Thursday, December 10, 2009

Algerian Nostradamus-Foretold what will happen til' year 3797.


Algerian Nostradamus foretold what will happen til' year 3797.

Ok now,here's the picture of the Frenchman-the real Algerian Nostradamus.
He was born in the 16th century ( where the Eiffel Tower does not even exist in France), an astrologer and also a physician himself. He's also a Jewish. ( Oh another Jewish, u know? Most of the Jewish are damn genius) .Some more, the woman ( the Algerian Nostradamus) named Vankeria Pandewa Kujaterowa , born in 1911 ( come on , 1911?!) , said that her predictions are 80% accurate ( 80%?!?!Hope so.) .Ok , let's see some of the predictions.
2008 -( the current year where I am now writing this blog) -Leaders of 4 Countries were assassinated, and is one of the reason leading to the World War 3. (You sure?You predicted so much ,how bout' the China earthquake?!?!)

2010 - World War 3 from NOV 2010 - SEPT 2014.At First, normal weapon were used, but soon Nuclear were used in the war and the Northern Land was left without Plants nor animals. Muslims soon unleashed their Chemical Weapon to the Europeans who were still alive. Skin cancers will soon spread due to the weapon.

2016-Europe will be isolated, and there'll be no living being there.

2018-China will be the new World Leader.

2023- The circle of life will slightly change.
2028- New power source will be discovered. [Is predicted to be from Nuclear Reaction.] From there, the world will prevail over hunger and start their journey to the space.
2033- North Pole's ice will melt, increasing the sea water's level.

2043- World's economy will improve, Muslims will lead the Europians.

2046-Humans will be able to 'create' their own body part, and this practice will remain as the best way to cure a disease.

2066-America will attack Rome with a new weapon, The Weather Control, that will cause the weather to be colder.
2076-Communist Social

2084- Nature will be healed :)

2088- New disease will be discovered. [Instant elderly]

2097- Complete cure for the [Instant elderly] disease is discovered.

2100- The generic 'Moon' will provide light to the dark part of the world.2111- Humans will become 'Cyborg' (what? we will become CYBORG??)

2125-Humans will receive signal from the space
2130- Humans will create the world Under the Sea [Recommended by the Space Humans].
2164-Animals will be a mixture of Human and Animals.
2167-New Religion is Born
2183-The Citizen of Mars possess Nuclear Weapons and demands independence.
2187-The World stopped 2 Volcanoes from erupting.
2195- The Underwater World succeeded in living by themselves, with food and energy.
2196- Asians and Europeans mixture are completed.
2221-On the Journey on space, Humans will encounter their greatest fear.
2256- Space Rockets will bring a severe disease to the World.
2262- The Circle of the Planet will change, Mars will nearly be crashed by a comet.
2273- Caucasian, African and Asian's mixture will create a new race.
2279- New power source which do not come from anything is discovered. [Is said to either be from the Vacuum or the Black Hole.]
2288-The journey through time has started, and a new communication with the Space Human are established.
2291- The Moon started to cool down, effort to restore the Moon's heat are made.
2296-A big explosion occurred in the Moon and the Space Stations are destroyed.
2299- A Big Mob against the Muslims in France.
2302- New Laws for the Space are made.
2304- The secret of the Sun is discovered.
2354- The Generic 'Moon' malfunctioned, causing severe lack of water.
2371-The largest food crisis.
2480- 2 Generic 'Moon' crashes upon each other
3005-War on Mars.
3010 -Comet crashes upon the Sun, causing it's pieces to be circling on the Earth.
3797-Nothing is left in the Earth.Human had been able to refuge to another Planet with their basic survival needs.

Believe it or not,depends on you. And God, if WW3's gonna happen,please dont let me suffer in this tragedy.

The Mayan Calendar



So what is the Mayan Calendar? The calendar was constructed by an advanced civilization called the Mayans around 250-900 AD. Evidence for the Maya empire stretches around most parts of the southern states of Mexico and reaches down to the current geological locations of Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador and some of Honduras. The people living in Mayan society exhibited very advanced written skills and had an amazing ability when constructing cities and urban planning. The Mayans are probably most famous for their pyramids and other intricate and grand buildings. The people of Maya had a huge impact on Central American culture, not just within their civilization, but with other indigenous populations in the region. Significant numbers of Mayans still live today, continuing their age-old traditions.
The Mayans used many different calendars and viewed time as a meshing of spiritual cycles. While the calendars had practical uses, such as social, agricultural, commercial and administrative tasks, there was a very heavy religious element. Each day had a patron spirit, signifying that each day had specific use. This contrasts greatly with our modern Gregorian calendar which primarily sets the administrative, social and economic dates.

