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John Perkins

John Perkins

Posted: December 7, 2009 12:09 PM

The True Meaning of 2012

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The movie 2012 has generated a tsunami of controversy over an ancient Mayan prophecy. We can thank Hollywood for stirring up our interest. Perhaps we needed a film loaded with global destruction and special effects to awaken our collective consciousness to this time of transformation. However, the theater version misses the true meaning of the message those great mathematicians and visionaries intended us to hear all those many centuries ago.

As I head off this week into the Mayalands of Central America, co-leading (with Llyn Roberts) a couple dozen people on an expedition that will delve deep into the significance of this ancient legend, I am struck by the signs that we are indeed poised to experience events foretold by the Mayan prophecy. But do not expect them to resemble the mayhem displayed in the movie.

Although there are many different interpretations of this prophecy, the one most widely accepted by the Maya teachers I know is taken from the Popul Vuh, the Mayan creation myth. Far from predicting a Hollywood-style doomsday, it holds out the possibility of positive transformation. In its simplest form, the people overthrow an egotistical regime characterized by exploitation and deception and replace it with an enlightened and compassionate one. In the process, the people have to surrender their own egos and endure material and environmental hardships.

December 21, 2012 was identified by the Mayans as the time when this transformation will become most obvious. It was an auspicious date for them because their astrologers predicted that at that moment the sun would move into alignment with the center of the Milky Way. Modern scientists, not the Mayans, offer theories that are the basis for the film's thesis that the earth's climate and magnetic poles may be changing.

My book Hoodwinked explores the deep underlying causes of the events that have now sent the U.S. and the entire planet spiraling toward the very things the Mayans foretold -- economic and environmental collapse -- and what we must do to reverse this process.

The real cause of our current meltdown is predatory capitalism -- the mutant form of an economic system that encourages widespread exploitation to benefit a small number of already very wealthy people. A new geo-political system has emerged; today the CEOs of big corporations, rather than governments, control human and natural resources around the globe, as well as politicians and the media. Their arrogance, gluttony, and mismanagement have brought us to the perilous edge. In their relentless drive to amass ever greater fortunes, they have polluted our air, water, and earth, relegated countless numbers to the ranks of the unemployed, and doubled the gap between the few who live in mansions and the many who are malnourished or starving. They exemplify that egotistical regime described in the Popul Vuh.

When I wrote Hoodwinked I was not thinking about the 2012 prophecy. Yet, now, as I prepare to visit the incredible cities these ancient people built, I realize that in an odd sort of way my writing is part of a tradition that stretches back to those Mayan visionaries.

We have indeed entered a critical time in human history. A tsunami is rapidly building on the horizon. Every person on earth is connected like never before, through the Internet and cell phones. Most of us have come to understand that we are perched on a shore that is threatened by a mounting wave of economic and environmental disaster.

We have only three years left until December 21, 2012. Whether or not you believe in this Mayan prophecy, we can all agree that we must turn things around. We must abandon our gluttonous, exploitative ways in favor of lifestyles and systems that will bequeath to our children and grandchildren a world they will want to inhabit. By definition, we simply must become sustainable.

You may want to take a moment, next time you pass by 2012 on a theater marquee, to reflect on the true message symbolized by those numbers. The real message is a call to action based on the knowledge that we can transform ourselves. It echoes down through the centuries from a people who built the magnificent pyramids that continue to enthrall and mystify visitors to the Yucatan Peninsula and who also created one of history's most accurate calendars -- the one that ends in 2012.

John Perkins is former chief economist at a major international consulting firm. He is the New York Times bestselling author of Confessions of an Economic Hit Man and Hoodwiniked and has written many books about the Maya and other indigenous cultures, including Shapeshifting, The World Is As You Dream It, and Psychonavigation. His website is www.johnperkins.org.

 
 
 

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04:39 PM on 12/30/2009
Wouldn't it be something if the Federal Reserve, created in 1913, was abolished by the end of 2012, so that we could begin the new era without such sociopathi­c financial "managers.­" The legitimate functions of the Federal Reserve could be moved underneath the Treasury department­, and now that we have confirmed that they create money out of "thin air," there would be no reason to pay interest on the "thin air" to private owners of the Fed. What a scam. 100 years is enough. No wonder some folks call the new era, "the lifting of the veil."
02:38 AM on 12/11/2009
2012 is an interestin­g topic. For an objective starting point, go here:
http://www­.2012endof­days.org
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ImmanuelGoldstein
Founder of the "Brotherhood"
09:58 AM on 12/09/2009
This is ALL MALARKEY.
There is no Mayan Prophecy, period. This is NOTHiNG more than christian apocalypse mongering grafted onto a culture with radically different beliefs. Calendars are interlocki­ng numerical cycles which inevitably come to an end (just like ours does every year. This is all there is to it. If the Mayans were so superhuman­ly prescient why couldn't they predict the El Nino drought cycle and out-of-con­trol warfare that brought them down? Why didn't they warn the other indio cultures about white people?

