‘China’s Nostradamus’ claims US UFO recordsdata are distraction as he predicts extra ‘atrocities’
“China’s Nostradamus” Jiang Xueqin has branded Trump’s newly released UFO files “complete nonsense” and “complete BS”, telling YouTuber Sneako the alien talk is a distraction
Jiang Xueqin AKA “China’s Nostradamus” has dismissed the US Government’s newly declassified UFO files as a cynical political distraction for something much more sinister. Branding the alien hype “complete nonsense” and “complete BS”, Xueqin made some eerie revelations about the world’s future during an interview with controversial YouTuber Nico Ken De Balinthazy, better known as “Sneako”.
The interview, which was uploaded to YouTube last month, saw Xuequin telling Sneako: “Everyone knows it’s complete nonsense. It’s complete BS.
“There are no aliens; there’s no alien technology. It’s a hallucination. You just distract people.” Xuequin’s comments were ignited by US President Donald Trump’s administration which pushed ahead with a declassification drive first made in February 2026.
It ordered the Pentagon and other agencies to identify and release previously classified records linked to extraterrestrial life and so-called unexplained anomalous phenomena (UAPs). However, Xuequin insisted the public was being played.
Xuequin claimed the public is splintering into rival camps, each gripped by its own anxieties and versions of reality, the Daily Mail reported. Some, he said, obsess over UFOs, while others fixate on artificial intelligence, government conspiracies or even the supernatural.
He warned: “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.”
Xuequin argued that the UFO obsession is pulling attention away from what he sees as more serious social fault-lines. In his view, the bigger threat isn’t alien life but a culture increasingly shaped by fear, uncertainty and distrust.
He said that people gravitate towards comforting stories instead of facing hard truths, deepening divisions that can sap a country’s strength. Xuequin explained: “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 moved into even more contentious claims, questioning whether some of the world’s biggest scientific and tech ventures are really about what they say on the tin.
Pointing to CERN, the European particle physics laboratory behind the Large Hadron Collider. he challenged the sheer scale of public spending. Xuequin noted: “You have to ask yourself, why are they investing a trillion dollars to find particles?”
From there, Jiang reportedly nodded to long-running online conspiracy theories alleging CERN’s experiments are aimed at opening interdimensional portals, rather than purely advancing science. He made similar suggestions about artificial intelligence, citing remarks attributed to an anonymous OpenAI employee quoted in a New Yorker article about the company’s ambitions.
Jiang said these ideas fit what he described as a wider belief that powerful institutions have long taken an interest in forces beyond conventional human understanding. He went on to claim elites throughout history have believed in supernatural or interdimensional entities, and suggested human consciousness may be able to interact with them.
He also said some conspiracy theories hinge on the idea that influential figures pursue hidden knowledge, longer life and greater power by seeking contact with such entities, though he offered no evidence for those allegations.
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