Most of the Mayan calendars were short. The Tzolk'in calendar lasted for 260 days and the Haab' approximated the solar year of 365 days. The Mayans then combined both the Tzolk'in and the Haab' to form the "Calendar Round", a cycle lasting 52 Haab's (around 52 years, or the approximate length of a generation). Within the Calendar Round were the trecena (13 day cycle) and the veintena (20 day cycle). Obviously, this system would only be of use when considering the 18,980 unique days over the course of 52 years. In addition to these systems, the Mayans also had the "Venus Cycle". Being keen and highly accurate astronomers they formed a calendar based on the location of Venus in the night sky. It's also possible they did the same with the other planets in the Solar System.
Using the Calendar Round is great if you simply wanted to remember the date of your birthday or significant religious periods, but what about recording history? There was no way to record a date older than 52 years.

The end of the Long Count = the end of the Earth?
The Mayans had a solution. Using an innovative method, they were able to expand on the 52 year Calendar Round. Up to this point, the Mayan Calendar may have sounded a little archaic – after all, it was possibly based on religious belief, the menstrual cycle, mathematical calculations using the numbers 13 and 20 as the base units and a heavy mix of astrological myth. The only principal correlation with the modern calendar is the Haab' that recognised there were 365 days in one solar year (it's not clear whether the Mayans accounted for leap years). The answer to a longer calendar could be found in the "Long Count", a calendar lasting 5126 years.
I'm personally very impressed with this dating system. For starters, it is numerically predictable and it can accurately pinpoint historical dates. However, it depends on a base unit of 20 (where modern calendars use a base unit of 10). So how does this work?

The base year for the Mayan Long Count starts at "0.0.0.0.0". Each zero goes from 0-19 and each represent a tally of Mayan days. So, for example, the first day in the Long Count is denoted as 0.0.0.0.1. On the 19th day we'll have 0.0.0.0.19, on the 20th day it goes up one level and we'll have 0.0.0.1.0. This count continues until 0.0.1.0.0 (about one year), 0.1.0.0.0 (about 20 years) and 1.0.0.0.0 (about 400 years). Therefore, if I pick an arbitrary date of 2.10.12.7.1, this represents the Mayan date of approximately 1012 years, 7 months and 1 day.
This is all very interesting, but what has this got to do with the end of the world? The Mayan Prophecy is wholly based on the assumption that something bad is going to happen when the Mayan Long Count calendar runs out. Experts are divided as to when the Long Count ends, but as the Maya used the numbers of 13 and 20 at the root of their numerical systems, the last day could occur on 13.0.0.0.0. When does this happen? Well, 13.0.0.0.0 represents 5126 years and the Long Count started on 0.0.0.0.0, which corresponds to the modern date of August 11th 3114 BC. Have you seen the problem yet? The Mayan Long Count ends 5126 years later on December 21st, 2012.

No Doomsday in 2012

Apparently, the world is going to end on December 21st, 2012. Yes, you read correctly, in some way, shape or form, the Earth (or at least a large portion of humans on the planet) will cease to exist. Stop planning your careers, don't bother buying a house, and be sure to spend the last years of your life doing something you always wanted to do but never had the time. Now you have the time, four years of time, to enjoy yourselves before… the end.
So what is all this crazy talk? We've all heard these doomsday predictions before, we're still here, and the planet is still here, why is 2012 so important? Well, the Mayan calendar stops at the end of the year 2012, churning up all sorts of religious, scientific, astrological and historic reasons why this calendar foretells the end of life as we know it. The Mayan Prophecy is gaining strength and appears to be worrying people in all areas of society. Forget Nostradamus, forget the Y2K bug, forget the credit crunch, this event is predicted to be huge and many wholeheartedly believe this is going to happen for real. Planet X could even be making a comeback

Doomsday
When something ends (even something as innocent as an ancient calendar), people seem to think up the most extreme possibilities for the end of civilization as we know it. A brief scan of the internet will pull up the most popular to some very weird ways that we will, with little logical thought, be wiped off the face of the planet. Archaeologists and mythologists on the other hand believe that the Mayans predicted an age of enlightenment when 13.0.0.0.0 comes around; there isn't actually much evidence to suggest doomsday will strike. If anything, the Mayans predict a religious miracle, not anything sinister.
Myths are abound and seem to be fuelling movie storylines. It looks like the new Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull is even based around the Mayan myth that 13 crystal skulls can save humanity from certain doom. This myth says that if the 13 ancient skulls are not brought together at the right time, the Earth will be knocked off its axis. This might be a great plotline for blockbuster movies, but it also highlights the hype that can be stirred, lighting up religious, scientific and not-so-scientific ideas that the world is doomed.

