Is it true that people who believe in 2012 events are crackheads and need to stop smoking crack?

January 27, 2012 - 9:57 pm 4 Comments

Question by : Is it true that people who believe in 2012 events are crackheads and need to stop smoking crack?
I personally think they are crackheads, what do you say? It seems like the same retards who believe in 2012 believed the world was going to come to an end in year 2000.

Best answer:

Answer by Ron Brgundy V2
Im pretty sure most of them are inbreds

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4 Responses to “Is it true that people who believe in 2012 events are crackheads and need to stop smoking crack?”

  1. Brianna B Says:

    No they are not crackheads. People might think they’re crazy but its what they believe. And to them they have a reason to believe it. People will believe what they believe and belief is a strong thing, just because of what they believe doesn’t mean they’re on some sort of drug.

  2. poldi Says:

    They aren’t crackheads, they are either uneducated or gullible (or both).

    And Y2K was a legitimate concern, not a hoax.

  3. Jeff Says:

    The crackheads, tweakers, stoners, pill poppers, junkies and all other ingesters of mind and body altering substances need to stock up come 2012 just in case the world does end but they don’t die. What if all their sources die and they don’t, they will be hating life and have no way to make it right.
    The slogan should be “Stock up in 2012, just in case”

  4. bikenbeer2000 Says:

    You’re right. All you really need to do is take a look at some of the people promoting the doomsday 2012 nonsense. If that doesn’t convince you it’s all baloney, nothing will. We have:

    José Argüelles who believes himself to be a reincarnated Mayan priest and tells us that “time is faster than light”, whatever that may mean.
    Zechariah Sitchin who invented planet Nibiru as an object populated by a race who genetically engineered humans as slave creatures to mine gold.
    Nancy Lieder who believes she’s is in telepathic communication with aliens from a planet orbiting the star Zeta Reticuli who have warned her about the approach of Planet X in 2012.
    Terence McKenna who, whilst on drugs, devised “novelty theory” which shows that “novelty” reaches a zero point in November 2012. When he heard about the Mayan Long Count calendar cycle rollover on 21st December 2012, he fiddled his result to match the date.
    “Doctor” Jaysen Rand who tells us he was abducted by extraterrestrials from the planet Epsilon and warned of the impending arrival of Planet X. He also likes to frighten young girls by telling them they are living in the end times.

    Saying that there will be no doomsday in 2012 are (among many others):
    Dr. Ed Krupp, Director of Griffith Observatory and specialist in Archaeoastronomy.
    Dr. David Morrison, Senior Scientist at the NASA Astrobiology Institute.
    Professor Mark Van Stone, PhD in Latin American Studies, Southwestern College, California.
    Professor Mark Morris, Professor of Astronomy & Physics, UCLA.
    Dr. Ian O’Neill, Solar Physicist.

    So who do you want to believe? Experienced scientists with many years of study in their respective fields or a ragbag collection of oddballs and lunatics.
    Difficult choice, isn’t it?