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Archive for the 'About the Author' Category

World to End in 2012 (Check Back for Updates)

Posted in About the Author on May 9th, 2008

Three children were recently removed from a remote church compound called Strong City in New Mexico. There had been allegations that children at the cult may have been sexually abused, though the matter remains under investigation and charges have yet to be filed.

The leader of the group, Wayne Bent, claims to be the son of God.

In early 2007, Bent said that the world would end on Halloween of that year. That apparently fell through, however Bent was undeterred and has updated his prophecy to say that the Apocalypse will happen at any moment: “The seven last plagues are all falling now and the end of all things is at hand,” Bent wrote on his church’s Web site.

Failed doomsday predictions are nothing new, of course. There have been thousands of people predicting the imminent end of the world, dating back to at least 2800 B.C. They have all been wrong for thousands of years (or however how long since they spoke), but that doesn’t keep people from trying.

End-times claims are often rooted in Bible passages, but also based on everything from schizophrenia to misunderstood astronomy. Most doomsday promoters are quite sincere, genuinely believing that
they have discovered a (literally) Earth-shaking secret that must be shared with others.

Doomsday deferred

It seems quaint now, but as the last century came to a close, there was fear of the “Y2K bug,” the computer programming glitch that supposedly was going to bring the world to its knees as the millennium turned. The news media ran alarmist stories of possible consequences, ranging from the timing on your coffeemaker being off to a global nuclear war started by mistakenly-launched missiles.

While most people were only mildly concerned, many stocked up on survival gear, and some even headed to remote areas to wait out the impending holocaust.

And it wasn’t just the Y2K bug; there were dozens of predictions that the world would end in 2000 (just as there had been a century earlier — some things never change). For example, author Richard Noone decided that the planets would align catastrophically almost exactly eight years ago, on May 5, 2000. The result would be the end of civilization through the melting and shifting of the polar icecaps.

Noone was so concerned about it he wrote a book titled “5/5/2000: Ice, The Ultimate Disaster.” (About 18 months before doomsday, I interviewed Mr. Noone about his book and prophecy; when we concluded, I
asked if we could arrange a follow-up interview on May 6, 2000, just in case the world didn’t end. He declined. Noone’s book is currently for sale on Amazon.com for 1 cent.)

Now what?

So how do true believers react when it’s clear that the world didn’t end? In many cases, followers have sold or given away all their possessions, assuming that they would have no need of them after the apocalypse. There must be some red faces as the hour of judgment comes … and goes.

You might also think that followers would decide they’d been fooled and rebel. More often, however, the failed prophecy actually makes their belief stronger. In the case of cults, members have invested their money, time, lives, and sometimes even children in the cult leader. It’s very difficult to suddenly reject all
that, since their very identity is often linked to the beliefs.

Believers may rationalize away the failure in one or more of the following ways: They may decide that the end is in fact near, but that the time or date was simply misinterpreted and move the true end-times date forward (as Wayne Bent did); they may decide that their faith and prayer actually saved the world and averted disaster; or they may believe that the end of the world did in fact occur, but nobody else noticed it because it was a mystical or spiritual apocalypse, not a physical one. For more on the psychology of failed apocalyptic predictions, see Leon Festinger’s classic book “When Prophecy Fails.”

The latest fad in end-times predictions is for the year 2012, which (depending on which “expert” you listen to) will supposedly bring about either a new age of global spiritual awakening, or the end of the world. Or maybe something in between.

There are several Web sites dedicated to cataloging hundreds of past doomsdays. One of the best is A Brief History of the Apocalypse. Check the site in 2013 to see what it says.

“Hostile” Iran Sparks U.S. Attack Plan

Posted in About the Author, Politics on May 1st, 2008

Pentagon Wary Of Tehran’s Expanding Nuclear Program And Support Of Iraqi Insurgents

(CBS) A second American aircraft carrier steamed into the Persian Gulf on Tuesday as the Pentagon ordered military commanders to develop new options for attacking Iran. CBS News national security correspondent David Martin reports that the planning is being driven by what one officer called the “increasingly hostile role” Iran is playing in Iraq - smuggling weapons into Iraq for use against American troops.

“What the Iranians are doing is killing American servicemen and -women inside Iraq,” said Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.

U.S. officials are also concerned by Iranian harassment of U.S. ships in the Persian Gulf as well as Iran’s still growing nuclear program. New pictures of Iran’s uranium enrichment plant show the country’s defense minister in the background, as if deliberately mocking a recent finding by U.S. intelligence that Iran had ceased work on a nuclear weapon.

No attacks are imminent and the last thing the Pentagon wants is another war, but Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mike Mullen has warned Iran not to assume the U.S. military can’t strike.

“I have reserve capability, in particular our Navy and our Air Force so it would be a mistake to think that we are out of combat capability,” Mullen said.

Targets would include everything from the plants where weapons are made to the headquarters of the organization known as the Quds Force which directs operations in Iraq. Later this week Iraqi Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki is expected to confront the Iranians with evidence of their meddling and demand a halt.

If that doesn’t produce results, the State Department has begun drafting an ultimatum that would tell the Iranians to knock it off - or else.

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/04/29/eveningnews/main4056941.shtml

About the Author- David M. Spriggs

Posted in About the Author on March 15th, 2008

David Spriggs, born in Scioto County, Ohio, in 1934 and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, currently spends his time as a freelance writer and poet. Since childhood, David’s love and curiosity for airplanes, space, and the undiscovered led him to join the Air Force in 1951 at the mere age of seventeen. These ten years of military service afforded him the opportunity to travel to twenty-seven countries, while specializing in the operation and maintenance of various types of aircraft. His concerns and topics in his writings focus primarily on issues such as the failing economy, government corruption, the Iraq war, and America’s progression at achieving domination of our outer space.