US | Harold Camping Rescheduled Rapture Doesn't Happen Harold Camping appears to have miscalculated again By Rob Quinn Posted Oct 21, 2011 6:04 AM CDT Copied Harold Camping speaks during a taping of his show "Open Forum" in Oakland, Calif., Monday, May 23, 2011 (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez) If you're reading this and the world isn't in the process of being annihilated around you, it means Harold Camping got it wrong again. After his original prediction that the Rapture would arrive May 21 didn't come true, the doomsday prophet decided that he had miscalculated and that Judgment Day would actually arrive on Oct. 21—today. The 90-year-old, who suffered a stroke in May, has kept a lower profile this time around. His followers—some of whom spent their life savings advertising May's apocalypse—have gradually drifted away and his daily radio program has been canceled. A Reuters reporter found him at his California home yesterday, where he answered the door in a bathrobe. "We're not having a conversation," he said with a chuckle. "There's nothing to report here." Read These Next Mexico says it killed top drug trafficker. BBC apologizes after racial slur heard at BAFTAs. The author of an acclaimed novel is being sued over its contents. Middle East nations rip Huckabee's talk of Israeli takeover. Report an error