A British psychic who claims to have foreseen both Donald Trump’s 2016 election victory and the coronavirus pandemic has issued a series of stark predictions about the global consequences of the ongoing war in Iran — including food rationing in Britain and the possibility of Trump serving a third presidential term.
Craig Hamilton-Parker, a content creator known within some circles as the “Prophet of Doom” and the “New Nostradamus”, says the combination of the Iran conflict, the war in Ukraine and accelerating climate change could converge into what he describes as a “perfect storm” with severe consequences for ordinary people in the UK before the year is out.
Twenty days have passed since the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. With Donald Trump signalling he is not yet ready to pursue a negotiated end to hostilities, Hamilton-Parker believes the ripple effects could prove far-reaching.
In a recent video, the psychic pointed to deteriorating weather patterns across Europe — including flooding and drought — as evidence of the disruption already underway. “When we’ve been out to Italy, there’s also been dried up olive groves,” he said, adding that shipping and trade patterns were being disrupted alongside agricultural output. He also warned that grain harvests in Ukraine remained under threat. Taken together, he argued, these pressures could leave Britain’s poorest households dependent on food coupons by the end of 2026.
Hamilton-Parker went further still, suggesting that if global instability continues to escalate, Trump might seek to remain in power beyond his current term — despite the constitutional constraints that would ordinarily prevent it. The 22nd Amendment to the US Constitution limits a president to two terms, but legal analysts at Cornerstone Law Firm have noted that the amendment prohibits being elected to a third term, not necessarily serving one. A separate constitutional mechanism allows the House of Representatives to select a president in the event that no candidate secures a majority of Electoral College votes.
“Things have changed so much in the world,” Hamilton-Parker said. “Who knows?”
Trump himself has raised the subject on multiple occasions, at one point saying he was “not joking” about the prospect, while also appearing to rule out exploiting any legal loophole. He currently has two years and ten months remaining in his present term.
Hamilton-Parker’s predictions remain unverified and are not endorsed by any scientific or political authority.
