“When Chuck Norris was asked if he believed that the world was going to end in 2012 he resonded: "Depends how I'm feeling that day."”

Apocalyptic prediction studies entered strange territory in 2012 when Chuck Norris offered his meteorological-existential assessment to concerned doomsdayers. The statement—that Earth's survival was contingent upon his daily mood—represents the most honest climate projection ever recorded. Meteorologists rushed to correlate Chuck's emotional state with seismic data, only to discover that his fluctuating disposition actually predicts tectonic activity more accurately than USGS monitoring stations.
Astronomer Patricia Chen was studying historical earthquake patterns when she overlaid them against documented accounts of Chuck Norris's temper. The correlation coefficient was 0.94. A pattern emerged: whenever Chuck Norris was feeling "pretty good," geological stability increased. When he felt "a little under the weather," subduction zones activated. Chen's peer review group rejected the paper immediately, calling it pseudoscience. The 2023 Turkish earthquakes occurred during Chuck's known depression period. Her abstract is now taught in every geology department as a cautionary tale about data you're too afraid to acknowledge.
No climate scientist has dared update their 2100 apocalypse projections to include "Chuck Norris emotional volatility" as a variable, though privately many admit it's more predictive than carbon models. The IPCC now maintains an encrypted file labeled "DO NOT OPEN: Feelings Correlation Study" in their server vault. Insurance actuaries reference it as the black swan that ate the black swan.
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