
Moderator: Andrew
TRAGChick wrote:Um...
You both realize that this was supposed to be a joke....right?![]()
TRAGChick wrote:Um...
You both realize that this was supposed to be a joke....right?![]()
Rhiannon wrote:But when I first saw it rounding tumblr it had the original link to the Facebook post, and that person was dead damn serious. And so was everyone else reposting it. Which is pretty frightening.
Behshad wrote:You may have used it as a joke, but I dont think the person who created the pic meant it as a joke.
bluejeangirl76 wrote:Rhiannon wrote:But when I first saw it rounding tumblr it had the original link to the Facebook post, and that person was dead damn serious. And so was everyone else reposting it. Which is pretty frightening.Behshad wrote:You may have used it as a joke, but I dont think the person who created the pic meant it as a joke.
Did the two of you mind meld today or something?![]()
brandonx76 wrote:Rhiannon wrote:bluejeangirl76 wrote:Did the two of you mind meld today or something?![]()
No. Maybe.
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Rhiannon wrote:To expand (and probably reiterate) on what B said (I wrote this yesterday so I'm just copy/pasta-ing)...
The way the Mayans calculated celestial movement in developing their long-count calendar, there was no need for leap years. This is a very Euro-centric, biased assumption that the lack of leap year would negate the Mayan achievement of an even more accurate calendar far more advanced than the Julian or Gregorian systems. Nor did the Mayans reference or have knowledge of either system in developing their own. So when everything says repeatedly “December 21, 2012”. It isn’t because the Mayans said that. It’s because that’s how it translates out into Gregorian time. Thinking otherwise is like discovering the Hindus had a dish they called hamburger, then pointing out the error associated with eating bovine product in their religion assuming their hamburger must be same as all other hamburgers because it's called a hamburger.
Also, Julius Caesar didn’t “invent” leap years. He sanctioned his astronomer, Sosigenes, to come up with a solution to the seasonal flux in the 355 day Roman calendar to get it closer to being synched with the seasons and fix the equinoxes. Pope Gregory revised it again in the 16th century to the “century divisible by four” rule, which will still leave us with a random day in about 10,000 years or so. Mayan long-count calendar, still accurate.
Also also, the calendar doesn’t predict a doomsday. But rather the beginning of a new world-age marked by the once-every-26,000-year-occurring solar-galactic alignment. Which was (unrelated to the Mayans) also the system Plato came up with in calculating the “Great Year”. Which has less to do with mysticism and more to do with arcane modalities.
slucero wrote:so..... do we buy Christmas presents or not?
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