So AK (Alabaster Knight) told me that I shouldn't plug John Titor when creating a V&V adventure. But screw that.
https://www.grunge.com/98398/untold-truth-time-traveler-john-titor/THE UNTOLD TRUTH OF 'TIME TRAVELER' JOHN TITOR
If we do someday day crack the secret code of time travel, we'll be opening a Pandora's box full of both nightmares and wonders. As if the threat of Skynet sending cyborgs back into the 1980s wasn't scary enough, the nature of time travel is so confusing that we'll forever question every element of reality.
On the other hand, what if time travelers have already set foot in our time, and we just didn't know about them? Some people believe that back in 2000, one time traveler from the future — a man who called himself John Titor — risked everything in order to tell the hairless apes of the present day a little bit about the terrifying destiny that supposedly lies ahead of us.
Before we begin, it's important to step back and remember that in the dawn of the new millennium, the internet wasn't the refined, smartphone-accessible, Facebooked social network that it is today. Back then, the internet was a scary place still trying to find itself, and you never knew who was on the other end of a screen name. It was in this atmosphere that an unknown man signed up on a message board with the username TimeTravel_0, according to i09, and opened the doors to a conversation that never closed. In January 2001, he announced his name as John Titor and said he had come from the future. He posted:
"Greetings. I am a time traveler from the year 2036. I am on my way home after getting an IBM 5100 computer system from the year 1975. My "time" machine is a stationary mass, temporal displacement unit manufactured by General Electric. The unit is powered by two, top-spin, dual-positive singularities that produce a standard, off-set Tipler sinusoid. I will be happy to post pictures of the unit."
From Day 1, John Titor started fielding a lot of questions, both from believers and disbelievers. What separated Titor from the everyday crank call was the level of detail he provided. Rather than sticking to vague fortune cookie platitudes, Titor's answers were precise.
An everyday prankster wouldn't last ten minutes when confronted with real scientists ready to poke holes in his story. However, according to the Guardian, Titor "held his own against skeptical physicists." He even shared detailed schematics and photographs of his time machine, which were all surprisingly convincing. It soon became clear that if this John Titor guy was a prankster, he'd at least done his homework.
An everyday prankster wouldn't last ten minutes when confronted with real scientists ready to poke holes in his story. However, according to the Guardian, Titor "held his own against skeptical physicists." He even shared detailed schematics and photographs of his time machine, which were all surprisingly convincing. It soon became clear that if this John Titor guy was a prankster, he'd at least done his homework.
An everyday prankster wouldn't last ten minutes when confronted with real scientists ready to poke holes in his story. However, according to the Guardian, Titor "held his own against skeptical physicists." He even shared detailed schematics and photographs of his time machine, which were all surprisingly convincing. It soon became clear that if this John Titor guy was a prankster, he'd at least done his homework.
According to AV Club, Titor claimed that his society was radically different from ours because people in 2000 were only a few years away from entering decades of horrible wars. Titor predicted that the 2004 U.S. presidential election would fracture the country into two opposing sides — yeah, you can probably guess what the sides are — resulting in a violent civil war erupting by 2008. As if that wasn't gloomy enough, the Guardian added that Titor predicted World War III would begin in 2015, caused by Russia dropping nukes on the U.S., Europe, and China, slaughtering three billion people. All this post-apocalyptic bloodshed supposedly caused Titor himself to become a child soldier at age 13.
Sadly enough, Titor made it clear that people from his time weren't too fond of the denizens of the early 2000s. After surviving the wars, he claimed that the humans of his time had become hardened, efficient workhorses who knew how to make their own tools, use their own guns, and pick up and move anywhere if they needed to. According to the Telegraph, Titor rather harshly condemned everyone in the message board by saying, "Perhaps I should let you all in on a little secret. No one likes you in the future. This time period is looked at as being full of lazy, self-centered, civically ignorant sheep."
