This Will END the War:
Prof. Xiang’s New Thesis
A viral Chinese professor connects every global conflict into one framework—and reveals why the world order you know is already over.
The Unified Conflict Thesis
Professor Xiang—who went viral after his appearance on Tucker Carlson’s podcast—presents an argument that upends conventional geopolitical analysis: the Middle East war, Russia–Ukraine war, and US–China tensions are not separate crises. They are deeply interconnected threads of a single, systemic unraveling.
“The United States should change its strategy by engaging in dialogue with rivals like Russia, China, and Iran, and accept that the world is no longer unipolar but moving toward a shared global order based on cooperation rather than dominance.”
— Prof. Xiang’s core argument
He also makes a provocative observation: some countries, like Russia, can actually benefit from prolonged conflicts due to shifts in global energy markets. When war disrupts supply chains, energy exporters gain leverage—a dynamic that incentivizes certain actors to prolong rather than resolve conflicts.
Three Seismic Shifts Coming
If conflicts continue on their current trajectory, Professor Xiang predicts three fundamental transformations:
1. De-industrialization
Rising energy costs may weaken large economies and shift focus toward local production and basic needs like food and energy. The factories that defined the 20th century may give way to distributed, localized manufacturing.
2. Remilitarization
Countries may stop relying on US protection and begin strengthening their own militaries. The security umbrella that shaped post-WWII alliances is fraying—and nations are quietly preparing to stand alone.
3. Self-Sufficiency (Mercantilism)
Nations may reduce dependence on global trade and build their own supply chains. The era of hyper-globalization may be giving way to economic nationalism and regional trade blocs.
Bottom line: The world may move toward a more fragmented system where US dominance declines and global power becomes more distributed. These predictions remain uncertain—but the trends are accelerating.
The Key Insight Most People Miss
“Decisions—both personal and political—are shaped more by immediate, internal pressures than by larger, visible goals.”
This is the lens through which Prof. Xiang reads every conflict. Not ideology. Not history. But the urgent, invisible forces pressing on leaders right now.
Your 2026 Readiness Score
Answer these questions honestly to gauge how prepared you are for the geopolitical shifts ahead. No data is collected.
Preparing for 2026: 5 Actionable Steps
Build Financial Resilience
Aim for 6-12 months of savings. Diversify across currencies, assets, and geographies. Cash reserves matter more in uncertain times.
Develop Portable Skills
Learn skills that transfer across industries and borders—digital literacy, negotiation, data analysis, and critical thinking.
Understand Energy & Food Systems
Know where your energy and food come from. Consider local sourcing, home gardens, and energy efficiency as hedges against global disruption.
Strengthen Local Networks
In a fragmenting world, local communities become lifelines. Invest in relationships, mutual aid groups, and neighborhood connections.
Stay Informed, Not Anxious
Follow quality analysis over clickbait. Understanding trends gives you agency. Panic takes it away. Be the person who sees what’s coming—and acts calmly.
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