
Guest post by Steve Goreham
Originally published in The Washington Times
The Mayan calendar is about to end, and with it, the world.
People love nothing more than an apocalypse. Meteor collisions, alien invasions, super volcanoes, nuclear winter, and global warming all provide great material for mass entertainment and breathless news reporting.
The latest apocalypse to capture our imagination is the idea that, along with the Mayan calendar, the world will end on the 21st day of this month. The Mayan “Long Count” calendar, which began in 3114 BC, ends on December 21, 2012. The calendar is supposedly the measure of days from the beginning of humanity to the end. As a result, some doomsayers predict the end of the world in a few days.
Proposed scientific reasons why we won’t have a merry Christmas include ejection of mass from the sun, a sudden switching of Earth’s magnetic poles, a massive meteor collision with Earth, and a sudden shift in Earth’s crust. At this very moment, people across the world are stockpiling guns, machetes, kerosene, matches, sugar, and candles in preparation for the coming disaster. But our National Aeronautic and Space Administration (NASA) assures us that the world won’t end on December 21.
Over that last two centuries, most doomsday threats have been blamed on humanity itself.
Consider overpopulation. The Anglican minister Thomas Malthus postulated in 1798 that global population would outstrip mankind’s ability to feed itself, leading to economic disaster. Dr. Paul Ehrlich followed up with his 1968 book The Population Bomb, predicting that hundreds of millions of people would starve to death during the decade of the 1970s. But the agricultural revolution of the twentieth century and slowing population growth have confounded the predictions of Malthus and Ehrlich.
Other feared man-made catastrophes include killer air pollution, global thermonuclear war, worldwide disease pandemics, economic collapse from passing the production point of peak oil, and disaster from genetically engineered foods. While the jury is still out in some cases, these predicted catastrophes do not appear to be occurring.
But the greatest of all these fears is Climatism, the belief that man-made greenhouse gases are destroying Earth’s climate.
Alarming climate change predictions would fit well with Mayan fears, but they need a little more time. According to economist Lord Nicholas Stern of the London School of Economics on the impacts of global warming: “…what we are talking about then is extended world war…People would move on a massive scale. Hundreds of millions, probably billions of people would have to move…” From environmentalist Bill McKibben: “The world hasn’t ended, but the world as we know it has—even if we don’t quite know it yet.” From Dr. James Lovelock: “…before this century is over billions of us will die and the few breeding pairs of people that survive will be in the Arctic where the climate remains tolerable.”
What’s amazing is that the theory of dangerous global warming is accepted by the majority of world leaders. Today, the heads of state of 191 of the 192 nations are pursuing policies to try to stop the planet from warming. Most leading universities, NASA and other major scientific organizations, most of the Fortune 500 companies, and the news media accept the pending doom of man-made climate change. The world is spending over $250 billion each year to try to “decarbonize.”
But empirical evidence does not support the theory of catastrophic man-made warming. The 0.7oC rise in global temperatures since 1880 was matched one thousand years ago during the Medieval Warm Period, when temperatures were warmer than today. Despite increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide, Earth’s surface temperatures have been flat to declining for more than 10 years. Arctic ice has been declining, but Antarctic ice, which is 90 percent of Earth’s ice, has been increasing over the last 30 years. Sea levels are naturally rising at 7‒8 inches per century, but no evidence shows that accelerating sea level rise is underway. Hurricanes and tropical storms are neither more frequent nor stronger today than in times past. Polar bear populations have more than doubled in the last 50 years.
So, complete your Christmas shopping and don’t sell your winter coat. The world may end, but not before you have to pay your taxes and your credit card bills.
Steve Goreham is Executive Director of the Climate Science Coalition of America and author of the new book The Mad, Mad, Mad World of Climatism: Mankind and Climate Change Mania.
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The only catastrophe to occur is when YouTube deletes all those 2012 catastrophe videos.. hopefully. Leaving them up there is simply evidence of human stupidity.
Nothing like the rubber stamp of Evo “give the planet rights” Morales to lend credibility to Apocalypse Day:
http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/article/evo-morales-looks-december-21-–-‘mayan-apocalypse’-–-new-beginning-146322
Aikimox
When in the history of this planet did the climate not change? If you were around during the MWP or the LIA I am sure the same thoughts would have been held by many.
You mean the all-knowing Mayans didn’t know about leap years? Oh the travesty!
No, I do, too. The only problem is, I never remember where I put them.
/Mr Lynn
Aikimox December 18, 2012 at 3:12 pm
“I’m a man of science…”
Best not confuse weather with climate, reality with models, or politics with science then.
so Jesus isn’t coming back then?!
