2012 Time Reversal?

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  • alexand0

    It'll be the end of the world as Britain are going to dominate the 2012 games. Anyone with me?

    ...

    ...

    No?

  • sputnik20

    mayans picking 2012 is like us picking 2506 as "the future" when all vehicles fly and we all have to go to carousel when we're 30. it seems like such a distant date.

    • not really, it's based on their calendar and math system.doesnotexist
  • doesnotexist0

  • dopepope0

    2 things will happen in 2012. Jack and Shit.

  • mjg0

    cyclical man. ask vaneigem

  • Bluejam0

  • dbloc0

    The Mayans were terrorists.

  • CALLES0

    men will grow massive knockers i heard

  • CGN0

  • CGN0

    Mayans talk about the change in "human" life. The world and universe will continue to exist. The only thing on a time limit is our time here on Earth. That's why I think everything is "green" this and "green" that. Subtle way the gov is letting you know to become sustainable. Cut the umbilical cord...

    • you are really really really stupid aren't yourupedixon
  • chossy0

    Who gives a shit what will happen life will continue in one way or another, be it human or wee mosses and lichens, life continues on no matter what on it's inexorable journey.

  • pascii0

  • ukit0

    If the world ends I don't mind. I'm only worried about my welfare compared to that of other people.

  • sea_sea0

    I for one do not subscribe to the idea of the end of the world. There is enough propaganda out there to make anyone shiver. The last thing we need is to worry about is this. it seems like we as humans are programmed to believe there has to be some kind of disaster that will end it all. I do believe in the fact that we as humans are evolving and that yes even our DNA is changing, but i refuse to give my power away to fear tactics.

    • I hope that you are right:)utopian1
    • we'll find out, in the mean time i heard kundalini yoga is a good form of raising your energy.sea_sea
    • sea_sea has powers?_salisae_
    • yup! :)sea_sea
  • utopian10

    • not Nibiru!! this is by far the worst theory out there. No justice to Nibiru either, doesn't explain it!?!sea_sea
    • NASA confirms that Nibiru does exist.utopian1
    • yeah it's kinda trippy, there are some better videos about nibooboo though, (sorry had to change the name for personal comedy relief)sea_sea
    • comedy relief)sea_sea
  • oozie0

    the past no longer is here the future doesn't exist and now doesn't exist for any time at all

  • flashbender0

    Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight can point you in the right direction about this

  • oozie0

    "My hypothesis, shared by many people, is that there is also a change happening in human consciousness, with increasing numbers of people recognizing psychic capabilities and undergoing initiations that lead to mystical insights, compassionate openings, and awareness of deeper levels of unity. It is interesting that our new media technologies amplify our awareness of interconnectivity, which was once a rarefied spiritual insight, but is now becoming apparent to many people."

    the world is turning itself inside out. there's a meaningful relationship between history and technology, humanity and God. Conciousness is the universe's conciousness after all.

  • robotron3k0

    Daniel just sent this little essay out that I thought was interesting...
    ...................................

    my new article appearing in the July issue of Conscious Choice:

    2008: The Return of Chicken Little

    A few years ago, while working with shamans in the Amazon jungle of Brazil, I channeled a prophetic voice that announced itself as Quetzalcoatl, the Mesoamerican deity. The voice insisted that a great karmic reckoning was on its way. These days, I often feel more like Chicken Little, seeking to warn people that the sky above them is starting to fall. The more I explore what the near future may bring, the more I feel like running for cover.

    Dmitry Orlov’s Reinventing Collapse argues that the United States is headed for an imminent economic meltdown that will be as devastating as the fall of the USSR in the 1990s: “Try to form a picture in your mind: it is a superpower, it is huge, it is powerful, and it is going to come crashing down,” he writes. “You or me trying to do something about it would have the same effect as you or me wriggling our toes at a tsunami.” According to Orlov, an engineer and peak oil theorist, the causes of this crash include ideological gridlock, the entrenched corruption of our corporate state, the massive debt piled on by heedless US policies, and our utter dependence on a rapidly diminishing supply of fossil fuels.

