Mayan scholars have updated their doomsday prophecy, and are now of
the opinion that the world would end on September 3, 2015, instead of
yesterday.
A new critique, published as a chapter in the new
textbook “Calendars and Years: Astronomy and Time in the Ancient and
Medieval World” argues that the accepted conversions of dates from Mayan
to the modern calendar are off. This coupled with a new book, “We Are
All Going To Die In 2015? by Fritz Barnkopf are rewriting the Mayan
doomsday playbook that has been popularized in our culture over the last
ten years.
The problem was discovered when researchers realized
the Mayan calendar was converted to today’s Gregorian calendar using an
erroneous calculation called the GMT constant, named for the last
initials of three early Mayanist researchers.
But the GMT
constant is completely bogus. “The Mayan researchers of the past twenty
years put too much stock in the GMT,” said Mayan expert Robert
Wannamaker. “They probably were chewing on too many cocoa leaves. The
fact is that the GMT constant is 2 years and 271 days off. We’ve proven
that conclusively hear at The Scripps Institute.”
The apocalypse
is now delayed. This is a stunning blow to all the merchandisers that
were seeking to capitalize on the “end-of-world” prophecy BEFORE the
world ends. “Man, I was selling all sorts of 2012 doomsday
paraphernalia. Now, I gotta go back and make it all again for 2015.
It’s a real drag,” said 2012 fanatic, Judd Barkley.
Hollywood is
jumping right on the 2015 bandwagon. Producers are lining up to make
the 2012 sequel, 2015. “It’s great for us,” said Producer Tracey
Barnham. “I hope that they extended it again in a few years, so we can
keep this franchise going.”
Not likely. Mayan researchers are
unanimous on the end-of-world data. The world will disappear in 2015.
You might want to plan accordingly.
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