Following his collaboration with Robinson, North built a web - based marketing empire built
around apocalyptic predictions that the Y2K bug would make the dawn of the 21st century «the year the earth stands still.»
Not exact matches
The conservative opposition found the passion of his condom advocacy not only thoroughly objectionable but medically unsound; his
apocalyptic predictions regarding the spread of AIDS (by 1999, he claimed, one out of every four people
around the globe would have the virus) became increasingly tedious and incrementally unbelievable.
In that article, Bailey noted that
around the time of the first Earth Day in 1970, and in the years following, there was a «torrent of
apocalyptic predictions» and many of those
predictions were featured in his Reason article.