10 Doomsday Prediction Misses

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10 Doomsday Prediction MissesLately, the world's Movies industry made an uproar, simply and solely because of the emergence of controversial Movie, Movies that tell the end of the age appears to cause the pros and cons of the community, many who consider that the 2012 Movie is a Movie which refers to the year 2012 confirmed Judgement day will happen when the case will be the emergence of doomsday predictions do not just happen this year, but in the year-earlier years many are predicting will be the emergence of these doomsday predictions, but until now it was not proven. Let us further careful doomsday predictions that turned out to miss anything and was not proven :

1. Chicken Predictors of Leeds, 1806
History records that many people approaching the last days are marked with the arrival of the prophet. However, maybe "prophet" of the most bizarre is a chicken egg from the City of Leeds, UK, 1806. Chicken was originally thought to produce eggs that reads "Christ is coming". As news spread of this miracle, many believed that the apocalypse was coming, so a curious residents who ultimately oversee the chicken when laying eggs and watch the fraudsters who wrote that sentence.

2. The Millerite, 23 April 1843
A New England farmer named William Miller, after several years of studying the Bible, concluding that the time chosen by God to destroy the world can be inferred from a literal interpretation of scripture. He explained this to anyone that the world would end between March 21, 1843 and March 21, 1844. He preached and published quite a lot and led thousands of people (called the Millerite) who believed that the exact date of doomsday is 23 April 1843. Many were sold or donated all his possessions because they believe it is not needed anymore, but when April 23 comes (but Jesus had not yet come) then that group was disbanded, and some have formed a movement that until now known as the Seventh-day Adventist Church (Seventh Day Adventist).

3. Of Armageddon / Apocalypse of Mormon, 1891 or earlier
Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormon church, the church held a meeting in February 1835 to tell him that he talks to God. During that conversation, Smith acknowledges that Jesus will return in the next 56 years, and then the end times will soon begin.

4. Halley's Comet, 1910
In 1881, an astronomer, from spectral analysis, found that the comet tails contain a deadly gas called cyanogen (cyanide from the origin of the word). This was not too interesting until someone realized that cross the Earth will intersect with the tail of Halley's comet in 1910. Is the surface of the planet will be covered by the poisonous gas? That speculation is printed on the front page of The New York Times and several other newspapers, which caused widespread panic across the U.S. and other countries. Finally, scientists with a cool head to explain that it is not worth worrying about.

5. Pat Robertson, 1982
May 1980, televangelist and Christian Coalition founder, Pat Robertson, a surprise and frighten many people when he states in his TV show, "700 Club", to viewers around the world that he knows when the world will end (although the Bible itself in Matthew 24:36 about the Judgement stated "About the day and hour no one knows, even the angels in heaven do not know"). "I guarantee that by the year 1982 there will be judgments of the world," said Robertson.

6. Heaven's Gate, 1997
When comet Hale-Bopp came in 1997, came the issue that was alien spacecraft following the comet. It is covered by NASA and the astronomy community. Although the allegations were denied by the astronomers (and could be denied anyone who has a good telescope), this issue had aired in the radio show "Coast to Coast AM" Art Bell hosted and theme of the paranormal. These allegations inspired a cult of believers UFO (Unidentified Flying Object which is considered alien spacecraft) at San Diego who call themselves Heaven's Gate to believe that the world will end soon. Indeed the world over for 39 cult members who committed suicide on March 26, 1997.

7. Nostradamus, August 1999
Michel de Nostradame papers are very confusing and metaphorical has attracted the attention of many people for more than 400 years. His writing, the accuracy is dependent on the interpretation of a very flexible, has been translated and translated again in the tens of different versions. One line of his writings mentions, "In 1999, the seventh month / From the sky came the king of terror." Many followers of Nostradamus became upset because she thought that this was the famous seer's vision of doomsday.

8. Y2K, January 1, 2000
When the last century to a close, many people worried that computers would lead to an end. The problem, known since 1970, is that many computers would not be able to distinguish between the years 2000 and 1900. No one knows for sure what effect, but many are expecting a disaster, ranging from light mass die until a nuclear explosion. Increased arms sales and getting people to survive in a bunker. But in fact, not many errors occur when the new millennium begins.

9. May 5, 2000
If it was not Y2K errors occur, the global disaster is guaranteed to happen by Richard No one, author of the book 5/5/2000 Ice: the Ultimate Disaster in 1997. According to No one, the mass of ice in Antarctica will become as thick as three miles away on May 5, 2000, a date that also coincides with the parallel of the planets in the solar system, that would somehow cause a fatal global freezing. That date passed and the earth is not frozen, but the book was actually "hot" in the market. Perhaps, too, global warming prevent the recurrence of the ice age.

10. God's Church Ministry, autumn 2008
According to the pastors of God's Church, Ronald Weinland, end times have arrived, again. His book in 2006, 2008: God's Final Witness, show that hundreds of millions of people will die, and at the end of 2006, "the longest two years left before the world was experiencing the worst time in human history. In the fall of 2008, America will collapse as a state power, and never will be again an independent state, "and the book was also noted," Ronald Weinland mortgage its reputation as an end-time prophet of God. "

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