Dubai - The Dec 21, 2012 phenomenon is made up of many ‘end of world’ theories. If you Google the phrase “2012 end of the world” you will find millions of references to many beliefs, and many different, often odd theories about what exactly might happen. On December 21, 2012, the Mayan calendar comes to an end, and so for a growing number of people, the world is expected to end. Others believe that a mysterious celestial object known as Planet X or Nibiru, is returning to our solar system and will bring cosmic catastrophe after colliding with Earth. Yet others think a rapid “polar shift” - a sudden reversal of the Earth’s rotation - will bring global destruction. Some theories talk of planetary alignments; others say there will be a reversal of the Earth’s magnetic polarity. The New Age community takes a different view of the 2012 predictions. They believe that the earth and its inhabitants may undergo a positive transformation, by which a new Era would begin after riding a positive wave. Scholars from various disciplines have dismissed the idea of such events occurring. The space agency Nasa received so many questions about it, they have placed extensive material on their website under a section called “Why the world won’t end”. The section begins by assuring readers “nothing bad will happen to the Earth in 2012”. Nasa discredited the claims about Nibiru and crushed theories about planetary and galactic alignment. They said no planetary alignments will occur for the next few decades and even if these events did take place their effects would be “negligible”. The polar shift theory was also dismissed by them as being “impossible” but pointed out that the reversal of magnetic polarity is actually true and it happens around every 400,000 years but state: “As far as we know, such a magnetic reversal doesn’t cause any harm to life on Earth.”
Dubai - The Dec 21, 2012 phenomenon is made up of many ‘end of world’ theories. If you Google the phrase “2012 end of the world” you will find millions of references to many beliefs, and many different, often odd theories about what exactly might happen. On December 21, 2012, the Mayan calendar comes to an end, and so for a growing number of people, the world is expected to end. Others believe that a mysterious celestial object known as Planet X or Nibiru, is returning to our solar system and will bring cosmic catastrophe after colliding with Earth. Yet others think a rapid “polar shift” - a sudden reversal of the Earth’s rotation - will bring global destruction. Some theories talk of planetary alignments; others say there will be a reversal of the Earth’s magnetic polarity. The New Age community takes a different view of the 2012 predictions. They believe that the earth and its inhabitants may undergo a positive transformation, by which a new Era would begin after riding a positive wave. Scholars from various disciplines have dismissed the idea of such events occurring. The space agency Nasa received so many questions about it, they have placed extensive material on their website under a section called “Why the world won’t end”. The section begins by assuring readers “nothing bad will happen to the Earth in 2012”. Nasa discredited the claims about Nibiru and crushed theories about planetary and galactic alignment. They said no planetary alignments will occur for the next few decades and even if these events did take place their effects would be “negligible”. The polar shift theory was also dismissed by them as being “impossible” but pointed out that the reversal of magnetic polarity is actually true and it happens around every 400,000 years but state: “As far as we know, such a magnetic reversal doesn’t cause any harm to life on Earth.”