Waikato Times

Armageddon via imaginary planet pushed back again

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UNITED STATES: In September, to much fame, a man who claimed to have studied astronomy in Kentucky and deciphered the Book of Revelation­s predicted an ominous sign would appear on September 23 and foretell the world’s end.

‘‘It’s a very biblically significan­t, numerologi­cally significan­t

number,’’ David Meade told The

Washington Post then. A series of catastroph­ic events would follow the omen, he claimed, culminatin­g in the appearance of a mysterious planet called Nibiru and the end of ‘‘the world as we know it.’’

Meade’s claim sold a lot of tabloids and YouTube ads. When September 23 passed with no omens or calamities, Meade revised his very numerologi­cally significan­t date to October 15, which also came and went uneventful­ly.

You might think two consecutiv­e misfired would quash the Nibiru theory. Instead, it’s simply transcende­d its erroneous author.

Meade isn’t even mentioned in the latest batch of tabloid stories, which quote yet another doomsday theorist to warn that the end of all things not on September 23 or October 15 - but now November 19, when Nibiru is supposed to set off cataclysmi­c earthquake­s.

‘‘November 19th will see earthquake Armageddon across huge swaths of the planet,’’ the Daily Express wrote in representa­tive tones. The paper cited as evidence unnamed ‘‘astronomer­s and seismologi­sts’’ - and an illegible picture of the Earth, covered like pincushion in quake markers.

Try to pin down the ‘‘astronomer­s and seismologi­sts’’ who supposedly support this theory, and you end up at PlanetXNew­s.com, a conspiracy website that Meade sometimes writes for.

The quake-pocalypse theory comes to us courtesy of a different author, Terral Croft. He writes that seismic activity has been increasing around the world as the massive ‘‘Black Star’’ (Nibiru has many names) wheels around the edge of the solar system, upsetting the planets within.

Meade predicted Nibiru would approach Earth, maybe even collide with it. But this latest version of the theory claims Earth will simply line up with the sun and ‘‘black star’’ on Nov. 19, somehow triggering a ‘‘backside-alignment quake event.’’

Croft’s article doesn’t say what, exactly will happen then. The tabloids have been happy to fill in the blanks, claiming volcanoes will erupt and tectonic plates would smoosh into each other.

But like every other Nibiru doomsday theory (which go back to 2003, as Kristine Phillips wrote for The Post) it’s based on an analysis of pure fantasy.

Nibiru, as far as science can tell us, simply doesn’t exist. ‘‘It would be bright. It would be easily visible to the naked eye,’’ a Nasa scientist wrote several years ago. ‘‘It would already be perturbing the orbits of Mars and Earth.’’

In other words, it doesn’t look much like the end times.

Not that anything, at this point, appears able to stop Nibiru’s imaginary advances. In fact, the Express had a breaking update yesterday - a new theory blaming a Vatican coverup for all Nibiru’s apparent failures to end the world on schedule.

"November 19th will see earthquake Armageddon across huge swaths of the planet."

Daily Express

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