Rock and
Pop Stars of the Apocalypse
ELVIS FLASHED MAYAN 2012 JUMPSUIT;
JIMI HENDRIX PREDICTED POLE SHIFT;
MICHAEL JACKSON WARNED OF THE END TIMES
The Mayans weren't the only ones
to believe that time is rapidly runing out for
the human race. Elvis Presley, Jimi Hendrix and
Michael Jackson all believed in doomsday, according
to rock guru Michael C. Luckman, founder of the
Cosmic Majority and director of the New York
Center for Extraterrestrial Research.
Luckman, who wrote "Alien Rock: The Rock 'n' Roll Extraterrestrial Connection " (Simon
and Schuster), a book read by Prince William
which focuses on rock and pop music icons and
their alien encounters, said that Elvis felt
that the Mayans were right on target with their
so-called doomsday calendar, so much so that
the King wore a jumpsuit featuring the Mayan
calendar for a live television special and in
the last concert before his death. The bejeweled
white jumpsuit, one of Elvis' favorites, is currently
on display at Graceland.
Larry Geller, Elvis' close friend and hairstylist,
confirmed to Luckman that Elvis was all shook
up over Biblical prophecies dealing with the
Final Days, which he thought were fast approaching. "Elvis
had secret plans to put his career on hold and
to perform as a musical ambassador to the Middle
East to help prevent World War III," said
Luckman.
"Hendrix predicted both a catastrophic
Pole Shift and a large asteroid hitting Earth
in the near future," said Luckman. Luckman
quoted Hendrix as saying that "The world
is going to go topsy turvy" and calling
people who were preparing for this eventuality "The
Chosen Ones." Hendrix criticized the Establishment,
saying that it was "going to crumble away" as
a result of abusing the planet and because of
powerful changes underway in the Solar System
that no one could do anything about.
"Jimi spoke of the rise and fall of civilizations
triggered by earth changes that occur in cycles.
Hendrix's comments were witnessed by his drummer,
the late Buddy Miles, on December 12, 1979," said
Luckman. "Hendrix was more than 30 years
ahead of his time in looking at the problems
that we now face. He was a true visionary."
Jackson, a devout member of the Jehovah's Witnesses
who sometimes dressed in a disguise that included
a "fat suit" in order to go door to
door preaching the group's religious beliefs,
confided to Luckman in 2007 that he believed
that the Biblical End Times were coming and voiced
his concern that Earth's rainforests would soon
vanish. "The planet is sick...like a fever," the
King of Pop told Luckman. Jackson had turned
his attention towards global warming and climate
change when tragedy struck.
The superstar singer said that meeting
Luckman was "a billion-to-one chance" to
share their common interests. Jackson once
asked Luckman to serve as a consultant
for a high-tech, multi-million dollar alien
landing pad that the Gloved One wanted
to build in the Nevada desert to welcome
aliens to Earth. "He also wanted to
perform the Moonwalk on the Moon," Luckman
recalled. Television host Matt Lauer introduced
Luckman as "the man who would serve
as matchmaker between Michael Jackson and
the aliens."
Luckman pointed out that Britney Spears'
sizzling music video, "Til the End
of the World," written by well known
pop singer Kesha, is based on the controversial
Mayan calendar, which ends on December
21, 2012. To date, the video has scored
a record 92 MILLION hits on YouTube," said
Luckman, "clearly establishing Britney
as the reigning Queen of the 2012 Apocalypse." R.E.M.'s
hit song, "It's the End of the World
As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)," meanwhile
has become the unofficial anthem of the
2012 survival movement. In marked contrast,
British pop supergroup Muse takes things
quite a bit further down the road to oblivion
with their shocking doomsday tune titled, "Apocalypse,
Please."
Luckman, who taught the nation's first
college course on rock music and the youth
culture at the New School for Social Research,
promoted last year's "Legend of the
13 Crystal Skulls" conference in New
York City featuring four leading Mayan
elders. The Mayans believe that their space
gods will soon be returning to Earth. Among
the celebrities who have read Luckman's
blockbuster "Alien Rock" book
are Bono, Steven Spielberg, Shirley MacLaine,
Dan Aykroyd, David Lee Roth, Yoko Ono,
Ringo Starr and Bianca Jagger.
Prince William reportedly was starstruck
after reading "Alien
Rock " during
his courtship of his bride-to-be, Kate
Middleton, at Queen Elizabeth's beloved
Balmoral Castle in Scotland. Andre Van
Pier, Luckman's late business partner,
designed couture worn by Wills' mother,
Princess
Diana, just before she was killed in a
suspicious car accident in a Paris tunnel.
A news
photograph taken
during that period shows Princess Diana
wearing Van Pier's signature blazer with
the initials "AVP" sewn in diamonds
on the pocket. Sadly it was one of the
last outfits that Diana ever wore.

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