PROPHECY UPDATE
PROPHECY RELATED NEWS AND COMMENTARY
Thursday, June 4, 2026
UFO Disclosure, Alien Contact, And Spiritual Deception
World Cup, Ebola, And Bioengineered Mosquitoes: A New Era Of Biological Risk?
'Super El Nino' Coming And Expected Decline In Food Production
The “9,000-mile marine heatwave” in the North Pacific is absolutely astounding climate scientists.
At the same time, the warming in the equatorial waters where El Niño events normally develop is at a level that we haven’t seen since at least 1877…
That “Super El Niño” was one of the primary reasons why 50 million people starved during the Great Famine that stretched from 1876 to 1878…
This El Niño, they say, could rival the intense event of the late 19th century that triggered “the Great Famine” on a global scale, killing millions of people. And its scythe sliced through southern Africa.
“The 1876-78 Great Famine impacted multiple regions across the globe, including parts of Asia, Nordeste [Northeast] Brazil, and northern and southern Africa, with total human fatalities exceeding 50 million people, arguably the worst environmental disaster to befall humanity,” a team of scientists said a decade ago in a ground-breaking paper presented at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
3 percent of the entire population of the world starved to death during those years.
Today, 3 percent of the entire population of the world would be 240,000,000 people.
In 1982 and 1983, we experienced the most severe “Super El Niño” of the 20th century…
Now we are being warned that the most powerful “Super El Niño” of all time could potentially be ahead of us.
We could see hot temperatures all over the world this summer, and we are being told that we are likely to see severe drought conditions “in southern Africa, Australia, India, the Indochina Peninsula and Oceania”…
Easterly trade winds across the equator, meanwhile, are replaced by bursts of westerly surface winds. Those pile warm waters against the western shores of South America. That suppresses cool ocean upwelling from below, which is needed to bring nutrient-rich waters closer to the surface. That starves baitfish and means poor fish harvests for dependent countries in Central America and the Pacific coast of South America.
Drought, meanwhile, is likely in southern Africa, Australia, India, the Indochina Peninsula and Oceania. Southeast Asia, meanwhile, could see above-average rainfall and more flooding.
Here in the United States, we could see a lot less rain than normal in the Midwest, and temperatures in the heartland could be 3 to 6 degrees above normal.
In other words, it would be horrible growing weather.
Our farmers are already facing much higher diesel prices, much higher fertilizer prices and a multi-year drought that never seems to end. Now a “Godzilla El Niño” could be on the way, and the World Meteorological Organization is telling us to brace for the worst…
In this country, where do we grow most of our wheat, rice, corn and soybeans?
Everyone knows that it is in the heartland, and the heartland of this country is about to get hit by a climate sledgehammer.
Of course we all still have to eat, and so demand for food is not going to go down.
Since there won’t be as much food produced, that means that prices are likely to spike…
Because demand for basic staples is inelastic – consumers must eat regardless of cost – even small supply deficits cause disproportionate price surges. Scenarios for this El Nino indicate price shocks of 10% to 50% across core commodities, with highly exposed crops, including rice, palm oil, sugarcane and coffee, potentially experiencing surges of 50% to 100%, or more.
In the past, price shocks struck one commodity at a time. A simultaneous, cross-category surge means consumers will be hit harder and broader than ever before.
Israel Is Winning in Gaza
The killing of Ahmed Jabari in November 2012 marked a dramatic turning point in the conflict between Israel and Hamas. Jabari, Hamas’s top military commander, was killed in Gaza while traveling in his vehicle. Israel immediately braced for retaliation, and Hamas responded with massive rocket fire toward Israeli cities, including Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, triggering Operation Pillar of Defense.
The contrast between what happened then and what is happening today is almost unimaginable.
On May 15 of this year, Israel eliminated Izz al-Din al-Haddad, Hamas’s chief military commander in Gaza. Ten days later, on May 26, Israel killed his successor, Mohammed Odeh. In the past, such consecutive blows against Hamas’s senior military leadership would almost automatically have triggered a major regional escalation.
Yet this time, no significant response came.
