Remember the Mayan prophecy? It is back: the date of the Apocalypse is next 21 June

    Remember the Mayan prophecy? It is back: the date of the Apocalypse is next 21 June

    The end of the world will come next week. For years, between theories and prophecies, it has been hypothesized that the planet's days are numbered.

    He is about to end up run over, his mother saves him

    Did you think you had already seen it all in this disastrous leap year? You will have to change your mind because it seems that the worst is yet to come: according to a recently proposed revision, the Apocalypse predicted in the Mayan prophecy is not dated December 21, 2012, but June 21, 2020.





    The end of the world will come next week. For years, between theories and prophecies, it has been hypothesized that the planet's days are numbered. For a few days on social media, the latest in chronological order of a bizarre hypothesis has been circulating, the one that based on a reinterpretation of the Gregorian calendar, introduced in 1582 to replace the Julian one, with the change, there would have been a 'loss' of some days a year, 11 to be precise, which added together give eight years of difference.

    We speak of “Twitter conspiracy”, because 'the end of the world' was hypothesized by Paolo Tagaloguin, who introduces himself as a scientist and who had posted a series of tweets, which were then deleted, as well as the profile. Without going into his calculations that have no scientific basis (among other things, the calendar was introduced in 1582 and not in 1752), we wonder why this Paolo Tagaloguin who introduced himself as a scientist, first put the posts, then they deleted, then made the profile disappear and now magically reappeared.

    "Following the Julian calendar, we are technically in 2012 ... The number of days lost in a year due to the Gregorian calendar is 11 days ... For 268 years using the Gregorian calendar (1752-2020) for 11 days = 2.948 days / 365 days (per year) = 8 years, ”Tagaloguin tweeted.

    we are technically in 2012. The number of days lost in a year due to the shift into Gregorian Calendar is 11 days. For 268 years using the Gregorian Calendar (1752-2020) times 11 days = 2,948 days. 2,948 days / 365 days (per year) = 8 years”….

    — Paolo Tagaloguin (@PaoloTagaloguin) June 15, 2020

    So, according to this new theory, the people who had calculated that the end of the world would take place on December 21, 2012, were wrong, since adding the eight years mentioned by Tagaloguin, the date for the end of the world will be June 21, this' year, in less than a week. And since yesterday, the scientist continues to tweet:



    June 21, 2020 would actually be December 21, 2012.. According to #mayancalendar pic.twitter.com/XGgAzmKMGa

    — Paolo Tagaloguin (@PaoloTagaloguin) June 16, 2020

    according to the Julian calendar, we are currently in the year 2012 and not in 2020… pic.twitter.com/HQYQTnQMQ3

    — Paolo Tagaloguin (@PaoloTagaloguin) June 16, 2020

    This is not the first time the end of the world has been announced, nor will it likely be the last.

    In the years 2000, 2003, 2006 and 2012, among others, the end of our days was sustained, yet we are still here.

    Now, all that remains is to see if the phantom prophecy will come true.

    Certainly recent events show us that the destruction of the planet is not that far away, Maya or non-Maya.


    Source: Paolo Tagaloguin/Twitter

    Read also:

    • Apocalypse Clock: 2 minutes to the end of the world
    • Apocalypse Clock: the end of the world is less and less missing, according to scientists
    • That is why there will be no end of the world on 21-12-2012
    add a comment of Remember the Mayan prophecy? It is back: the date of the Apocalypse is next 21 June
    Comment sent successfully! We will review it in the next few hours.

    End of content

    No more pages to load