
A man, known to his followers as the “New Nostradamus”, claims to have accurately predicted at least four major events in recent history. Athos Salomé is a self-proclaimed paranormal expert and fortune teller who claims that he was right about his prophecies about the coronavirus pandemic, Elon Musk buying X (formerly Twitter), and Queen Elizabeth’s death.
Aiming to silence his critics, Salomé points to many more such predictions he made that came true.
One such claim is about the 'God of chaos' asteroid which is predicted to come dangerously close to Earth in 2029. He told Daily Star, "On 28 July this year, I posted a video in my Instagram stories again about the asteroid, predicting that NASA would make an announcement in September, confirming that the asteroid would enter a collision course with Earth by November."
Notably, even though the asteroid currently is not on course to hit Earth, recent reports suggest that there is a slight chance that it might divert and change trajectory to create a scenario for a scary encounter. However, we won't know if it has until 2027.
Among his other reported predictions is the mass Microsoft outage, where he says he warned people that it may lead to an “escalation of confrontation” and cyber war.
"This event may result in shifts in political actions and military tactics on an international level, and the threat of an international war is real,” he previously told the Daily Mail.
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He further claims he was right about the planned cyberattacks targeting the 2024 Paris Olympics. “Events of such magnitude like the Olympics would be the ideal attack targets, capable of causing disturbances in the existing order,” he told the Daily Mail.
Talking about the matter, he warned that a significant cyberattack can “‘cripple nations", and that our "focus should be on resolutions and preventing conflicts".
Typhoon Yagi, which has wrecked Vietnam, also seems to be on his list of prophecies. He reportedly warned of severe weather impacting parts of Asia.
“In September of 2024 real events supported these expectations with typhoon Yagi,” Salomé said.
Typhoon Yagi triggered landslides and floods in Vietnam, leaving at least 254 dead and 82 missing.