Talk of a “new Nostradamus” tends to grab attention, especially when it involves bold claims about global conflict or political figures like Donald Trump. In this case, the prediction attributed to Craig Hamilton-Parker leans less on supernatural certainty and more on a familiar pattern: how people and institutions respond under pressure. The scenario he describes imagines a world already strained by geopolitical tensions, where fear and instability begin to reshape what once felt non-negotiable.
At the center of the discussion is the idea that even well-established rules—such as those outlined in the Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution—could be questioned during moments of crisis. While such changes would face significant legal and political barriers, the broader point isn’t about a specific outcome. It’s about how quickly conversations can shift when uncertainty grows and people begin prioritizing stability above all else.