A professor known as ‘China’s Nostradamus’ has issued a haunting prediction following the Trump administration’s release of previously classified UFO documents.
Jiang Xueqin, a Chinese-Canadian academic and political commentator, has earned the moniker due to a series of geopolitical predictions that his supporters claim have come to fruition.
Among his notable forecasts are Donald Trump’s potential return to the presidency in 2024 and a looming conflict involving the United States, Israel, and Iran during Trump’s administration.
Jiang has now shifted his focus to the government’s increasing transparency regarding UFOs, cautioning that the repercussions might extend far beyond mere speculation about extraterrestrial life.
In an interview with YouTuber Nico Ken De Balinthazy, also known as Sneako, Jiang dismissed the notion that aliens are behind the mysterious sightings detailed in the UFO documents.
“Everyone knows it’s complete nonsense,” he stated. “It’s absolute BS. There are no aliens; there’s no alien technology. It’s a hallucination. It’s just a distraction for the public.”
Instead, Jiang argued that society is becoming increasingly fractured as people embrace competing fears and belief systems.
Some focus on UFOs, he said, while others become consumed by concerns about artificial intelligence, government conspiracies or even supernatural forces. ‘And 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,’ Jiang warned.
His comments come as the Trump administration continues rolling out previously classified records related to unidentified anomalous phenomena, or UAPs.
A video released in the first wave of UFO files appeared to show a glowing object resembling an ‘eight-pointed star’ with uneven arms moving across the sky
The disclosure effort, which began on May 8, has already produced two major releases containing videos, photographs and intelligence documents that had remained hidden from the public for years.
The latest batch included 46 videos that members of Congress had been demanding the Pentagon release for months.
Some of the footage appears to show strange metallic spheres or orb-like objects moving at high speeds over mountains, oceans and military facilities.
Other documents detail sightings stretching back decades and include accounts from military personnel, intelligence officers and pilots who reported encounters they could not explain.
The releases have reignited debate over whether governments possess evidence of extraterrestrial life and whether the public is finally being shown information that was previously withheld.
Jiang, however, believes the fascination with UFOs is distracting people from deeper social problems.
The greatest danger, he argued, is not alien life but a society increasingly driven by fear, uncertainty and distrust.
He warned that people may turn to comforting narratives rather than confront difficult realities, creating divisions that can weaken entire nations.
Jiang Xueqin dismissed the idea that alien visitors are behind the unexplained sightings documented in newly released government records
‘They would rather close their eyes and shut off their ears and just live in the normal world,’ Jiang said.
‘We’ve seen this happen historically before, where empires decline because of civil war, because they get exhausted.’
The analyst then ventured into more controversial territory, suggesting that some of the world’s most ambitious scientific and technological projects may be driven by motives far beyond their publicly stated goals.
Pointing to CERN, the European particle physics laboratory that operates the Large Hadron Collider, Jiang questioned why governments have spent enormous sums studying subatomic particles.
‘You have to ask yourself, why are they investing a trillion dollars to find particles?’ he said.
Jiang then referenced longstanding online conspiracy theories claiming that CERN’s experiments are designed to open interdimensional portals rather than simply advance scientific knowledge.
He made similar claims about artificial intelligence, citing comments from an anonymous OpenAI employee quoted in a New Yorker article about the company’s ambitions.
According to Jiang, these ideas reflect a broader belief that powerful institutions have long been interested in forces that exist beyond conventional human understanding.
He argued that elites throughout history have believed in the existence of supernatural or interdimensional entities and claimed that human consciousness may be capable of interacting with them.
Jiang further suggested that some conspiracy theories are rooted in the belief that powerful individuals seek hidden knowledge, longevity and greater influence through contact with such entities, though he offered no evidence to support those claims.
Whether his latest prediction proves accurate remains to be seen.