OpEd: Jack
One who is sound of body and mind would think most youth would be more concerned about the lack of History and Science being taught in 'Progressive Public Schools' as well as subjects that could actually prepare them for a a career or rewarding employment...not just burdening them with college student loan debts! This is just another prime example of how our school systems are leading our kids astray...what would be the term?...Oh yeah 'Dumbing Down' with the Marxist scare tactics in order to control their minds and thought process, pure 'Alinsky Tactics'..re writing history and confusing kids...!
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By
Damian Ghigliotty
While some are throwing fantastical
Doomsday countdown parties, The National Aeronautics and Space
Administration is issuing grave warnings that 2012 Mayan apocalypse
rumors pose a real-life threat to frightened children and depressive
teenagers.
David Morrison,
an astrobiologist at NASA Ames Research Center, said on Wednesday that
he receives a large number of emails and letters from worried citizens,
most often from young people.
Some say they can't eat, or are too worried to sleep, while others say they are suicidal, Morrison said.
He made that announcement during an online video 'hangout' event hosted by NASA on Google+, calling the propagation of rumors on the Internet to frighten children ‘evil.’
‘While this is a joke to some people and a mystery to others, there is a core of people who are truly concerned,’ Morrison said.
NASA, a United States government agency, recently set up an information page on its website explaining why the world is not going to end on December 21, 2012.
The apocalypse rumors and fears are based on misinterpretations of the Mayan calendar, as SPACE.com reported.
The
rumors began with claims that Nibiru, a rogue planet discovered by the
Sumerians, will crash into Earth on December 21, killing everyone,
according to NASA’s website.
Rumor debunker: David Morrison, an astrobiologist at NASA Ames Research Center, says the world will not end on December 2011...Rumor originator: Zecharia Sitchin wrote in 1976 that he had found and
translated Sumerian documents identifying a rogue planet that will
destroy Earth
The origins of those rumors have been
linked to the works of the late Azerbaijani-born author Zecharia
Sitchin, who wrote in 1976 that he had found and translated Sumerian
documents identifying the rogue planet. Sitchin died in 2010 at the age
of 90.
There is no such planet, scientists say.
‘If
Nibiru or Planet X were real and headed for an encounter with the Earth
in 2012, astronomers would have been tracking it for at least the past
decade, and it would be visible by now to the naked eye,’ NASA states on
its apocalypse fear debunking page.
Other rumors -- including claims that
the Earth's magnetic field will suddenly reverse and claims that the
planet is heading towards a black hole at the center of the Milky Way --
were also dismissed on Wednesday.
Concerns
about the planet’s demise would be better directed on more
substantiated problems such as climate change, Andrew Fraknoi, an
astronomer at Foothill College in Los Altos Hills, California, said.
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