As June is the midpoint of 2025, the world reflects on a bumpy six months — catastrophic earthquakes in Taiwan and Turkey, significant volcanic activity primarily on the Reykjanes Peninsula, record-breaking flooding in Argentina, Bolivia and Brazil, economic shocks across global markets, and ramping-up outer space exploration, such as the leaked NASA reports of unidentified aerial phenomena.
Renowned astro-analyst Alizay Rahman, who made headlines for predicting a set of disasters — a storm, earthquake, and floods — forebodingly told us what would happen to us in the early months of 2025.
Her statement about the “first half being just a trailer” holds true today as the world is facing ecological destruction and rising geopolitical tensions.
Rahman predicts a turning point coming within the next span until July 27, 2025. According to her, the second half of the year can bring an extraterrestrial breakthrough of revolutionary proportions, a colossal global disaster, and intensifying trade alignments, especially led by the United States because of shifting power blocs.
Whether her insight is heavenly foreknowledge or astute pattern recognition, her growing popularity cannot be denied.
Social media networks are abuzz with debate over her accuracy, especially after a number of weather anomalies and political upsets mirrored her predictions.
While record heatwaves threaten, intensified solar activity foretold by NASA, and geopolitical tensions bubbling from Eastern Europe to the Indo-Pacific, the world holds its breath. If the first half of the year has been a trailer, is the second half the real storm?