Time traveller ‘from 2050’ and ‘shows horror reality after World War Three’
A time traveller is claiming to show the detritus of a failed war in eerie videos of 2050 with abandoned airfields, rusted landmarks, and no human being in sight.
A so-called time-traveller has claimed to show the horrors of the aftermath of World War Three.
In a series of videos, shared on social media under the user @unknown.path31, the man reveals what he claims is a rusted Eiffel Tower and Russian planes with bullet holes in them.
In this clip, the man claiming to be a time traveller says he is in the year 2050 in Paris, and goes on to eerily say that “something happened.”
He shows a rusted Eiffel Tower with slabs of concrete cracking around it and no whisper of a tourist in sight, at one point, he picks up an empty and squished Red Bull can.
The video narrator says there are “vines growing on the metal” and “complete silence” with Notre Dame Cathedral “old and grey” with “grass growing through the roads.” He pans quickly to the Cathedral showing a worn, greyer version of the Parisian landmark.
The TikTok account has 26,000 followers and has posted a number of bizarre videos, including one claiming to be in front of Abraham Lincoln and Michael Jackson – both contain AI generated content.
The video narrator then claims to be in Russia in the year 2050 at an abandoned military airport.
The narrator says in Russia there is a “military airport destroyed”, and an “old Russian plane full of bullet holes” and “wings ripped apart.” He seems to show a half empty airfield, with rusted planes he claims are Russian.
Then the man seems to find an old giant ship, but its beached on land with no water around, surrounded by dessert. The narrator says: “Everything abandoned, the world is empty, just wind.”
It comes as global tensions heat up over the straight of Hormuz crisis. Defence ministers from more than 40 nations met on Tuesday to discuss the plans led by the UK and France to protect shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.
John Healey and his French counterpart Catherine Vautrin co-chaired the meeting, where the coalition partners are expected to outline the military contributions they can make to the defensive mission to reopen the strait once hostilities cease in the US-Iran war.
The UK has already announced the deployment of HMS Dragon to the region so the destroyer can play a role in the multinational mission should the conditions allow.
Iran has effectively closed the strait to most traffic, inflicting severe economic damage around the world as the sea lane carries around 20% of global oil shipments as well as significant amounts of gas and products including fertiliser.
The US responded by blockading Iranian ports to prevent vessels linked to Tehran being able to use the route.
Defence Secretary Mr Healey said: “The UK is leading this multinational, defensive mission because trade, energy, and economic security for working people here at home depend on it.
“We are turning diplomatic agreement into practical military plans to restore confidence for shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. When I co-chair this meeting of nations from around the world, our job will be to make sure we are not just talking, we are ready to act.
“We will give people hope for the future by securing Britain and our national interests.”
