by Scott Creighton
Remember back during the Gulf Spill crisis and each and every day Mike Rivero at What Really Happened had some new horrific prediction about how another valve was going to blow out or poison gas leaking from the blown well-head blowing on shore in Florida killing everything that moves? He ended up, before it was all over, going on and on about the oil cavity under the Gulf of Mexico collapsing and the mighty tidal wave of 80 feet or more wiping us poor Floridians off the map like so many fire ants on my front stoop last week. He had my poor 70 year old mother so terrified of being drowned like a rat she wanted to pack up and flee for destinations unknown.
Never happened. Not “what really happened” but “what never happened”.
As bad as the truth about the BP oil spill was and IS… Mike seemed quite happy to make it seem worst than it was or could ever have been.
Mike also has a policy on his “radio show” of cutting people off who happen to talk about “what really happened” at the Pentagon.
It appears Mike’s opinion is that “what really happened” is exactly what the Pentagon says happened and if you even hint at anything else, he’ll hang up on you.
Because,it seems, “what really happened’ can’t stand up to open debate, apparently. Which, oddly, is the same position that Shyam Sunder of NIST takes.
Well, Mike is at it again.
In spite of the plethora of good news trickling out of Japan regarding their nuclear power plant, old Doomsday Mike is literally spouting more end-times prognostications about “Burn Throughs” in Japan. In one frame of his video on the front page of his website today, Mike has the words “Nuclear Apocalypse in Japan” in bold bold white superimposed over a Geiger counter. Then a quick flash of what, I guess, is supposed to be a burning Japanese skyline. It’s comical actually.
Think I’m bullshitting you? Here’s a screenshot of what Mike Rivero produced and is putting up on his site today…

Is this What Really Happened?
Continue reading →
Filed under: Japan Earthquake, Japan Tsunami, Scott Creighton | 20 Comments »