And why is it none of the other South of the Border culture predicted any of this. The Aztec calendar (more accurate than ours) sails right on through 2012 without noticing for instance.
The trailers claim that the Mayans were the world's oldest civilizati­on. Emmerich got this one wrong by a mere 5000 years. The Sumerians stole a march on them by that much.

Roland Emmerich has just relearned the lesson that exploitati­on directors learned as far back as the 1950's. If you are going to make an exploitati­on movie, exploit a 'hot' meme not one that is already years moribund like the 'kaiju' genre (remember Godzilla?)­. All of his post Godzilla movies have done this like ID4 and DAT.
I predict his next film will be a finance industry thriller , 'Wall Street ' but with more explosions­.

I wish somebody would carve a NEW Mayan calendar as a rejection of all this silliness. Maybe I'll have to to it myself...
12:50 AM on 12/09/2009
I read your book 'The Secret History of the American Empire' and it was very enlighteni­ng. Thank you for awakening my consciousn­ess.

People can and should do the following to diminish our dependency on capitalism and save the envirnomen­t:
REFUSE (buy only what you need, refuse the rest)
REDUCE (reduce your use of things, like your car)
REUSE (reuse things that you would otherwise throw out, or use things found at thrift stores)
RECYCLE (recycle anything that can be used for other purposes, like old t-shirts that can be torn and used as cleaning rags)
01:09 AM on 12/08/2009
See Carl Johan Calleman for a compelling study of the world history time line laid over the Mayan calendar. It is a fascinatin­g thesis on the relativity of 2012. It has been suggested that the creation of the Gregorian calendar, which is what we currently use, is off by seven years from the Mayan calendar to adjust for the Gregorian need for Christmas on the 25th of Dec every year. Other's have suggested interestin­g things happening in 2017. Do the math. Global warming may be part of the natural path we go through approximat­ely every 26,500 years. It may be just our fate to experience the dark rift as has happened before during the galactic alignment. If you thought the Y2K run up was interestin­g then you'll really like what's coming. Will the earth become one big self fulfilling prophecy? It will be far more reality stirring than any movie.
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InofTouch
I Hate Hate, Is That A Problem ?
11:57 PM on 12/07/2009
Thanks for selling your book here
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
politicky
just follow the $$$
08:05 PM on 12/07/2009
Thank you Mr. Perkins. I looked at the trailers for the 2012 movie and couldn't help but wonder if Cusack needed to finance one of his other projects and that's why he did it? The movie looks like utter nonsense. I'm looking forward to the predicted 1000 years of peace.
07:11 PM on 12/07/2009
The real message is that we as a species are doomed to extinction­. If those Mayan rulers had had the technology they wouldn't pushed the nuke button against their enemies again and again. And they would've had a secret chamber deep inside the pyramids for the powerful elite, the ruling class, to hide and survive the blasts. It's the same old story of the rich vs. the poor, the haves and have-nots. Who built those magnificen­t pyramids? Why the same enchained, dirt-poor slaves of Mel Gibson's "Apocalypt­o", that's who. What a load of you now what this kind of hypocritic­al nonsense is.
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deminmo
just looking for answers
02:51 PM on 12/07/2009
Some native Americans have legends about 2012, that basically
give a "fall off a cliff" senario or a continuati­on of man. Seems as
a species we have head our heads up our collective butts and deny
any involvment in our own demise. Now is the time to decide if
we look at government­, our role in climate changes, the future of
business, and what aspects of our culture to keep and what we destroy.
If we wait much longer, the culmative effects will be like an asteriod
hitting us, and we will end up off that cliff. Chose the "right path and
live" chose the current path, and cease to exist.
03:31 PM on 12/07/2009
Amen! It really is so simple, it's on us and we hate, with a capital H the idea that we and only we are responsibl­e for our choices. Oh, my, don't make me responsibl­e-you decide, right now I just want to "play".
Yet there have been times in the past when "we" have come to an agreement about a shared world view, (how each of us must live in community with the "other")an­d profound growth and health of the human family has been the result.
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Kliff215
01:42 PM on 12/07/2009
Recently read 'Confessio­ns...'by Perkins and I am currently reading 'The Secret History of the American Empire' and they change my reality, my outlook. I feel like he has woken me up from a dream world. I wish I could go back to sleep because I have little hope in stopping the corporate criminals but once someone like Perkins' wakes you up, you can't ever go back to sleep.
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John William Ross
01:21 PM on 12/07/2009
I didn't view "2012" as a call to action at all, much less a critique of rampant capitalism­. True, much of the movie is spent following the desperatio­n of ordinary Americans who, even if they could afford a room on one of the "arks," don't even know they exist, while the rich elite class who are able to afford a spot are depicted as callous, self-inter­ested jerks. Yet as we follow the plight of John Cusack and his family, it's only with the help of the elite class (the private-je­t-owning plastic surgeon and the Russian billionair­e Karpov) that they're able to survive. True, Karpov is depicted as an ignorant comic-reli­ef type, but the movie's critique wanes as we take delight in outrunning the disasters in private jets and luxury automobile­s. Then in the final sequence, despite the fact that "ordinary people" (embodied by Chiwetel Ejiofor) get to repeatedly castigate the rich elites for being heartless, it's still only the elite class who survive. The critique is abandoned entirely by the time we reach the "happy" ending where the survivors admire the sunset from the deck of the ark built by the very people who screwed over the whole population­. Everyone else is dead, but no one seems to care. Despite all the complainin­g, the rich class survived and "saved the day" in the end with their money and access. This is the last movie I'd expect to convince people to abandon their gluttonous­, exploitati­ve ways.
03:25 PM on 12/07/2009
"...it's still only the elite class who survive."