If Titor's story were true, it'd be hard to blame him for the hard feelings, considering that his entire world seems to have gone to hell by 2015. But oddly enough, despite the fact that Titor noticeably disliked almost everyone he talked to online, this supposed time traveler did invite his followers to come to the future with him. Titor warned that the trip would be a lengthy process involving multiple long drives across the country, since the time displacement unit had to be loaded into a vehicle, a la Back to the Future. If anyone did go with him, well, we never heard about it.
According to Mike Sauve, who is known as the official John Titor academic due to his book Who Authored the John Titor Legend?, the controversial time traveler did make some friends on the message board. Titor's closest connection was a woman named Pamela Moore, who shared a warm relationship with him, almost as if she already knew him from outside the boards. Moore has said that Titor left her with a so-called "secret song," which she could use to verify his identity in case any impostors came along in the future.
According to Mike Sauve, who is known as the official John Titor academic due to his book Who Authored the John Titor Legend?, the controversial time traveler did make some friends on the message board. Titor's closest connection was a woman named Pamela Moore, who shared a warm relationship with him, almost as if she already knew him from outside the boards. Moore has said that Titor left her with a so-called "secret song," which she could use to verify his identity in case any impostors came along in the future.
If he was real, John Titor didn't stay in our time for long. After looking around, meeting the past versions of his family, and answering every question that his online following wanted to ask him, he said adios to the early 2000s. His final post appeared on March 24, 2001. To summarize why other time travelers didn't make a point to speak to denizens of the past, Titor wrote, "Quite frankly, you all scare the Hell out of me and I'm sure other temporal drivers would feel the same."
This post, which can still be seen on Stranger Dimensions, is also a lengthy speech where Titor explains what he believes is so terrible about the humans of present-day Earth, angrily stating his belief that people in the modern era needed to do a better job taking care of each other. In the post, Titor rails against the way people ignore the sick and homeless, as well as expressing his disbelief that people so callously drive right by anyone broken down on the side of the road, never asking if that person needs help.
Finally, John left his followers with a parting line that could have been a movie quote: "Bring a gas can with you when the car dies on the side of the road." After that, he sped away in his time traveling car into a temporally fleeting sunset, or whatever, presumably never to return ... right?
While most people doubt that John Titor was really a time traveler, there are those who still believe, and he may even have come back a few times. The most notable example of this occurred on November 30, 2010, when a user calling himself John Titor issued a terrifying warning on CNN's iReport feature, frantically warning the United States not to get into a war with North Korea. Titor explained that the conflict would be a horrendous mistake, which would result in half of the U.S. being wiped out.
Was this the same John Titor as before? Maybe just an impostor using the name for dramatic effect? Or perhaps, was it ... a different Titor? The time traveler's friend, Pamela Moore, told Mike Sauve that our current timeline could be invaded by John Titors from various alternate timelines, all of whom might come from different post-apocalyptic futures. For a glimpse at how confusing all these overlapping timelines can get, try watching one of the later Terminator movies.
Most observers believe the John Titor saga was a hoax, but no one has ever claimed the bragging rights for it. Nonetheless, interested parties have dug for answers. According to Pacific Standard, the most notable investigation was conducted by Voyager, an Italian TV series. Voyager's professional sleuths peeked into a for-profit LLC called the John Titor Foundation, which sells self-published collections of Titor's posts. The Foundation's CEO is a man named Lawrence "Larry" Haber. If that name sounds familiar, it's because Larry Haber is the same lawyer who represents Kay Titor, the woman who claims to be John's mother.
As written by io9, investigator Mike Lynch believes that the real John Titor is actually the lawyer's brother, a computer scientist named John Rick Haber. This guy's professional background would certainly explain why "John Titor" was so knowledgeable. According to Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Haber's son Brandon is also an IT expert who previously worked for NASA and the U.S. Air Force. Crazy stuff, but it does seem plausible that the John Titor story could've been a group effort.
As seen on Thrillist, multimedia artist Joseph Matheny claims that he was a consultant for the John Titor "project," which he says was a postmodern storytelling effort using...(cont)