Posted on 03/08/2011 12:30:48 PM PST by Scythian
Most people like to push thoughts about the end of the world to the back of their minds, hoping that the apocalypse, if it ever comes, will be a long way off.
But for one group of not-so happy campers, doomsday is a lot sooner...May 21 to be precise.
According to the predictions of the Family Radio ministry, on that date a massive earthquake will shake the world apart, littering the ground with 'many dead bodies'.
I think this is Harold Camping's group again ...
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
“Camping predicted the world would end 17 years ago “
Yeah but he forgot about leap years and Daylight Savings Time and he didn’t carry the three and he wasn’t wearing his reading glasses.
I'm pretty comfortable mocking now.
He wasn't, and isn't.
Berkland makes the same vague predictions more or less guaranteed to come true every month.
Thankfully, I've noticed there seems to be far less interest in him in the last year or so.
Right after you pay the caterer. But before you pay the band. Figures.....
“My car is on its last legs and if this is true, I wont have to spend a lot of $$$ to buy a new one.”
On the other hand, you finance a new Corvette ZR-1, Nissan GT-R or Porsche GT2 a month before doomsday and never make a payment.
Arm a gedden outta here!
“So tonight Im gonna party like its May 20.”
There’s a song in that.
Man we got get a song together, record it, sell 8 million copies and then party till May 21! Time to get Busy!!!
I wish some rich dude would publicly challenge these nuts to a $1,000,000 bet that the end of the world does NOT occur on May 21st, and for them to also show the specific passage in the Bible that guarantees it.
so I guess theres money behind this.
Or a bunch of maxed out lines of credit they figure on not repaying.
I was dreaming while I wrote that.
LOL! There have been a few famous doomsday panics in the past in the US, particularly in the 19th century.
In one case (early 19th century), everybody ran up to the roofs of their houses to await the Rapture, which of course did not happen. The problem was that they had already given away their houses and land, expecting everything to be vaporized in the Rapture. When this didn’t happen, the people to whom they had given everything weren’t willing to give it back.
The doomsday believers had to sue to get their possessions back, and some of them weren’t able to do so. So I hope these folks didn’t charge to the max, because after Doomsday doesn’t come, they’re still going to be liable for the balance...
One dumb question. Why are they posing for the camera?
So on May 20th I should ask them to give me their wallets?
It's more complicated than that. The magnetic field of the earth acts funny when there's a big earthquake. There's more to it than just two rocks colliding.
Changes in the magnetic field are just a small side effect. Bottom line, there isn’t going to be any May 21st cataclysm. Massive geological forces, when they do happen, usually build up for a very long time, and give all sorts of indications.
Something of the scale to cause worldwide earthquakes would have to be immensely larger than the supervolcano that covered India with lava in the distant past. Literally, the majority of the Earth’s mantle would have to be involved.
Harold Camping... oh boy.
And yet, the earth wasn't destroyed 18 years ago. Amazing. ;-)
Well, thanks for sharing. I feel fine too after listening to that.
Maybe the false prophets exist so that we will be skeptics after we hear their predictions fail over and over again.
The Mills grind exceedingly small.
Maybe the devil just likes to troll.
Yes, indeed.
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