"Saw an article that the mayan calendar was wrong and the world is gonna end next week," @ot9momoland11 wroted.

They believed that some cataclysmic or transformative events would occur on or around 21 December 2012 and it was regarded as the end cycle of the Mayan calendar, corresponding to the end of the world. The Mayan calendar is an ancient calendar system that rose to fame in 2012, when a “Great Cycle” of its Long Count component came to an end, inspiring some to believe that the world would end at 11:11 UTC on December 21, 2012. Live Breaking News: I think the Mayan who said 2012 was dyslexic and meant 2021 whole time ‍♀️ I think the Mayan guy was just dyslexic and the world is ending in 2021 and we’re experiencing it The mayans were dyslexic, 2021 is the actual end of the world. People are making funny meme references to the 'Dyslexic Mayan'. Some netizens are now saying that the Mayan who predicted the apocalypse of 2012 was actually dyslexic. (@r_crashh0627) March 28, 2020 Due to readings of the Mayan calendar, theorists expected the … Maya (Mayan) were a diverse group of indigenous people who lived prior to 2000 BC, and predicted future events. End of World in 2021? It wasn’t 2012 or this past weekend as others had posted. This Long Count calendar identifies a day by counting the number of days passed since a mythical creation date. People are making funny memes and tweets about dyslexic Mayan on social media. Hawking, a former Professor of Mathematics at the University of Cambridge, has long been a critic of the pseudoscience surrounding doomsday predictions, and in… We urge everyone to not panic and spread fear among others. The reading of the Mayan calendar was wrong according to a conspiracy theory on Twitter, and while the world didn’t end in 2012, Mayan doomsday is sometime this week or next.


Some netizens are now saying that the Mayan who predicted the apocalypse of 2012 was actually dyslexic. People are making funny memes and tweets about dyslexic Mayan on social media. By creating an account, you verify that you are at least 13 years of age, and have read and agree to the Comicbook.com In a series of tweets that have now been deleted, scientist and Fullbright scholar Paolo Tagaloguin explained that the Mayan predictions could still prove accurate due to our shift to the Gregorian calendar. Just a warning with no proof or evidence but prepare for the end times of 2021. the Mayan calendar was wrong. Instead of 2021, the person wrote it as 2012. It looks similar to the Chinese baby gender calendar in that its abscissa is the month of conception from January to December and its ordinate is the mother’s age at conception. Instead of 2021, the person wrote it as 2012. Netizens Say Dyslexic Mayan Predicted Apocalypse of 2021 as Doomsday 2012, Check Funny Memes and Tweets. These are just funny memes and jokes that people are attaching to the end of the world in 2012. Tagaloguin has since deleted his Twitter and Instagram accounts.“Following the Julian Calendar, we are technically in 2012…," the scientist wrote in the now-deleted tweets (via As only the internet could, the speculation and conspiracy has become a mainstay topic on social media, turning into a meme in and of itself. "So in 10 days it'll be the end of the world according to the mayan calendar..." @iamelmahdi "Please adjust your schedule accordingly," @IPOT1776 Even the stans came out in full force, being sure to stock up on their fancams to celebrate the end of the world. That the long count Mayan calendar ends in 2021 – on December 21st to be exact. For years there have been speculations that concentrate around the end of the world, the planet being wiped out by an asteroid or submerging in huge tidal waves and resultant earthquakes. The media hype and hysteria that ensued was later termed the 2012 phenomenon.Of course, the predictions did not come true—just like hundreds of other doomsday prophecies that fizzled out in the past. No one is saying that the calendar does not end after 5126 years, but they call into question the dating of the calendar and therefore its predictions on 2021 . “Second, that doesn't matter anyway, because the 21 December 2012 date was converted from the Maya calendar to the Gregorian one in the first place,” Plait adds. In fact, we're still in 2012 according to the Julian Calendar. As Taglaloguin said in now-deleted tweets, we lost out on 11 days per years by using the Gregorian Calendar as opposed to the Julian Calendar. But well, eight years down the line since that prediction, people are earth are braving a terrible situation of the deadly COVID 19 flu which has claimed over 30,000 lives globally and more than 6 lakh people infected.