Warnos44

Thanks for the share. You should link an archived version so we dont give them traffic. I really loathe them at this point.

XAPHAN

Having read quite a bit about this, I can tell you this is a total shit piece.'

Zecharia Sitchin knew eleven languages and his credentials were a mile long.

The article throws out such wonderful journalism like:

Sitchin fancied himself an expert in the ancient Sumerian language. (He was actually the world foremost expert.)

From his translations sprang a plot out of a second-rate L. Ron Hubbard novel

The fictitious shadow planet, according to Nibiru believers, is flung from the outskirts of the solar system dangerously close to Earth every 3,600 years. And, like its mysterious elliptical orbit, the heavenly body has a way of circling back in vogue. The most recent incarnation of Nibiru, as British tabloids and AOL News noted at the beginning of January, pencils in the apocalypse for October 2017.

Even Mr Sitchen states as is reported in this article Niburu would not be close to earth for another 1000 years.

Washington Post is a total shit show. Even on subjects that don't mean much in the larger scheme of things.

vastrightwing

Odd they wrote such a long article about something like this. I can't solidify the meme here. Perhaps a staff writer had no propaganda to write. Surely there was something divisive they could pen.

derram

https://archive.is/MwLay :

Will the mysterious shadow planet Nibiru obliterate Earth in October? No. - The Washington Post

'If all goes according to wild conjecture, planet Earth and the planet Nibiru are set to collide in the autumn, twin cosmic shooters in a game of apocalyptic marbles. '

'The Plymouth Herald pointed to David Meade, author of the book “Planet X — The 2017 Arrival,” as the source of the current stir. '

'The fictitious shadow planet, according to Nibiru believers, is flung from the outskirts of the solar system dangerously close to Earth every 3,600 years. '

'There is not, in reality, a planet called Nibiru boldly zooming through our solar frontier. '

'In the estimation of NASA astrophysicist David Morrison, there are some 2 million websites devoted to what happens when Nibiru meets Earth. '

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