Well yeah, I was gonna say: Higgses would have existed in great profusion in the very early universe, just after the Big Bang, and particles with energies many orders of magnitude higher than the energy that will (hopefully, maybe, perhaps) be achieved at the LHC smash into the Earth's upper atmosphere all the time. And for those particles to have those energies, still more energetic events must have created them in the first place. So really, the universe (and even our small corner of it) is and always has been full of Higgs bosons, along with whatever other exotic particles and phenomena some people have predicted could spell doom for us.
Secondly, collisions between elementary particles are explicitly quantum-mechanical by nature, which is to say probabilistic, so if there was some ghostly hand of chance trying to prevent Higgs bosons from being made, it could just wait until the LHC was up and running and then simply ensure that no Higgses were made, even though millions of them 'should' be made in a year of running at the nominal energy.
So the whole idea only makes any sense, to the extent that it makes any sense at all, if the universe had some particular prejudice agains Higgs bosons being created by human beings - which strikes me as just a teeensy bit anthropocentric, to say nothing of ludicrous.
(Nomad, AFAIK the possibility of igniting the Earth's atmosphere with a nuclear explosion was put forward by people who knew their stuff as a real possibility; it was certainly more plausible than the idea of particle physics experiments bringing about doomsday as it would certainly have been the first time in the Earth's history that a macroscopic plasma of that temperature and density was achieved. The individual particles involved in experiments or cosmic ray collisions have much higher energy that those produced in a nuclear blast, but it's only a few particles, as opposed to several kg of matter being suddenly raised to millions of degrees in a nanosecond.)
Edit:
This malign influence from the future, they argue, could explain why the United States Superconducting Supercollider, also designed to find the Higgs, was canceled in 1993 after billions of dollars had already been spent, an event so unlikely that Dr. Nielsen calls it an “anti-miracle.”
Never underestimate the antipathy of the American Christian Right towards witchcra- I mean science!
