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| 21 Oct 2011 08:04 AM |
Is not possible. I live in Australia so I'm one day ahead of you Americans.
The world is not ending and it wont end for another 5 billion years when the sun dies, and I EXTREMELY doubt we'll be limited to Planet Earth by then. |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:10 AM |
The world will end one day...
But silly how people can predict and scam other people for it... Notice how this dude can scam people? |
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Lckelear
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| Joined: 20 Jul 2008 |
| Total Posts: 6998 |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:11 AM |
Is it 2012 or now? How does everyone leaving earth *now* cause the end of the world to happen *one year* later?
It's just another thing some guy in some town came up with to cause he world to stir.
Like in the 80's when everyone thought there'd be a second ice age.
-Lcke- |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:15 AM |
| Comets will pass, meteors will hit. Things will happen in space that we can not explain. Black holes will find us, and stars will too. All I care about is that I am alive, right now. |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:17 AM |
| But it's not so much the 'Rapture' that people think is going to happen, it's the giant comet that killed the dinosaurs (It didn't hit us. It basicly grazed out atmosphere. Look it up.). It may not come today, or tomorrow, but all that we care is that it is close to us. |
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Lckelear
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| Joined: 20 Jul 2008 |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:19 AM |
Even with it being highly possibly fake, it still kinda worries me...
-Lcke- |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:20 AM |
Cutemooshi,
Yep. If it did hit Earth, im pretty sure it would still be recovering right now, knowing how Mother Nature likes to take her time... |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:20 AM |
| That's why they made it up. Because people, with all their panicinng, will make other believe it will happen somewhere in their heart. |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:23 AM |
| Comet Nelenin hit AFTER Thea hit us, which caused the spring of life. It grazed our atmosphere, caused heating to take place, and caused a series of smoke and ash in our system, enough to kill the really big dinosaurs, and then the Yellowstone volcanoes did the rest. Yellowstone created enough ash to cover the entire U.S., which is very far away from it's self. It is predicted with in this era it will erupt. Unless it is disturbed by the heat of an off-worldly force.. |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:24 AM |
| The world won't end tonight because The Doctor is going to be there!! |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:25 AM |
| Doctor Who may be able to stop alien invasions and horrible disasters, but I'm pretty sure he can't stop a comet. |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:26 AM |
Whats the point of predicting our own demise?
Shouldnt we just be living our lives? |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:28 AM |
| Scientists predict what will happen because it is their job, not because they want to preach to the rest of the world. And all they are are predictions. Notice they never say 'It will' or any variation of that phrase. |
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Lckelear
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| Joined: 20 Jul 2008 |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:29 AM |
They sure did say "it will" when explaining Nibiru.
-Lcke- |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:35 AM |
| Lckelear, you listen to what people say on Youtube too much. People claim they have spread the word that it is 100% true. Infact they are trying to force people to believe it by impersonating or talking over what they say. Scientists and NASA believe there is a possibility of it coming our way, and it does exist, yes, but that doesn't mean it will happen. |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:46 AM |
*cough* 6 billion years *cough*
The world will only end in 6 billion years when the sun implodes from age. And who says another star won't take it's place? |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:47 AM |
@my previous post
I only say that because usually, when a star dies, another star forms during it's explosion. Too bad the Sun is so big it will probably create a black hole and suck the solar system into it. But who says we wouldn't have found other inhabited planets? Who says there aren't other planets that can harness life? |
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Lckelear
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:48 AM |
I don't think Nibiru will hit us. What if when it supposedly enters our galaxy, it's on one side of the sun and we're on the other?
then we'd both spin synchronized around the sun and neither would be hit. That is, if it doesn't travel faster/slower than us...
-Lcke- |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:49 AM |
| Usually objects closer to the sun orbit faster. |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:56 AM |
@Cutemooshi Then why is there a 110-mile diameter crater on the Yucatan Pennisula, with geological evidence pointing to impact 65 million years ago, the time when the K-T boundary was formed?
That's what everything I looked up said. |
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| 21 Oct 2011 08:58 AM |
| Can't believe everything you find on the internet. |
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| 21 Oct 2011 09:07 AM |
@Mikey Saw it on TV, read it in books. |
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