A futurist's internet program that predicted the start of a monthslong war between humans and aliens on December 3 has gone viral online.
Clif High, a computer scientist and linguist, spoke in a YouTube video about his model's prediction, known as the "39 days to melee," that said a battle between humans and aliens in the sky would occur 39 days after a trigger incited the incident. What High calls the "temporal marker" was podcaster Joe Rogan's interview with President-elect Donald Trump on October 25.
High said: "So we're going to have these...some kind of weird confrontation visible contention which we could probably call and term combat in the skies that will show up and it'll show up at a predictable point, which is probably something over a month—and we'll put down 30 days or 39 days something—over a month after the temporal marker of, um, Trump and Rogan. And that's just the beginning of all of this, right."
Newsweek was unable to contact High for comment.
High's model predicts that "there will be 39 days between the temporal marker of Trump's interview and the appearance of this visible contention," which he said would eventually lead to melee. In this instance, the "visible contention" would be with space aliens or "alien reproduction vehicles."
The descriptors his model tracked in 2009 indicated that the visible contention would be UFOs fighting other UFOs or UFOs fighting jets.
High predicted that on December 3, visible contention between humans and aliens would begin, eventually ending in melee after an unspecified period.
His prediction model, the Web Bot, is a computer program that allows individuals to predict future events by tracking keywords on the internet. It monitors internet chatter, including articles, blogs, forums, and more, according to the Telegraph.
High created the computer program in 1997 with his partner, George Ure, but said he developed his theory regarding a war between humans and aliens in 2009.
The prediction has since gone viral on YouTube and X, formerly Twitter, with many voicing their thoughts on his theory and anticipation of a war in the skies.
High's YouTube video detailing his prediction has 110,000 views, 4,600 likes, and more than 600 comments at the time of writing.
X user @tifftastic369 wrote about High's prediction and cautioned users about analyzing them in a post that has gained nearly 300,000 views.
"It's important to note that Clif High's predictions, derived from his Web Bot project, have been met with both interest and skepticism," she wrote.
"The Web Bot, developed in the late 1990s, analyzes internet chatter to forecast future events. While some claim it has accurately predicted events like the 2003 Northeast blackout and the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, others view its forecasts as pseudoscientific and too vague to be meaningful.
"As December 3, 2024, approaches, observers are keen to see if the predicted events align with Clif High's forecasts. However, it's essential to approach such predictions with discernment, recognizing the speculative nature of these methodologies."
A Pentagon report released last month revealed that hundreds of new incidents involving unidentified aerial phenomena have been reported. However, officials at the Pentagon's Pentagon's All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office stressed that it "has discovered no evidence of extraterrestrial beings, activity, or technology."