2012: Is It True?
  Whitley Streiber
11-Oct-2005
   
  Just in the past two years, there have been two great earthquakes that have 
devastated populated areas and many other smaller ones that have also done 
great damage, the Amazon has virtually dried up, the Arctic has begun to melt, 
the Greenland and Antarctic ice caps have become unstable, and the weather has 
turned into a complex monster.
   
  What is so interesting about this is that our planet is not the only one in 
the solar system that appears to be affected. There have been signs of unusual 
weather on Saturn, and Mars appears to be experiencing polar cap decline not 
dissimilar to our own.
   
  Now a scientific paper has been published suggesting that increased solar 
activity over the past decade has resulted in the sun contributing anywhere 
from ten to thirty percent of the additional heat that's going into global 
warming.
   
  In fact, it doesn't just suggest this, it goes a long way toward proving it. 
This will be taken by some people to mean that we needn't bother about global 
warming because it's the sun's fault. But, of course, it's not ALL the sun's 
fault and we can and must do something about the part that's our fault. The 
truth is that the added impact of solar heating makes the problem incredibly 
urgent. This planet's whole natural process is about to go into chaos, and when 
it does potentially billions of us are going to die, and the most vulnerable 
areas are the United States, Europe and China, so we Americans cannot expect to 
sit on the sidelines while the rest of the world suffers for our sins.
   
  Anybody who doesn't burn to do something about the global warming problem is 
insane, and leaders who won't address it are in the process right now of 
committing the greatest crime against humanity that history has ever known.
   
  When I worked on Superstorm, there were no models that factored in increased 
heating from the sun. But it's there all right, and therein lies the making of 
a catastrophe not unlike that prophesied as the end of the age, according to 
Jose Arguelles, by Pacal Votan, a Mayan ruler of the sixth century A.D.
   
  I am beginning to see around me evidence that this man's prophecy was 
correct. Why that would be so is another matter entirely, and one that I cannot 
address except with speculation, but I can say that, if things keep 
deteriorating at the present rate, there are going to be environmental 
disasters of unprecedented ferocity in a few years, and I would not be 
surprised if they weren't upon us right around 2012.
   
  There is no question at all that an age is coming to its end right now. In 
the past couple of years, the problems have become so obvious that they are 
very hard to ignore. The sun is more active than it has been in a thousand 
years. The magnetic pole is showing signs of a shift. Storms are becoming more 
frequent and catastrophic. Human pressure on the planet's natural functioning 
is rapidly overwhelming its ability to stay alive. Earth is dying.
   
  And then there are the earthquakes and the subtle suggestions that great 
volcanic events might be impending. There are things nobody really understands, 
such as the hot spot east of Santa Barbara, California, and the signs of 
activity beneath some of the world's supervolcanoes.
   
  The earthquakes are the strangest phenomenon. Why are they happening now? Are 
they in some way related to solar activity? If so, it's not something that our 
own science understands. We even have trouble understanding if there is a 
connection between earthquakes that take place in close time proximity but on 
unrelated faults.
   
  There was a book published some years ago called Hamlet's Mill that suggested 
that much ancient symbolism was an attempt to warn the far future that earth 
every so often, perhaps on a regular cycle of about 12,500 years, went into a 
state of chaos.
   
  Subsequent to the publication of this book, we have come to know that there 
was a complex series of cataclysms on this planet around 12,500 years ago, that 
led to the collapse of the world's then extensive glaciation and the beginning 
of the interglacial in which we have spent our entire recorded history.
   
  There is all sort of evidence, commented upon by many authors, notably Rand 
and Rose Flem-Ath and Graham Hancock, to the effect that some sort of past 
civilization, advanced in ways that are hard for us to apprehend, was utterly 
destroyed during this time.
   
  Sea levels rose fantastically during the glacial melt, and they rose fast, 
increasing hundreds of feet over just a few centuries. Nowadays, we live in 
what would have been the highlands of that period. Gigantic stretches of land 
that were present in those days now are gone. And there are suggestions, here 
and there, that there might be inundated cities and other structures, now far 
from land. But underwater archaeology is in its infancy, and geology has not 
produced more than a rough idea of where shorelines lay during the last 
glaciation. Add to that the probability that earthquakes have further altered 
landforms, and the chances of provably detecting any unquestionable remains of 
even quite a large civilization become remote.
   