Party like it’s 13.0.0.0.0
http://www.laprogressive.com/baktun-13/
and
http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/1302887–party-like-a-mayan-on-dec-21-the-world-isn-t-coming-to-an-end
It’s ironic that the Mayan civilization (stretching it here) collapsed long ago due to some kind of regional climate change (that is the consensus, right?).
But I thought the rapture was coming May 2011. Or was it October? Regarding Harold Camping and his false rapture predictions, I always thought it was funny that he claimed to know something Jesus did not. In the gospels, Jesus said he didn’t know the day or the hour (Matthew 24:36) and he also said that the end will come when you don’t expect it (Matthew 24:44). Who gave Harold Camping this special knowledge? Since we are still here, nobody did. It was a false prediction.
In the same way, who gave these climate scientists this special knowledge? Who gave the Mayans this special knowledge to know when the end will come? Whenever I hear a prediction about some global catastrophe, I always wonder who gave that person this special knowledge that I don’t have. There will always be another. If the global temperatures crash like a rock in water it won’t be long before some scientists will preach doom because of our hedonistic modern lifestyle. It won’t be long before someone else will say the rapture is coming on a certain date. And it won’t be long before someone makes a prediction about some super natural disaster. There will always be another because there will always be those wanting to believe so.
So sleep well tonight. I will see you December 22.
I think John Belushi had all of the possible scenarios nailed down back in the 70’s. Locusts could be the one that ends it all for mother gaia…
If the Mayans were so good at predicting the future, how come they couldn’t predict what the Spaniards were going to do to them?
The tipping point was reached when the meme-dissemblers realized “global warming” was past, so they changed the words to “climate change” to cover themselves and yet retain the same means of fleecing the sheeple as they start to chant about “global cooling.”
According to Stephan Lewandowsky, I believe in the Mayan prediction. ( as do many who visit this site.) So please stop making fun of my(our) strongly held beliefs.
Could our current crop of doom-mongering pro-AGW catastrophists be reincarnated Mayan witch doctors who made predictions so far into the future that they could not be validated by those existing at the time?
richardscourtney said @ur momisugly December 18, 2012 at 3:38 pm
Richard, you beat me to it. There was also tulip mania in the 17thC.
Aikimox said @ur momisugly December 18, 2012 at 3:12 pm
The World record hot spell was at Marble Bar with 160 consecutive days of maximum temperatures of 37.8 degrees Celsius (100 degrees Fahrenheit) or more from 31 October 1923 to 7 April 1924. When Phil Jones asserted on ABC radio that record temperatures were evidence of global warming, I went and looked at record temperatures throughout Australia and discovered that nearly all were in the first half of the 20thC. I guess we had our global warming back then and never even noticed what a disaster had befallen us 🙂
I don’t need to worry about CO2 causing the end of the world by global warming, because the Mayan prediction will get us first. This is why so many climate skeptics are believers in other doomsday scenarios. Makes perfect sense.
John Trigge (in Oz) said @ur momisugly December 18, 2012 at 6:22 pm
No, they are reincarnated Mayan climatologists, though that amounts to the same thing I suppose 😉
John in NZ…from your reading of WUWT comments and articles…could you please give us a few examples of ‘why so many climate skeptics are believers in other doomsday scenarios’?
Or did you just make that up?
John in NZ said @ur momisugly December 18, 2012 at 6:34 pm
The Git is old enough to have now lived through several ends of the world. They’re not all they’re cracked up to be, so The Git mostly ignores them these days… He has however stocked up on several cases of his favourite wines — just in case.
Remember… No one makes it out of this world alive.
It’s just where you end up after you die…
Isaiah (9:6) gave the overriding prophecy:
Relax and enjoy Christmas!
A friend of mine recently attended a small lecture being given by a Mayan Elder, who was rather perplexed by all the hoopla over the end of this particular Mayan Calender. “Everyone assumes it signifies the end of the world, but if they really wanted to know what it means, they should have asked us!” He then went on to explain that the Mayans have about a half dozen calenders of various lengths, each signifying a cycle divined from nature, the stars or the gods. The ending of a calender is simply the ending of a cycle. This December 21st signifies the end of the longest cycle in the Mayan Calender system, but not the end of the world.
The whole myth is apparently a product of ignorance. Now where have we seen that before?
We should all be very concerned by this prophecy. The IPCC have made temperature predictions that go beyond December 21st along with predictions of rising anthropogenic carbon dioxide. They are thus implying that both the world and mankind will still exist, and given their track record for predicions up to this point…
“Over that last two centuries, most doomsday threats have been blamed on humanity itself.”
Make that since the beginning of society. Smiting the unrighteous has always been fun and profitable.
Charles Gerard Nelson said @ur momisugly December 18, 2012 at 6:39 pm
See:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/09/05/stephan-lewandowskys-slow-motion-social-science-train-wreck/