    Predicting mass bankruptcy, hyperinflation, and resource shortages, Orlov recommends stockpiling items that can be bartered on the black market, such as razors, condoms, and liquor, strengthening local communities, and learning how to grow your own food. “For most people in the US, rich or poor, life without money is unthinkable,” he notes. “They may want to give this problem some thought, ahead of time.”

    The most penetrating inquiries into our immediate future seem to be coming from small press writers such as Orlov. His book is published by New Society Press, which specializes in studies of our unfolding debacle and pragmatic tactics for dealing with its unavoidable fallout. Another meta-perspective is provided by Alexis Zeigler’s Culture Change: Civil Liberty, Peak Oil, and the End of Empire (Ecodem Press). Zeigler’s bracing little screed explores the connection between biofuel production and world hunger, and argues that ecological crisis will lead to increased authoritarianism, in the short term.

    While Zeigler describes the dangers ahead, he is more optimistic than Orlov in that he sees the possibility of a mass activation of social awareness and a shift to more sustainable patterns. “The solution to changing the Western lifestyle is the simple impossible act of creating social networks that build social support outside of the mainstream in the context of a truly sustainable society,” he writes. Both writers foresee the necessity of adapting communal lifestyles to stretch increasingly scarce resources. Interestingly, Orlov proposes that the friendly American mentality is much better suited for communal life than the surlier Russian psychology.

    I tend to agree with these authors that the next few years are going to see extraordinary and even unprecedented hardships as many negative factors combine in unexpected ways to amplify each other. In the US, as the going gets rough, there is certainly the potential for a further degeneration into a hyper-controlled, security state. The horrific development of “disaster capitalism” based on Milton Friedman’s economic doctrine is well-documented in Naomi Klein’s The Shock Doctrine. The last decades have seen a massive transfer of assets from the poor and middle class to the wealthy elite, who are now contracting with private security firms to guard and rescue them in the event of social or ecological catastrophe.

    At the same time, there are many positive developments that could counteract the doom-and-gloom. The increasing ease with which groups of people, ranging from small communities to massive crowds, can self-organize and mobilize through the Internet, using new Web2.0 tools, is viewed as a revolutionary development in Clay Shirky’s Here Comes Everybody. My hypothesis, shared by many people, is that there is also a change happening in human consciousness, with increasing numbers of people recognizing psychic capabilities and undergoing initiations that lead to mystical insights, compassionate openings, and awareness of deeper levels of unity. It is interesting that our new media technologies amplify our awareness of interconnectivity, which was once a rarefied spiritual insight, but is now becoming apparent to many people.

    The material crisis we face is an expression of a spiritual crisis that requires a deep transformation of values and habits. As our current civilization melts down around us, my personal hope is that those people who have initiated themselves through spiritual practices – whether yoga, meditation, shamanism, martial arts, or other disciplines – will step forward as leaders, helping the multitudes who have not been prepared for such a shift. A prudent course of action in the near-term might involve a process of self-education and study in sustainable techniques, securing access to clean water and locally grown food, exploring “off the grid” tools and alternative energy sources, while deepening one’s spiritual practice in preparation for greater changes ahead.

    As Charles Darwin wrote, “It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the most adaptive to change.” As the pace of change increases rapidly, we have a great opportunity to practice non-attachment, to pare down to essentials, and to learn by doing. Rather than ignoring our intuition and remaining complacent, it would be best to face the future and make substantive changes in our lifestyles and expectations right now, while encouraging our friends and communities to do the same.

  • CGN0

    enough to keep you reading... lawoftime.org <--pretty interesting link It's not for everyone. You can believe Bush is your god.

    • well one thing is for sure, Arguelles has some human flaws, but his intentions are good.sea_sea