  Nevertheless, in memory and in prophecy, we do have indications that this 
civilization was once there, and that it has tried to send warning forward.
   
  We are living in the time it identified as the next age of chaos, and we 
would do well to acknowledge that fact as they did in their time, in order to 
do what they did, which is to project some remnant of what we have accomplished 
and what wisdom we have gained forward into the next human age.
   
  It is fair to ask, then, what is to be done? I'm not a survivalist and I'm 
not going to recommend the purchase of flashlights and seeds. Time and chance 
will capture us all, and it will be a matter of luck and the moving finger on 
the wall who survives and who does not.
   
  Best that we humbly acknowledge that, somehow, the past had possession of 
extremely potent knowledge. It's demonstrable: Mayan texts do identify 2012 as 
an epochal year; and the environment is disintegrating in ways that suggest 
that this prediction, made over a thousand years ago by a man who didn't even 
have use of the wheel, is perhaps the most potent human idea formed in all of 
our history. If he is correct, then it's not difficult to argue that his was 
the best mind that ever lived, at least during this particular cycle.
   
  For nearly three million years, earth has been rocked by climactic 
instability. The periodic nature of ice ages suggests that the sun heats up 
over a vast cycle of thousands of years, causing the release of greenhouse 
gasses through natural means, resulting in a spike in air temperature that 
violently melts the ice and ushers in another interglacial when the sun 
suddenly changes and cools down again.
   
  This gigantic solar cycle must exist now, but it has not always existed. 
Actually, the earth has spent huge, unimaginably long epochs in a condition of 
stability unlike anything we have known across the entire history of our 
development. During many of these periods, there were no polar caps, and life 
evolved slowly, impelled by the competition for living space into the myriad of 
forms and survival strategies that we see around us today.
   
  For the past three million years, though, the opposite has been true. The 
continuous cycle of cooling and heating that the planet is now undergoing has 
wrought havoc in nature. The number of species has been in decline for that 
entire period, and has just now reached the peak of the bell curve. We will see 
a phenomenal dieoff in the next few years, a massive collapse in the number of 
life forms on the planet.
   
  The extinction event that created us, in other words, is about to challenge 
our very existence.
   
  It's not as if it hasn't happened before. In fact, every time there was a 
gigantic climate change, the primates reacted by adapting themselves anew to 
changed conditions. Were it not for the instability of the present situation, 
we would never have become an intelligent species.
   
  Now, that intelligence must be called upon again, to get us through to the 
next period of relative calm. During this period, we will leave behind 
virtually everything we now understand as civilization. The consumer society 
will be the first to go, a victim of overpopulation and our failure to address 
the need to find new energy sources early enough. With it will go the United 
States as superpower. We are already in the last phases of that: like the 
British Empire in 1910, our country is overwhelmed with debt and beginning to 
treat the restless in its client states with extraordinary brutality. Next will 
be some cataclysm, perhaps the unexpected collapse of Saudi oil or the 
detonation of atomic bombs in our cities or a great plague--who knows what it 
will be--but on the other side of it, the world will no longer be dominated by 
a superpower.
   
  At the same time and consequent to the fall of the superpower, will come a 
period of climate change so rapid that growing seasons worldwide will be 
disrupted at the same time that the large scale movement of food around the 
planet becomes problematic due to a lack of energy resources. This is likely to 
mean sickness and famine on a very broad scale, especially in areas that are 
not self sufficient in food.
   
  It's not a pretty picture, and the failure of human leadership worldwide just 
at the time when creative innovation at the top was most essential has 
condemned us to vast suffering.
   
  So, why don't I just go ahead and fall on my sword or put a gun to my head?
   
  Because I am optimistic about the future, and I have good reason to be.
   
  At the same time that all of these negative forces are gathering and arraying 
themselves against us like some kind of dark army of invincible soldiers with 
the monstrous weapons of the apocalypse, all aimed straight at our hearts, the 
mind of man is responding in ways that are so far beyond what we presently 
realize that they beggar description.
   
  However, we are on a collision course with two destinies: the planet is about 
to throw us off like a horse switching its tail at a persistent dobson fly, 
while at the same time we are on the point of making a series of phenomenal 
scientific breakthroughs that may finally take the mind in the direction it has 
been trying to go ever since we looked up and saw the stars, which is outside 
of the body, into the surrounding world and universe, into total knowledge, 
total freedom and a future so fantastic that what we will be in fifty years 
will be so radically different from what we are now that we will be all but 
unrecognizable to ourselves.
   
