America stamped rumors about the end of the world

The stories of human extinction days are spreading online in recent times that NASA must launch a campaign to quell them.

The stories of mankind's day of extinction are spreading online recently, causing the US Aerospace Agency to launch a campaign to quell them.

The Telegraph said the apocalyptic scenarios revolve around some rumors about things going to ashes when a planet named Nibiru collides with the globe.

According to rumors, the Sumerians (who lived in the fourth millennium BC and reached a very high scientific and technological level before perishing) discovered the planet Nibiru. Then they determined that it would clash with the Earth. That is 2012.

Many websites have accused the US Aeronautics Agency (NASA) of hiding the truth about the end of the world. But NASA claims these stories are just pranks on the Internet.

'2012 apocalypse affirmations are not based on any scientific basis. If the earth is at risk of colliding with a certain object, astronomers have discovered that object for decades before the collision occurred. If the planet called Nibiru is about to hit the earth in 2012, we can now see it with the naked eye. But nobody saw anything, because the planet did not exist.

Prestigious scientists in the world did not find any threat to the planet in 2012. In summary, our planet will be stable for more than 4 billion years, ' NASA stated on the website.

Picture 1 of America stamped rumors about the end of the world

Earth artwork collides with impactlab.com's other planet.

In the past, some hypotheses suggested that the disaster of destruction would take place in May 2003, but when nothing happened, that time was delayed until December 21, 2012 - the last day in the ancient Mayan calendar. . According to some rumors, on that day there will be a phenomenon of planets forming straight lines.

NASA confirmed that the Mayan calendar did not end on December 21, 2012 and there would be no alignment of planets. Even if that phenomenon occurs, its impact on the earth is not significant.

Mayan descendants in Guatemala and Mexico voiced their rebuttal 'prophecy' about the end of the world. They are angry because their ancestors' beliefs and traditions are distorted.

'The notion of doom or apocalypse does not exist in Maya culture , ' said Jesus Gomez, head of the Mayan Alliance of Teachers in Guatemala, declaring to the Telegraph.

Cirilo Perez, a descendant of the Mayan and also a famous astrologer, is working as advisor to Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom. He affirmed that the Mayan tradition never mentioned the end of the world. This scholar thinks that some individuals intentionally release rumors about the end of the world to profit.

'With the development of the Internet, rumors can bring commercial benefits to some individuals. Today, people appreciate Maya civilization, but in fact very few people understand our ancestors, ' Perez said.

Update 17 December 2018
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