Heaven is a fantasy a Hoax-Arnold Schwarzenegger

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FILE - In this April 4, 2019, file photo, Arnold Schwarzenegger, a cast member in the upcoming film "Terminator: Dark Fate," discusses the film during the Paramount Pictures presentation at CinemaCon 2019, the official convention of the National Association of Theatre Owners at Caesars Palace, in Las Vegas. Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver’s marriage is officially over more than 10 years after the award-winning journalist petitioned to end her then-25-year marriage to the action star and former California governor. A Los Angeles judge finalized the divorce on Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2021, court records show. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP, File)

At 75, Arnold Schwarzenegger is thinking about the big questions of life. He opened up about his thoughts on the afterlife in a conversation with his “Twins” co-star Danny DeVito for Interview Magazine.

Devito asked “The Terminator” star, “What’s in the future for us?” and he gave a thoughtful answer to a question that philosophers, scientists and religious leaders have grappled with since the dawn of humanity.

“It reminds me of Howard Stern’s question to me. ‘Tell me, governor, what happens to us when we die?’ I said, ‘Nothing. You’re 6 feet under,’” he told DeVito.

“I said, ‘We don’t know what happens with the soul and all this spiritual stuff that I’m not an expert in, but I know that the body as we see each other now, we will never see each other again like that,'” continued Schwarzenegger.

Schwarzenegger admitted that he’s not comfortable with the topic of death but thinks the notion of a heaven is a “fantasy.”

“When people talk about, ‘I will see them again in heaven,’ it sounds so good, but the reality is that we won’t see each other again after we’re gone. That’s the sad part. I know people feel comfortable with death, but I don’t,'” he said.

Arnold Schwarzenegger has revealed that film producers originally had another celebrity in mind to play The Terminator — none other than OJ Simpson.

The former California governor discussed the casting decision that made him a film star in the 1970s in a new Netflix docuseries about his life, telling how producers had originally thought he should play the role of rebel fighter Kyle Reese and then-football star Simpson should play the killer robot.

But as the production moved forward, Schwarzenegger said, ‘no one’ at at Orion Pictures —which distributed the blockbuster movie — thought Simpson would be believable as a ‘killing machine.’

James Cameron, the director, then pushed him to take on the role, but the now 75-year-old said he was reluctant to do so.

It is just the latest revelation from the docuseries, which chronicles Schwarzenegger’s life, acting career and his transition to politics.

By  Rachael Shieley