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2012:
Opportunity to change civilization
February 28, 2008
Four years, nine months and three weeks may
be about all the time we have left on Earth.
Why? Dec. 21, 2012, marks the end of a 5,000-year
cycle by the Maya Long Count calendar. To some,
this spells doomsday (disaster scenarios include
earthquakes, volcanic eruptions caused by solar
storms, cracks forming in the earth’s magnetic
field and mass extinction brought on by nuclear
winter). To others, it carries the promise of
a new beginning. And to still others, 2012 provides
explanations for unsettling developments (e.g.,
the disappearance of bees) that seem beyond our
control.
While all this has largely been a hot topic
within alternative cultures, the 2012 phenomenon
is slowly trickling into the mainstream. At least
four new books on 2012 have appeared in bookstores
in the wake of the 2006 success of Daniel Pinchbeck’s “2012:
The Return of Quetzalcoatl.” This month,
Sony won a bidding war for disaster-movie king
Roland “Godzilla” Emmerich’s
apocalyptic script “2012.” And this
Saturday, 2012-ers will converge on Hollywood
for a day-long conference devoted to the subject.
“There’s a real hunger for this
kind of knowledge,” says 2012 Conference
producer Christian John Meoli. Meoli takes a
more optimistic view of the date, referring to
it as “the Shift” (the conference’s
slogan: “Shift Happens”). “It’s
easy to manipulate people with fear,” he
says. “I wanted to stay away from the gloom
and doom.”
Among those appearing at the conference will
be “Return of Quetzalcoatl” author
and psychonaut Pinchbeck, who describes 2012
as “a window of opportunity to change civilization.”
Says Pinchbeck: “At the moment, global
civilization is unsustainable. . . . According
to many scientists, 25% of our species will be
extinct within 30 years. We need to re-center
our world view away from materialism. My hope
is that by 2012, there’s a fundamental
redirection of focus, and we start projecting
the universal dream.”
Other futurists scheduled to appear at the 2012
Conference include Alberto Villoldo, a Cuban
American medical anthropologist and psychologist
who has studied and practiced shamanism for more
than two decades, John Major Jenkins, author
of “Maya Cosmogenesis 2012,” and
filmmaker Sharron Rose, whose documentary “Timewave
2013? will kick off the conference.
“I’m also flying in a shaman from
Peru — you should see his rider!” Meoli
laughs. “Do you have any idea where I can
get some yuk-yuk?”
Meoli plans to produce a total of 12 conferences
in various cities around the globe.
“The grand hurrah will be on Dec. 21,
2012, at the Mayan pyramids,” he says. “This
is just the beginning.”
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