• Plum@lemmy.worldOPM
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      1 month ago

      Macho Man Randy Savage got raptured that day.

      *no wait I’m revising that. There were a couple Armageddon days that year. My friends and I apparently celebrated the summer solstice one… by getting hammered and giggling about Xenu.

      We heard about the Macho Man dying on the radio the next morning and realized the rapture was very, very limited. Good times. (non-wiki link.)

    • If Only@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      That one was my favorite. My friends and I threw a doomsday party with beer and pizza and pretended to be shocked when nothing happened.

      I guess we weren’t sexy enough to make the apocalypse come.

  • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    There were a few minor predictions in the 80s, mostly surrounding Jesus coming back or nuclear war just starting. I was more afraid of nuclear war because everyone was talking about it all the time.

    The first major one I remember clearly was 1990. For some reason everyone thought the calendar turning over to a new decade meant the end.

    The next one after that was the year 2000 … everyone thought for sure we were all gone.

    After 2000, I was cured of all these stupid predictions.

    • Bags@piefed.social
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      1 month ago

      My brother and I hid in the basement on New Year’s eve 1999 lol (we were 6 and 8 respectively)
      We brought sleeping bags, snacks, a little radio to listen to the news, flashlights and extra batteries… we were SET for survival after everyone else died.

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    Going in I knew it would be a long list, but fuck me, it was a looking list

    Yet idiots keep on going about how the world will end

    The world will end in about a billion years from now when the sun will cook everything alive

    Humanity? Depends on how far and fast we’ll push climate change. The way we’re going until today we actually might kill most of humanity by 50 years from now.

  • thisbenzingring@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 month ago

    I love to counter the argument with… IT ALREADY HAPPENED ONCE

    The apocalypse happed in the Americas already. Will it happen again? Maybe but it wont take the world away and it won’t be the end of life. This old lady has a lot of time left to keep on ticking and humans can only fuck it up so bad before they are removed and nature reverts to a simpler time to start anew.

  • notsosure@sh.itjust.works
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    1 month ago

    What I really hate about Wikipedia, is that they always show the dates in chronological order (starting with old, ending with new), instead of reversed order (starting with the latest). Especially in this case, I don’t want to wade through an entire list of old entries, I’d like to know what is what, so that I can prepare myself appropriately.

    • Daemon Silverstein@calckey.world
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      1 month ago

      @[email protected] @[email protected]

      While Wikipedia tables often have a sorting button, yeah, there’s no such option for all tables within this article specifically…

      However, in this article, all tables are arranged by a section for each century and the Table of contents (although visible only through the desktop version) allows for accessing the 21st century directly, as in the screenshot.

      Also, there are Wikipedia front-end apps out there implementing the sorting button even for tables that don’t natively have it. I’m lacking examples to mention, though (the one I have installed on phone, wikireader, doesn’t have such a feature, but I remember using other front-end apps and websites for reading Wikipedia articles beyond the Wikipedia website itself).

      Mobile screenshot of Wikipedia article "list of dates predicted for apocalyptic events" with the Table of Contents (ToC) opened.