Dec21 which was predicted as the end of the world is about three weeks away. If you go Google Mayan tradition, you will see this civilization is a satanic blood letting community, that takes pride in human sacrifices. The period they exited was the epitome of satanic powers and inhuman behaviors. The highest blood letting in the history of mankind was during this period in history. So it was not untoward that God struck them with three hundred years of famine to wipe Satanic virus infected people away from the land.
Some New Age believers and doomsday types have attributed great meaning to Dec. 21, 2012, with some predicting an apocalypse and others expecting some sort of profound global spiritual event.
The date was made famous by a reference to the 2012 date in an inscription on a monument dating back to around A.D. 669 in Tortuguero, Mexico. (Mexican archaeologists reported finding a second reference to the date last year, carved or molded into a brick at the Comacalco ruins nearby.)
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.
Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History has long said
rumors of a world-ending or world-changing event in late December 2012
are a Westernized misinterpretation of Mayan calendars.
The institute repeated Thursday that “western messianic thought has twisted the Mayan cosmovision.”
Most experts cite only one surviving reference to the date in Mayan script, a stone tablet from the Tortuguero site. But the institute’s statement said there is in fact another from the nearby Comalcalco ruin site.
Some New Age believers and doomsday types have attributed great meaning to Dec. 21, 2012, with some predicting an apocalypse and others expecting some sort of profound global spiritual event.
The date was made famous by a reference to the 2012 date in an inscription on a monument dating back to around A.D. 669 in Tortuguero, Mexico. (Mexican archaeologists reported finding a second reference to the date last year, carved or molded into a brick at the Comacalco ruins nearby.)
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.
The institute repeated Thursday that “western messianic thought has twisted the Mayan cosmovision.”
Most experts cite only one surviving reference to the date in Mayan script, a stone tablet from the Tortuguero site. But the institute’s statement said there is in fact another from the nearby Comalcalco ruin site.
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