give it a menacing, threatening feel.

It's important to note, I think, that New Zealand still exists, the Pacific Rim is intact, the pockets of the people in that audience were made a bit lighter and the dude speaking is probably retired, enjoying a lifetime vacation on a tropical island somewhere. Hilarious, yet also very sad at the same time.
 
1297343631925_ORIGINAL.jpg


It looks wrong. The world would end more neatly on 21.12. 2112 so it'd be a palindrome. Where can I complain?

I don't know where you can complain but I do know where you could get an argument.

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kQFKtI6gn9Y"]Argument Clinic - YouTube[/ame]

Well, considering most of us are in the US, I'll be watching for our Aussie friends to post up and let us know if something is happening.

Kinda like Y2K...I waited until I knew Australia was all right before relaxing.

LOL.

Best-
Herding Cats

God, does not harm emus!!! :snooty:

Hee hee! Made me recall an episode of Wifeswap I saw recently. This family are doomsdayers. They had a countdown clock on their wall for their poor kids to enjoy. Fully into the Mayan calendar thing. Then an expert in Mayan history or archeology came over and educated them. It actually worked and they were stunned that "Anyone can say anything on the internet. It's not all true."



No "what if's". Like it's stated above, anyone can say anything on the internet. It doesn't mean it's true. And when I see some dude in front of a chalk board with a bunch of nonsense scribbled on it and then worse, I play two seconds (all I watched) and hear, "The date is being given by the illuminati", I know instantly that the guy is a huckster out to make money off people who do not know better.

Trust me, by the time the world "ends", life on the planet will have slowly fizzled out long before. But that won't be for several million to billions of years. And that's science, which more of us should study - not nonsense, which more of us should ignore. :twocents:

BBM

Kimsters not an alien? :what:



Quoting myself to say, Flatlander, that I guess you figured all that out already! I decided to watch a bit more of that video. About a minute in, he stated that on 9-26-11, that's 2011, the entire Pacific Rim would be destroyed and disappear, New Zealand would disappear, all from massive earthquakes.

I loved the horrified gasps by the audience and the scary, reverberating undertone note that the video was set to, to give it a menacing, threatening feel.

It's important to note, I think, that New Zealand still exists, the Pacific Rim is intact, the pockets of the people in that audience were made a bit lighter and the dude speaking is probably retired, enjoying a lifetime vacation on a tropical island somewhere. Hilarious, yet also very sad at the same time.

You don't pay close attention to the news do you? That all actually happened already. :tsktsk:
 

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