These operations are not isolated events. They are part of a broader strategic process Israel has been carrying out in Gaza over recent months: the systematic destruction of Hamas’s military infrastructure, including command centers, weapons depots, tunnel networks, and operatives across multiple levels of command.
At the same time, Israel has steadily expanded its operational and territorial control inside the Gaza Strip. Today, Israel reportedly controls approximately 65% of Gaza….
That is up from the 53% of Gazan territory, to the east of the Yellow Line, that the IDF controlled just a few weeks ago. And the IDF will not stop at 65%, but intends to control at least 70% of Gaza before it calls a halt to its advance.
The only country with influence over Israel’s campaign in Gaza is the United States, and the administration has made clear that Israel is free to do whatever it deems necessary in Gaza.
It is Israel, not Hamas, that is winning in Gaza. It has inexorably taken over more and more of the Strip’s territory, now 65%, and soon to be 70% of the total. Out of an estimated initial total of 400 miles of Hamas tunnels, the IDF has destroyed at least 150 miles. With each passing day, the IDF locates more, and destroys more, of the tunnel network. On October 7, 2023, the IDF estimates that Hamas had 40,000 men under arms in Gaza. Since then, the IDF estimates it has killed at least 25,000 of them. Hamas has managed to recruit an estimated 5,000 new recruits during the war, which leaves it with a total of 20,000, that is only half as many men as it had before October 7. By any measure, Hamas is losing badly. And inside Gaza, anti-Hamas militias have sprung up to keep their own neighborhoods free of Hamas and therefore, they hope, free of IDF attacks. There are four of these militias: first, the Popular Forces, with some 700 fighters, who operate in eastern Rafah and Khan Yunis; second, the Al-Astal Militia, who operate around Qizal al-Najjar in the Khan Yunis governorate; third, the Popular Army (Northern branch), that operates out of northern Gaza; fourth, Rami Helles’ Militia, operating in the eastern areas of Gaza City. Hamas has issued threats to these militias to disband and join Hamas, but so far it has been afraid to take any of them on.
Hamas is now so weak that it does not dare to attack even the smallest of these militias.
Why Did Trump Demand that Netanyahu Stop IDF Attack on Hezbollah Sites in Beirut?
Later, Netanyahu announced that he had told Trump that “if Hezbollah doesn’t stop attacking our towns and citizens – Israel will attack terror targets in Beirut.”
He also said that the IDF would continue to operate as planned in southern Lebanon.
The Lebanese Embassy in Washington had earlier confirmed that Hezbollah had accepted the US proposal, saying that the ceasefire framework would be expanded to encompass “all Lebanese territories.”tories.”
But as of now, that “ceasefire framework only includes Beirut. The IDF will continue to target “all Lebanese territories” except Beirut.
The embassy’s statement also claimed that Trump had told Lebanon’s Ambassador to the United States that Netanyahu had also agreed to the arrangement.
I don’t know if Trump really said this to the Lebanese ambassador, but I am certain of one thing: Netanyahu would never agree to stopping IDF attacks on Beirut no matter what. He made clear that any Hezbollah attack, from anywhere, would trigger a resumption of IDF attacks on Beirut. Netanyahu would never agree to a full ceasefire in Lebanon. That would be a lifesaver for Hezbollah, just as it is finally on the verge of dismantlement under the punishing bombs of the IDF.
Trump is behaving with Netanyahu like a monarch grandly giving orders to an underling. In telling Netanyahu he “must not strike Beirut,” he is protecting the terror group Hezbollah, that previous American administrations have recognized as such. The Americans should not be protecting Hezbollah; it was Hezbollah that murdered 241 Marines in their Beirut barracks in 1982, and has murdered more American citizens in Israel ever since..
The headquarters of Hezbollah are in Dahiyeh, a suburb in southern Beirut, which Israel has repeatedly attacked. Now, if Trump’s order to Netanyahu is obeyed, that will be throwing a lifeline to Hezbollah, that will simply move many of its members into Beirut where, thanks to Trump, they will be free from IDF attack. It’s a preposterous demand that Trump has made of a reluctant Netanyahu, and one that shows Trump is so desperate for a deal with Iran, that he is cravenly prepared to stop the IDF literally in its tracks.