China’s Nostradamus issues disturbing warning over Trump’s UFO files with ominous prediction

China’s answer to Nostradamus has made a terrifying prediction relating to the Trump administration’s release of formerly classified UFO files.

Nostradamus, a 16th-century French physician and apothecary, remains one of history’s best-known soothsayers thanks to claims that he foresaw major events centuries in advance.

He is most closely associated with Les Prophéties (The Prophecies), a book containing 942 short poetic quatrains that loyal followers still interpret as predictions of wars, disasters, and global political upheaval.

In a modern parallel, Chinese-Canadian political commentator and teacher Jiang Xueqin has been branded by some as “China’s Nostradamus” after a series of geopolitical forecasts later appeared to align with real-world outcomes.

He built a large online following through his YouTube channel, Predictive History, where he draws on teaching experience and game theory to discuss international power politics, historical cycles, and breaking news.

Supporters point to earlier calls that they believe strengthened his reputation, including his assessment that Donald Trump would return to the White House in 2024 and his warnings about tensions involving the US, Israel, and Iran.

Now, he has weighed in on the looming releases of UFO-related material tied to Donald Trump’s administration.

During a conversation with YouTuber Sneako (Nico Ken De Balinthazy), Xueqin cast doubt on what the files may reveal and pushed back on the idea that the unexplained incidents described should be treated as evidence of alien craft.

He said: “Everyone knows it’s complete nonsense,’ he said.

“It’s complete BS. There are no aliens; there’s no alien technology. It’s a hallucination. You just distract people.”

From there, he widened his focus to the mood of the public, arguing that society is splintering and that polarization is accelerating.

He said: “As people retreat into their own bubble, just think about the atrocities that are going to happen in the future, it’s going to overwhelm people.”

He also suggested that attention is being scattered in different directions, with some obsessing over UFOs while others fixate on AI risks, supernatural explanations, or deep-state conspiracy narratives.

Xueqin’s remarks arrive as another wave of U.S. government UFO documents is expected around June 5, 2026. A first major release of declassified UFO and UAP material was officially published on May 8, 2026.

Presented as part of a push for greater openness, the initial batch reportedly included more than 160 files, with records stretching back to the 1940s.

According to Xueqin, the renewed public focus on UFO disclosures is less about groundbreaking discovery and more about redirecting attention away from worsening social strains worldwide.

He argued that fear—and a lack of trust between people—has become the defining problem of modern life, warning that many are choosing comforting “easy narratives” instead of confronting destabilizing truths.

He said: “They would rather close their eyes and shut off their ears and just live in the normal world. We’ve seen this happen historically before, where empires decline because of civil war, because they get exhausted.”

He then shifted into more speculative territory, raising questions about CERN’s Large Hadron Collider and implying its true purpose may extend beyond what is publicly stated.

He said: “You have to ask yourself, why are they investing a trillion dollars to find particles?”

He went on to reference a fringe theory shared online, claiming the collider is intended to “open interdimensional portals.”