In the
three or four years before 2012, apocalyptic dogma emerged from
various religious groups and began to infiltrate the mainstream, with
a lot of help from Internet sites like YouTube and Facebook. … Do
you remember? ... A lot of people were worried about a certain date
in December 2012 when doom was supposed to happen. After a year or
two it became "apocalyptic alarmism" on a grand scale! It
even spawned a Hollywood blockbuster!
The spike in 2009 would be because the movie '2012' was released in the United States on November 13, 2009, and in the rest of the world shortly after that date.
By the way, perhaps the most widespread myth during those times was that the
ancient Mayan race predicted the end-of-the-world on December 21,
2012. Anthropologists said that the Mayan culture does
not include end-of-world beliefs. It just happened to be the date
when the ancient Long Count calendar was due to end one cycle and
start another. It was the gringos ('white' people) that latched onto
the date and invented various world-wide disasters that had zero
evidence to back them up. Most of them were not in the least bit plausible.
(Interesting videos on this page :- Mayans Never Predicted an Apocalypse)
(Interesting videos on this page :- Mayans Never Predicted an Apocalypse)
What
follows is *part of a blog post I wrote during that year. .. I hoped
that the worried people would not be obsessed by one or more natural
events that they thought would be “signs” of an apocalypse that
would surely happen in December. (The post was also on the
'www.2012hoax.org' site. … That site now redirects to
'www.cosmophobia.org')
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Natural
Earth Processes
Statistics
[and history] tell us that on *any day during the year there is a
good chance that somewhere on Earth there will be *one or more* of
these events :-
~ algal
bloom or major pollution,
~
avalanche or land slide,
~ deaths
of varying numbers of animals,
~
earthquakes of varying magnitude,
~ flood or
storm surge or whirlpool,
~ freezing
or very hot temperatures,
~
hurricane or cyclone or typhoon,
~ major
storm with snow or hail,
~ sand
storm or dust storm,
~ sink
hole or mine collapse,
~ tornado
or water spout,
~ tsunami
or tidal wave,
~ volcanic
eruption.
We cannot
predict or forecast most of those things, but we do know there is a
good chance that *one or more* might happen somewhere on Earth on any
given day. So we shouldn't be surprised if one or more of those
things happen on any particular day(s) in December. It will just be
the Earth doing its thing. It will always do its own thing no matter
what its human inhabitants think. Also, we have no reason to expect
that any particular day in December will have *zero natural
disasters. If a natural disaster does happen it will be a "sign"
of absolutely nothing, other than the Earth continuing as normal.
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Apocalyptic
alarmism about various natural events is an old problem. ... Alarmism
can also involve events that *might originate from outside of the
Earth's atmosphere. Astronomer David Morrison, senior scientist with
the NASA Lunar Science Institute, coined the term 'cosmophobia' after
answering questions at the NASA "Ask an Astrobiologist"
page. He defined it as "An unreasoning fear of the cosmos".
Further information is at the 'www.cosmophobia.org' site; and at the NASA JPL site about asteroids and comets. "No one should be overly concerned about an Earth impact of an asteroid or comet. The threat to any one person from auto accidents, disease, other natural disasters and a variety of other problems is much higher than the threat from Near Earth Objects."
Also, see my last post: What If Saturn "Explodes or Something".
Further information is at the 'www.cosmophobia.org' site; and at the NASA JPL site about asteroids and comets. "No one should be overly concerned about an Earth impact of an asteroid or comet. The threat to any one person from auto accidents, disease, other natural disasters and a variety of other problems is much higher than the threat from Near Earth Objects."
Also, see my last post: What If Saturn "Explodes or Something".
.