Following the Trump administration’s release of previously classified UFO material, a scholar known as “China’s Nostradamus” made a terrifying warning.
The moniker was given to Chinese-Canadian political analyst and educator Jiang Xueqin after he made a number of geopolitical prophecies that, according to his followers, eventually came to pass.
They included predictions that Donald Trump will take office again in 2024 and that, under his leadership, Israel and the United States would engage in hostilities with Iran.
Jiang has now focused on the Trump administration’s expanding UFO disclosure initiative, cautioning that the repercussions could go well beyond concerns about extraterrestrial life.
Jiang rejected the notion that alien visitors are responsible for the strange sightings reported in recently revealed government documents in an interview with YouTuber Nico Ken De Balinthazy, often known online as Sneako. “Everyone knows it’s complete nonsense,” he said. “It’s total nonsense.” Both aliens and alien technology do not exist. It’s a delusion. You only divert people’s attention.
Rather, Jiang contended that when people adopt conflicting fears and ideologies, society is growing more divided.
According to him, some people become fixated on UFOs, while others are overwhelmed by worries about artificial intelligence, plots by the government, or even supernatural entities. Additionally, people withdraw into their own bubbles. People would be overwhelmed by the crimes that will occur in the future, Jiang said.
His remarks coincide with the Trump administration’s ongoing release of formerly secret documents pertaining to UAPs, or unidentified abnormal occurrences.
A luminous object with unequal arms that resembled a “eight-pointed star” was seen moving across the sky in a video included in the initial wave of UFO data.
Two significant disclosures of videos, images, and intelligence papers that had been kept secret from the public for years have already resulted from the disclosure campaign, which started on May 8.
46 films that Congressmen had been requesting the Pentagon release for months were included in the most recent batch.
A portion of the video seems to show odd metallic spheres or objects that resemble orbs traveling quickly across mountains, seas, and military installations.
Other records contain reports from pilots, military people, and intelligence professionals about encounters they were unable to explain, as well as sightings dating back decades.
The disclosures have rekindled discussion about whether governments have proof of extraterrestrial life and whether previously concealed information is now being made public.
However, Jiang thinks that people’s obsession with UFOs is diverting attention away from more serious social issues.
He contended that a society increasingly motivated by mistrust, fear, and uncertainty poses a greater threat than extraterrestrial life.
He cautioned that instead of facing harsh truths, individuals would resort to consoling stories, which could cause divisions that could undermine entire countries.
“They would rather close their eyes and shut off their ears and just live in the normal world,” Jiang Xueqin said, rejecting the notion that alien visitors are responsible for the unexplained sightings reported in recently made public government records. “We’ve seen this happen historically, where empires decline because of civil war, because they get exhausted.”
The analyst then went into more contentious ground, speculating that some of the most ambitious scientific and technological endeavors in the world might have motivations that go much beyond their declared objectives.
Jiang questioned why governments had spent so much money researching subatomic particles, citing CERN, the European particle physics institute that runs the Large Hadron Collider.
You have to question yourself, “Why are they spending $1 trillion to find particles?”He uttered those words.
Jiang then cited long-standing internet conspiracy theories asserting that CERN’s activities aren’t just meant to further science but are also intended to open interdimensional portals.
Citing remarks from an unnamed OpenAI employee cited in a New Yorker piece about the company’s goals, he made similar assertions regarding AI.
These concepts, according to Jiang, are part of a larger conviction that influential organizations have long had an interest in forces that are outside the realm of human comprehension.
He maintained that throughout history, elites have held the belief that supernatural or interdimensional beings exist and that human consciousness might be able to communicate with them.
Jiang went on to say that some conspiracy theories stem from the idea that influential people desire longevity, hidden knowledge, and increased power by interacting with such creatures, but he provided no proof to back up such assertions.
It remains to be seen if his most recent prediction comes true.