Sunday, December 9, 2012

Government promises world won’t end on Dec. 21


FYI - Interesting that the NWO cabal, which operates out of and has occupants moving to Denver from Wash DC and London, thinks there is a coming situation that is serious enough to take a few years and millions - perhaps billions - of dollars to build an entire well equipped city 7 miles under the Denver airport.  Why the interest in and the need to take on such a costly monstrous project unless there was a well motivated reason?  Form your own opinions.  



The Lookout

Government promises world won’t end on Dec. 21

By Liz Goodwin, Yahoo! News | The Lookout – Mon, Dec 3, 2012
Pages of the 12th-century Dresden Codex, a Mayan manuscript used to incorrectly predict the end of the world (Joern …
The U.S. government wrote a helpful blog post on Monday titled, "Scary Rumors About the World Ending in 2012 Are Just Rumors."
The post on USA.gov says NASA scientists have received thousands of letters from people convinced that the world will end on Dec. 21, based on a misunderstanding of the ancient Mayan calendar that's been promulgated in doomsday message boards online. Some people think a giant comet will strike Earth that day, others that we are about to collide with another planet. A NASA scientist said he's received several letters from young people contemplating suicide because they believe the apocalypse is coming.
"The world will not end on December 21, 2012, or any day in 2012," the post says.
NASA released a video earlier this year explaining that the Mayan calendar does not actually predict the end of the world on Dec. 21, and that the myth that the planet "Nibiru" is heading toward Earth is easily disproved because astronomers have detected no such planet. America is not alone in trying to placate nervous doomsayers. The Russian government has made similar assurances to its people that the end of the world is not nigh, and authorities in France are planning to block access to a southern mountain which believers think could serve as a mystical place of refuge on Dec. 21.
Some doomsday groups are capitalizing on the fear by spreading the Dec. 21 myth online. A Belgian amateur astronomer named Patrick Geryl has set up an online community for people who follow him and believe the world will end in three weeks. He tells followers to stockpile 15 to 20 pairs of shoes and to be in good physical shape. Geryl declined an interview request, saying over email, "No time for interviews. ... Want to enjoy last weeks of our civilization."

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I promise it too!