Some of the most popular space-based threats to the Earth and mankind focus on Planet X wiping most life off the planet, meteorite impacts, black holes, killer solar flares, Gamma Ray Bursts from star systems, a rapid ice age and a polar (magnetic) shift. There is so much evidence against these things happening in 2012, it's shocking just how much of a following they have generated. Each of the above "threats" needs their own devoted article as to why there is no hard evidence to support the hype.
But the fact remains, the Mayan Doomsday Prophecy is purely based on a calendar which we believe hasn't been designed to calculate dates beyond 2012. Mayan archaeo-astronomers are even in debate as to whether the Long Count is designed to be reset to 0.0.0.0.0 after 13.0.0.0.0, or whether the calendar simply continues to 20.0.0.0.0 (approximately 8000 AD) and then reset. As Karl Kruszelnicki brilliantly writes:

World not ending in 2012, says NASA

Contrary to what you may read on the Internet, the world is not going to end in 2012. A rogue planet named Nibiru is not on a collision course with Earth. And a solar flare won't toast the planet.
It's all fiction, though the makers of the film "2012" may lead you to think otherwise.
"I don't have anything against the movie. It's the way it's been marketed and the way it exploits people's fears," NASA scientist David Morrison at the Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., told Discovery New
Morrison has launched a counter-attack through his "Ask An Astrobiologist" online column, which he says has gotten more than 1,000 questions about the end of the world.
Scientific misinformation about 2012 has been ramping up for a few years, with more than 200 books and 1,000 Web sites purporting to explain various doomsday scenarios. Sony Pictures is behind a particularly viral campaign to build publicity for its upcoming apocalyptic movie "2012," which debuts on Nov. 13.
The company has set up an interlinked family of Web sites and Facebook pages to infuse a sense of reality to its fictional work.
The lead character in the film, played by actor John Cusack, for example, is the faux author of a faux book about a murder, conspiracy and disaster aboard the space shuttle Atlantis, which, coincidentally, is poised for launch on a space station construction mission the weekend the movie debuts.
The fictional fiction, named "Farewell, Atlantis," has a Web site, a Facebook page to follow "author appearances," fans and friends, a faux publisher with a faux Web site, a faux press release and endorsements from the very real son of the late Carl Sagan.
There's also a fake institute that presumably dispenses "real" science supporting the movie's claims, as well as a fake news website that distributes fake press releases about a fake aerospace company winning government contracts.
Warren Betts, owner of a California-based publicity firm that peddles real science stories tied to movies, says the type of marketing campaign Sony is executing for "2012" is nothing new.
"It's been done before," said Betts, citing the 1999 horror movie "The Blair Witch Project," a story about a group of amateur documentary film-makers who have a really bad couple of days in the woods.
"Some people went to that movie and they thought it was reality, that it was an actual documentary," Betts said.
Morrison says Sony has crossed a line with promoting "2012."
"I think people are really, really worried about the world coming to an end. Kids are contemplating suicide. Adults tell me they can't sleep and can't stop crying. There are people who are really, really scared," he said.
"People are very gullible," he added. "It a sad testimonial that you need NASA to tell you the world's not going to end."

2012 is not the end of the world according to Nostradamus.

2012 is not the end of the world according to Nostradamus. His prophecies, according to the man himself, go to 3797!!!! Nostradamus is NOT predicting the end of the world in 2012 therefore. Therefore this galactic center alignment is just a device used by charletans to make money.
This galactic center alignment reminds me of the Great Planetary Alignment when ALL the planets were on one side of the solar system, and it was supposed to be, get this....THE END OF THE WORLD!!!! This was back in the 70's or 80's or 90's, I forget which.
There are just a bunch of nuts who will say and do anything for attention to sell a book and make money. And SCARING people makes money, gets attention, and viewers!
I remember all the PROPHECY shows, 1 through 4, back before the year 2000, on the History Channel by the way. They all predicted DOOM before or by the year 2000. They were all wrong. Now the date is 2012, mostly because of the Mayan Prophecies, and charletons have picked up on that because they can scare people and make money. Well who says the Mayans were right? Nostradamus obviously does not think that 2012 is the end of the world, because his predictions go to 3797.
I agree that the show was a waist of our time. It showed no new material. The advertisment was a lie. It was not the "best" prediction for last. It was the SAME prediction, with symbolic pictures. I think the History Channel needs to CLEAN HOUSE of some over zealous ad men. I think they need to hire some technical directors to keep the errors down, and consistancy. One show on Cities of the Underworld OR Lost Worlds had Kennedy's assasination in 1965 two years after it happend!!! So they need some PROOFREADERS before they air their shows.
So I hope to see you all in 2013!!!