John, did you miss the part in which all the "ordinary" people were let on board?
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John William Ross
03:56 PM on 12/07/2009
Yeah, I did. If you're referring to the sequence where they decide at the last minute to let the desperate crowd waiting outside on board, you'll recall that that crowd was actually made up of the passengers who had reservatio­ns on the ark that wasn't completed in time. They did let on a few people who worked at the facility, but those few along with Cusack's family were the only non-paying passengers let on.
08:36 AM on 12/08/2009
And this John, is where I felt the movie had some flashes of dialogue brilliance­. The debate between Chiwetel Ejiofor and Oliver Platt made some very telling and thoughtful points about survival and who (gets to) survives. I relayed this point on another post.

If one can get past the John Cusack moments (too cliched), and all the SFX ( which I felt were terrifying at times, but excellent)­, "2012" can be seen as a critique on a number of issues facing humanity right now.

The ending would have come off as hilarious, if it weren't so telling.

I was digging all the Irwin Allen homages too.

And the Woody Harrelson takes on Art Bell, George Noory, Alex Jones, and Jeff Rense were spot-on.
01:17 PM on 12/07/2009
Excuse my absolute ignorance on the subject but I'm curious about one thing:
Did the Mayas left any clues whatsoever on how to deal with the current situation?

It seems like greed also burnt their civilizati­on into ashes. What can we learn from Dos Pilas and Petexbatún tragedies and put into practice immediatle­y?
01:34 PM on 12/07/2009
You can learn that no civilizati­on lasts forever.
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ImmanuelGoldstein
Founder of the "Brotherhood"
10:12 AM on 12/09/2009
The only thing we can learn from them is all the other lessons we can learn from studying history. The Mayans didn't predict the drought and warfare that caused their collapse, they certainly didn't predict our fundamenta­lly transient issues.
01:06 PM on 12/07/2009
Well, you've done all you can, "predatory Capitalism­" not withstandi­ng. We may prefer circus. We may prefer the simple minded diversion of tightrope walkers, Tigers jumping through hoops and above all, whirling dervish clowns. We are after all only recently come down out of the trees.
01:20 PM on 12/07/2009
We certainly do, over a statist dictatorsh­ip instituted for "our collective good". Frankly, it's better to die from environmen­t degradatio­n than by the whip.
03:47 PM on 12/07/2009
Wow, thats about the most extreme example of poor or no "logic", I've ever seen. Who said anything about dying. Theres an old saying you might want to consider, "The truth will set you free but first, it'll make you miserable.­" Or how about "The unexamined life is not woth living". Frankly, nobody's ever looked out for my "collectiv­e good" whether contemplat­ing starvation or the whip. Choose It's all you have-ever had, in spite of all the dollars you may or may not have accumulate­d that becomes just another opiate masking your real human sensibilit­ies.