First and foremost, let's clear the air a bit and get something straight once and for all; 2012 is not, nor has it ever been the prophesied date of the end of the world. No culture on the planet (save our own) has ever put in writing, glyph or folk tale that this year would bring about the annihilation of mankind. Surprised? Don't believe me? Hey, I understand, and really, it's not like I can just tell you "go look it up" because looking it up will just prove me wrong. Not because I'm wrong mind you, but because "looking it up" these days can "prove" anyone wrong. Evolutionists are well aware of this. Also, I work in television and let me tell you, the people who have the power and the will to speak to the public are rarely (if ever) the ones who know what they're speaking about. (Your's truly excluded, kindly)

Now, I'm not saying that we've made no advances since the Maya. Sure we have this wonderful, magical technology that lets us live long, fat, lazy lives. It's wonderful really. We have the previously unfathomable ability to become sick and die en-masse solely because of inactivity and eating synthetic food. What a glorious future we live in. This is how I know the Mayans could not see into the future, because if they could see us right now, they would have prophesied doomsday.
I was thinking of my country today. I realized that I can't think about Canada without two images popping into my head; oil and Harper. It's a personal fixation, I'm sure, but these two things cause me the fanciful urge to go back in time and say to the Mayan: "I'm sorry. There was no awakening of consciousness, no god-like realization of the Universe. We just kept sucking the planet dry."
For the first time in my life, I feel like leaving Canada. Not because I don't like it and not because I think I could do better somewhere else, but because I seemingly don't represent any relevant number of the populace. I feel like Canada is a drug dealer living in my neighbourhood and he's getting everyone addicted to an unsustainable lifestyle. I know the comparison has probably been made a thousand times, but it is an apt one; Canada (or the whole of western society) is Tony Montana. Do I need to explain the coke/oil metaphor? Probably not, but I walk around every day, holding that thought in my head and it's hilariously perfect. Oooh, ooh. And the Mayans are that Colombian drug lord on the phone in that scene, and they're saying "I told you a long time ago, you @#$^%," etc. etc. Anyway, you all know how it ends. Oh,wait . . . do you? Come to think of it, do any of our leaders know how it ends? Do they think the oil keeps flowing and technology keeps pumping along, extending our synthetic lives into eternity?
That's my biggest question to the world right now, and I'll leave it here as this is getting kind of long.
Where are we going? Does anyone think about this? Is there an end to the means? We are all taught to have goals for ourselves in our own little lives. They help us achieve things and stay on track. Ultimately, we know we're going to die so our goals only have to take us to the end of our lives, but it doesn't work the same for entire races of people. Human kind won't die. Not for millions, conceivably billions of years, if we do the right things. Can we think in terms like that? Can we live our lives conscious of the reality that billions of people after us will have to keep going, walking on the embers of whatever we've destroyed? It seems to me that as a whole, people are too locked into their own mortality to realize that, in a sense, we are all immortal. Humans can keep living until the sun explodes if we have the desire to. Maybe we can't get our heads around it so we live like the world ends once our own, individual life does. If this continues, then no, human kind won't go on. Isn't it all just a big waste of time then? Isn't each generation, each epoch living for themselves just the same as a person spending their entire life on the couch?
The Mayans didn't live on the couch. They sacrificed their own lives to give the future a glimpse of what we could become. They thought in terms of forever and we remember them for it. But we certainly don't honour them.