MAYAN RIVIERA, MEXICO

MAYAN RIVIERA, MEXICO–If there's a word in Mayan for "malarkey" that's what shaman Gerardo Carrera thinks of Hollywood's end-of-days spin on Dec. 21, 2012.
With Roland Emmerich's big-budget disaster movie 2012 riding a wave of studio publicity into theatres Nov. 13, people are talking about what seems to be the date the sophisticated Maya calendar runs out, perhaps triggering the downfall of civilization.
Trailers for the blockbuster, rumoured to cost some $260 million, show John Cusack and Amanda Peet desperately fleeing a crumbling Los Angeles that literally hives off and slides into the ocean as they make their airborne escape.
The trailer ends with the solemn words: "Find out the truth: Google 2012."
But Carrera, a traditional spiritual healer, ceremonial leader and go-between for this world and the next, says Dec. 21, 2012 isn't the end of the world as far as the Maya are concerned.
"It's not true. It is not the end," says the soft-spoken Carrera, resident shaman at a luxury eco-resort about 60 kilometres from Cancun on Mexico's Yucatan peninsula, an area rich in the Maya culture and belief system that predates European settlement.
In fact, Carrera sees this as a very beneficial period in human history, a time of rebirth as the calendar clicks over and starts again.
"There will be change. All the signs are there, with the economy, the world weather, the Earth," Carrera says.
"It will be a time of rebirth. Newness. Not destruction."
Gyles Iannone, Mayanist and associate professor of anthropology at Trent University in Peterborough, Ont., explains the Maya calendar doesn't end on Dec. 21, 2012 – not even close.
"The calendar is much more complex than the calendar system we use today," Iannone says.
Based on 20-day months and 18-month years, the Maya Long Count calendar is only in the 13th phase – the 13th baktun – of a 20-baktun system, Iannone explains.
"In a purely calendric aspect, 2012 doesn't mean a thing," Iannone says.
The cycle doesn't wind up for another 2,700 years.
Which isn't to say Dec. 21, 2012, holds no significance. It marks 13.0.0.0.0 – the beginning of the 14th baktun under the Mayan calendar that starts at the Gregorian equivalent of Aug. 11, 3114 BC, the date Maya people credit as the birth of the world.
"There's nothing to suggest anything about the end of the world. It's really a celebration of a day in the past tied to creation," says Iannone.
"If you Google 2012, the amount of material that comes up is telling and, of course, everybody has their own interpretation," says Iannone, who touches on the subject in the classroom.
Iannone, who also teaches a course on archaeology and pop culture, plans to see the movie – and enjoy it.
"It's a movie, let's not forget that fact," he says.

Sony Pictures, "2012"

The latest big screen offering from Sony Pictures, "2012," arrives in theatres on Friday , with a $200 million production about the end of the world supposedly based on theories backed by the Mayan calendar.
The doomsday scenario revolves around claims that the end of time will come as an obscure Planet X - or Nibiru - collides with Earth.
The mysterious planet was supposedly discovered by the Sumerians, according to claims by pseudo-scientists, paranormal activity enthusiasts and internet theorists.
Some websites have accused the US space agency of concealing the truth about the wayward planet's existence, but Nasa has denounced such stories as an "internet hoax."
"There is no factual basis for these claims," Nasa said in a question-and-answer posting on its website.
If such a collision were real, "astronomers would have been tracking it for at least the past decade, and it would be visible by now to the naked eye," it added. "Obviously, it does not exist."
"Credible scientists worldwide know of no threat associated with 2012," it insisted.
After all, "our planet has been getting along just fine for more than four billion years," added Nasa.
Initial theories set the disaster for May 2003, but when nothing happened the date was moved forward to the winter solstice in 2012, to coincide with the end of a cycle of the ancient Mayan calendar.
Nasa insisted the Mayan calendar does not in fact end on December 21, 2012, as another period begins immediately afterward. And it said there are no planetary alignments on the horizon for the next few decades.
And even if the planets were to line up as some have forecast, the effect on our planet would be "negligible," Nasa said.
Modern Maya in Guatemala and Mexico have also rushed to debunk the "prophesy".
they view the burgeoning end-of-the-world 2012 industry with a mixture of confusion, exasperation and anger at what is perceived as a Western distortion of their traditions and beliefs.
"There is no concept of apocalypse in the Mayan culture," Jesus Gomez, head of the Guatemalan confederation of Mayan priests and spiritual guides, told The Sunday Telegraph.
Cirilo Perez, an adviser to Guatemala's President Alvaro Colom is a prominent ajq'ij - literally a "day counter", a wise man who makes predictions and advice on the most propitious dates to marry, plant or harvest. He decried the commercial exploitation of Mayan culture by outsiders.
"This has all become business but there is no desire to understand," he said. "When foreigners, or even some Guatemalans, see us, they think 'Look at the Maya, how nice, how pretty', but they don't understand us."