One of the illusions
of life is that the present hour is not the critical, decisive hour.
Write it on your heart that every day is the best day in the year.
No man has learned anything
rightly, until he knows that every day is Doomsday.
Paul Kavanagh
2012
Armageddon Redux
Before the
hype about the forthcoming end of the world inundates the ether zone, it is best to examine the paranoia about the paranormal
that is prophesied about 2012. One fact is indisputable. No one can prove what will happen until the time comes for the Armageddon
finale. That inconvenient detail does not prevent speculators from bringing up all kinds of scenarios and interpretations
about expectations. The pervasive drive to forecast the approaching future is perennial throughout all of history. With that
said, there is one sure prediction that is rock solid.
Place a bet,
with all your cash, that the end of the world will happen in 2012. All you have to do is find a Jon S. Corzine type to book
the wager. Or why become the bookmaker and front such a gamble? You grab all the loot upfront and when the due date passes
and the sun still rises in the East, you can go bankrupt like MF Global. If the gaming commission deems it is required to
have sufficient guarantees or funding to pay off, all you have to do is plea "too big to fail" and turn over the
debt to the Federal Reserve for settlement. Such a play script is not that far removed from the real world. It makes the prospects
of an actual total devastation of the planet, far more attractive, than the mental torture of enduring the suffering of interminable
hell under the banksters’ matrix.
Conceding to the History Channel devotees, the Maya version of earth shattering shifts in 2012 deserve a
short analysis. "Perhaps I should add that most 2012 Mayan predictions seem to be based upon Western interpretation of
the calendar and Mayan drawings as opposed to what the Mayans themselves have ever publicly taught throughout history."On The History Channel, Steve Alten, author of Domain, stated:
The four prior cycles all ended in destruction. So when we talk
about the Mayan doomsday prophecy, we're talking about the end of the fifth cycle, the very last day, which equates to December
21, 2012 (Mayan Doomsday Prophecy, Decoding the Past. Original air date 08/03/06).
Mr.
Alten offers his conclusion that seems to be the rational viewpoint.
While
I do not believe that the end will come then, I do believe that we are getting close to the time of the destruction of civilization,
as we know it.
Even so, what does rational thinking have
to do with prophetic prognostication? In the absence of empirical proof and verifiable data, no computer model can demonstrate
with certitude the future. Belief however, can and often does motivate human behavior. It is evident that conditions and events
are speeding up at a pace that is hard to comprehend, much less, understand the linkage and ultimate consequences.
Now do not draw from the above assessment that it is imprudent to reject prophecy in all
forms. The mere association of seeking the meaning within the term Armageddon possesses biblical propositions of end times.
Nevertheless, the essential reality that faces each of us independently and humanity collectively is that we are not in control
of the celestial universe. What may or what eventually will happen results in the aftermath of our current perception of existence.
Our acceptance of fate is a healthy surrender to the forces beyond out mastery.
While this recognition is sensible, many still want to
live in a world of speculation and stargazing. The ELENIN & NIBIRU series on the YouTube atlanticobr channel provides fertile ground for self-indulgence.
Pushing the time for the end to a date already past is no reason to criticize the presentations. To the many, what we do not
know is preferable to the facts that are already established, and the areas that we actually can effect meaningful change.
If the finality of a 2012 AD year has any specific
significance, entering into a new Age of Aquarius, would be as distant from current global strife as the light years it takes
to exit our Milky Way galaxy.
What is incontestable about the record
of human conduct is that the procession of the equinox, continually gravitates toward inhuman conflicts that raise the level of
abuse and pain. The gradual incrementalism that was once the pattern is now on a collision trajectory at warp speed. Showers
of asteroids or impacts of comets could be seen as a welcome resolution to terminate the absurdity of the political orders
that vie for total control. No wonder, a planet of the Apes seems preferable to the rule of the international community.
Consider the message of a man who was haunted by the incongruity of his
fellow human species.
Remembering Kurt Vonnegut’s viewpoint,
Maria Popova writes about this work that addresses the subject of war. She concludes
from this anthology of posthumous collection of stories:
"But, also as usual, it’s underpinned by an honest hope for humanity’s
future, for our capacity to change and better ourselves, which makes Armageddon in Retrospect — and his work in general — as sticky and powerful as it is."
Roy Blount Jr, in a New York Times item, offers an instance about the resilience of humanity
in the continual apocalyptic rush to judgment.
Dated May
29, 1945, a letter headed "FROM: Pfc. K. Vonnegut, Jr., TO: Kurt Vonnegut."
It
begins: "Dear people." It closes: "Love, Kurt - Jr." It informs his family that he is in an American repatriation
camp in Le Havre after having been held prisoner by the German Army. It tells "in précis" how he was captured,
transported in a cattle car and "herded ... through scalding delousing showers. Many men died from shock in the showers
after 10 days of starvation, thirst and exposure. But I didn’t."
And
how he was a captive in Dresden when Allied bombers "killed 250,000 people in 24 hours and destroyed all of Dresden —
possibly the world’s most beautiful city. But not me."
And
how his captors put him to work carrying corpses. "Civilians cursed us and threw rocks as we carried bodies to huge funeral
pyres."
Now how can one compare
the mere bombing of an ancient city to the destruction of the entire world? Clearly, the former can be said to be a prevented
tragedy, while the later is a cosmic natural event. If there is an ethical equation connected with the loss of life from raining
bombs from the sky, what is the moral imperative standard that arises from the devastation of the end times?
"Overall, the theme of Hopi prophecy
is that the Earth is going to soon go through a great purification and that humanity can make the decision as to how extreme
this purification will be. Their belief is that the world goes through a period of destruction and renewal and that we are
about to enter into a new age."
You do not have
to be a protégé of Nostradamus to understand the insanity of the global financial system or the maturations
that push factions toward total global war. Nor do you have to be able to translate the double speak quatrains of the power
elite to interpret that you are slated to be sacrificed, so that the New World Order can purify itself into a technological
global gulag.
Armageddon redux
is the destiny of the mentally deranged world leaders and their banksters’ master outlaws. 2012 looks like the culmination
year on many levels.
Believers in the Book of Revelation await
the end of times in order for the fulfillment of the Second Coming. Those who only see the conclusion of this age in cosmic
obliteration, have little faith. The parallel to the destruction of the planet Vulcan with its six billion inhabitants may try a Star Trek mind melt explanation
to forecast events. However, the better way to describe the risks of the coming year is in terms of the famous Jim Traficant
catchphrase, "Beam me up Scotty".
Transport all of us
back to reality and concentrate upon the very literal danger of an annihilation global war. The advocacies are not nations
against countries, but must be viewed in terms of the Globalist Mattoids vs. the 99.9999% of the rest of us. The minions and
enablers of the NWO cabal are all expendable, yet they serve their malevolent masters out of a false sense of duty, utter
ignorance or a depraved yearning to be part of the evil empire.
The
bible says that Armageddon is actually a battle. The eventuality that this conflict will come to pass is not within our ability
to prevent, but we do have the "capacity to change and better ourselves" as Vonnegut believed. Both the atheist
and the theists base their conviction on belief. Faith in their beliefs is not proof that they are correct. Nevertheless,
the self-destruction tract that humanity is on now, cannot have a happy ending.
Look to the stars for your salvation or your destruction if you wish, but resist the oligarchs that are making your
life a living hell. Only then will your final gasp of last breath have meaning.