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2012 world doomsday prophecy sparks off end times anxiety | Reports indicate that the 2012 end of the world prediction
made by the ancient Mayans has sparked real fears, with some people displaying "end times" anxiety. NASA's Ask an Astrobiologist Web site, for example, has received
thousands of questions regarding the 2012 doomsday predictions-some of them disturbing,
according to David Morrison, a senior scientist with the NASA Astrobiology Institute.
"A lot of the submitters are people who are genuinely frightened," said Morrison,
who thinks movie marketers, authors, and others out to make a buck are feeding
some of the fears. "I've had two teenagers who were considering killing themselves,
because they didn't want to be around when the world ends," he told National Geographic
News. "Two women in the last two weeks said they were contemplating killing their
children and themselves, so they wouldn't have to suffer through the end of the
world," he added. Part of the worry, according to Morrison, is being fanned by
a suite of Web sites created by the distributor for '2012', the movie. The sites
appear to represent scientific organizations, press releases, and 2012 whistle-blowers,
all intent on telling the "truth" about our upcoming doom. Now, all the 2012 marketing
sites display clear disclaimers that the contents are "Part of the 2012 Movie
Experience." "But, those labels weren't there from day one, adding to the suggestion
that the doomsday scenarios might have some truth behind them," Morrison said.
Conspiracy theorists often believe that world governments and those "in power"
know all about some impending disaster, but are doing nothing to save the rest
of us. Now, thanks to the Internet, such theories can gain traction quickly and
spread more widely than ever before. According to Anthony Aveni, a Maya expert
and archaeoastronomer at Colgate University in Hamilton , New York , "I got into
an email dialogue with a high school student who was quite seriously concerned
that the world was going to end. This person thought we were all going to die."
"For a lot of people I think it's almost kind of a parlor game. But there are
also people who take it very seriously," said University of Wisconsin historian
Paul Boyer. "What strikes me is the total lack of historic awareness that people
who get caught up in these things seem to exhibit. The most elementary look at
history shows such a series of these episodes that are then proven false," he
said. "Yet despite that, there always seems to be a market," he added. |
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