- Jan 13, 2005
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Originally posted by: godmare
Originally posted by: The Godfather
Originally posted by: godmare
Originally posted by: The Godfather
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: The Godfather
Originally posted by: Sphexi
Yeah..just like it was going to end in 2000...or 2004...or 1984...or whenever. World isn't going to end anytime soon, I'm not worried.
Yeah but that was scientists' prediction, not historical facts.
Some guy's vague predictions and a disputable calendar ending are facts?
Yeah well didn't that "guy" also predict 9/11 and a whole bunch of other things that actually came true?
afaik, that guy predicted twin brothers would perish in a fire. Or that's what I heard, anyway. It could really mean anything, since nostradamus used language subjesct to dramatic interpretation![]()
Twin brothers? What the hell?
Nostradamus' writings have frequently been misquoted and, in some instances, even deliberately altered in order to "prove" that he supposedly predicted various events. Since the advent of the Internet, many prophecies have even been fabricated outright, therefore enhancing the mystique of Nostradamus. For example, after the September 11 Terrorist Attacks, the following was circulated on the Internet along with many more elaborate variants:
In the City of God there will be a great thunder,
Two brothers torn apart by Chaos,
while the fortress endures,
the great leader will succumb,
The third big war will begin when the big city is burning
As it turns out, the first four lines were indeed written before the attacks, but by a Canadian graduate student named Neil Marshall as part of a research paper in 1997. Ironically enough, the research paper included this poem as an illustrative example of how the validity of prophecies are often exaggerated. For example, the "City of God" (why is New York City the City of God?), "great thunder" (could apply to just about any disaster), "Two brothers" (lots of things come in pairs), and "the great leader will succumb" phrases are so ambiguous as to be meaningless. The fifth line was added by an anonymous Internet user, showing obvious alteration since Nostradamus wrote his Propheties in four-line verses called quatrains. Nostradamus also never actually referred to a "third big war".
and what the hell are you doing asking what we're talking about?
you've hardly said anything cohesive yet.
What do you want me to say? I asked for your opinions.