  If we live.
   
  This has happened before. During the latter stages of the dinosaur age, the 
climate entered an unstable phase as well, which lasted about three million 
years before a the great cataclysm that delivered the coup de grace. During 
this time, the number of dinosaur species gradually declined, and highly 
intelligent--by dinosaur standards--new species such as Struthomimus--evolved. 
This fast, smart little beast came about as a response to a consistently 
challenging climate.
   
  In modern (by geologic standards) times, the mammals responded to our own 
climate challenge by evolving another highly intelligent species--us. But we're 
a much better contender than Stuthomimus, and for a very specific reason: we 
are intelligent enough and informed enough to induce further, even more rapid 
evolution in ourselves, and perhaps save ourselves and even our civilization, 
from the coming upheaval.
   
  Indeed, I don't believe that a changing environment is actually our greatest 
enemy. Our greatest enemy is a part of nature that lies concealed within us. It 
is the death wish that arises out of excessive population pressure. This death 
wish began to be triggered a long time ago, in the middle of the eighteenth 
century, when a restlessness swept Europe as cities grew in population, 
crowding and filthiness. By the middle of the nineteenth century, there had 
been two major revolutions, the French in the 1780s and the upheaval of the 
1840s. In the United States in the 1860s, the first war of population 
destruction was fought. And then, at the beginning of the twentieth century, 
the firing of a single bullet into the brain of an archduke in Bosnia turned on 
a killing machine that we had invented in the form of the European arms race 
that had unfolded from 1890 through 1914.
   
  That killing machine, started by that single bullet, has never since been 
turned off. It is directly responsible for the rise of communism and Naziism 
and the massive avalanche of death that they brought to this world. Indeed, I 
could take you, event by event, from that bullet to the latest death in Iraq 
and show you just how direct and unbroken that chain really is.
   
  I could take you, also, through the wicked hell of opposing ideologies that 
keep the machine running, and show you how a larger sense of enmity, expressed 
again and again as a desire to enter one utopian condition or another, has been 
threatening man from within even as the environment threatens us from without.
   
  But this is not a history lesson. It is about what lies ahead, because the 
machinery of death might at last coming to pieces, and, if it does, then the 
human mind is going to spring free, and there will be wonders.
   
  A confluence of scientific discoveries holds almost immeasurable promise for 
us. We are in the position, probably for the first time in any of the cycles we 
have lived through, of taking possession of our own evolution, and therefore 
also of the nature that now controls our lives with its dangers, its arbitrary 
cycles, and its indifferent casting of species after species down into death.
   
  Biological and informational technologies are about to come together in ways 
that are beyond startling, that suggest that we may finally leap free of the 
bondage of the death wish and all the silly superstitions and ideologies that 
flow out of it, from the myth of the good communist to the myth of the superman 
to the myth of the free market, to leave it all behind, and along with it the 
religious and social superstitions that drive our ideologies on the ash-heap of 
failed ideas and false gods.
   
  As our ability to create ever more dense information nodes is increasing 
exponentially, so also is our ability to deliver information to the brain, and 
to alter ourselves in ways that enable us to process it with greater efficiency.
   
  And this is only one of many areas in which science is progressing toward the 
exact sort of post-apocalyptic human state that has been prophesied, that we 
will reach superconciousness even as the world falls apart around us.
   
  It turns out that our approaching this state isn't connected with some sort 
of magic at all, any more than the spirit hole through which Pacal Votan said 
that he would speak was woven of an incomprehensible magic. Just as ordinary 
science is going to make the magic of the superconscious human being a reality, 
it was that hole that enabled archaeologists to discover Pacal Votan's tomb, 
and bring his existence back to light.
   
  Magic, when you understand it, is no longer magic, and we are rapidly 
reaching the ideal human condition, which is one in which the average person is 
too smart to believe in the deadly superstitions and ideologies that claw at us 
like evil trolls trying to prevent us from fulfilling our destiny, which is to 
take flight and fill the universe with human mind, human spirit and human being.
   
  If we live... 
   
  http://www.unknowncountry.com/journal/ 
   


Visit: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/circle2012dreams/

                        
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