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A Series of 130 Year Old Novels Predicted Barron Trump's Entire Life, Proving We Live in a Simulation

Chip Somodevilla. Getty Images.

Contrary to popular opinion, it was not The Police but analytical psychologist Carl Jung who developed the concept of Synchronicity. Which is the idea that seemingly unrelated events that occur at the same time are meaningful and connected. In the simpler terms, it's that some things are too coincidental to be dismissed as mere coincidence. 

One of the most famous examples is that, more than a decade before the Titanic sank, a novel was published about a state-of-the-art, "unsinkable" luxury liner that sank on its maiden voyage. Across the north Atlantic. From England to the US. In April. After striking an iceberg. A ship that was not equipped with enough life boats, causing hundreds of deaths. And the ship's name? Titan

Another synchronicity that fortunately has a death toll of zero but is just as uncanny that I came across recently involves, believe it or not, one of the Harlem Globetrotters:

Source - A reporter named Irv Kupcinet came to London in 1958. He was in London to report on the coronation of Elizabeth the II. Irv was staying at the luxurious Savoy hotel on the Strand. In one of the drawers of his bedside table he found several items which had the name Harry Hannin on them. This was interesting because Irv knew a Harry Hannin who was in the famous Harlem Globetrotters. Harry was a friend of Irv’s.

Two days later Irv called Harry to ask him if he had ever stayed at the Savoy hotel. Harry said he had, but before Irv could tell him about the items he found in the drawer Harry said he had been in the Hotel Le Meurice in Paris two days before and found a tie in a drawer in his room, with the name Irv Kupcinet on it!

But neither of those examples can hold a flickering candle to the bizarre, uncoincidental coincidence that's been occurring before our very eyes over the last decade or so. 

In short, an obscure novelist in the late 19th century saw Barron Trump happening. Here are the broad outlines explained on Joe Rogan:

And more from Wikipedia, emphasis mine:

The Baron Trump novels are two children's novels written in 1889 and 1893 by American author and lawyer Ingersoll Lockwood. …

Lockwood published the first novel, Travels and adventures of Little Baron Trump and his wonderful dog Bulger, in 1889, and its sequel, Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey, in 1893. The novels recount the adventures of the German boy Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Von Troomp, who goes by "Baron Trump", as he discovers weird underground civilizations, offends the natives, flees from his entanglements with local women, and repeats this pattern until arriving back home at Castle Trump. …

100pk. Getty Images.

Chris Riotta noted in Newsweek that Baron Trump's adventures begin in Russia. Riotta also mentioned another book of Lockwood's, 1900; or, The Last President, in which New York City is riven by protests following the shocking victory in the 1896 presidential election of a populist candidate who brings on the downfall of the American republic.

While the New York Post goes into further detail on the Nikola Tesla connection Rogan mentioned:

Some link the novels to Donald Trump’s late uncle, John G. Trump, who analyzed Nikola Tesla’s papers regarding energy and time. This connection has led some to wildly speculate that the Trump family gained knowledge of time travel through studies tied to Tesla and his supposed secret time travel experiments.

Tesla … Tesla. Why does that name ring a bell? Oh, right …

JIM WATSON. Getty Images.

And here's a brief clip illustrating some of the wild speculation the Post referred to. Note the pocket watch brand Ingersoll Trump, the rabbit hole references, and the peculiar way the dates line up:

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And while we're at it, which series of high tech creations around the globe have been doing groundbreaking work in physics, including though not limited to identifying the so-called "god particle"? Note that the Trump family name was originally Trumpf:

Granted, that's bit more of a stretch than the Baron Trump novels, which are much more on-point. But I'll allow it. Whenever you discuss time travel, leaps in logic and even paradoxes will always come up.

Now, the lazy, reactionary way to explain this all away is dismiss it as simple pareidolia.  Seeing patterns were none exist. Like a cloud that looks like a dragon or a mountain on Mars that looks like a face. Which is a natural human instinct. Hell, New Hampshire still has the Old Man in the Mountain on its license plate even though the thing barely looked like anything and fell down the cliff years ago.

But just passing this off as nothing more than random chance or our own imaginations playing tricks on us is to ignore certain basic principles of physics. There are sane, rational scientists who argue that we're living in a simulation. The Boltzmann Brain theory states that eventually (like really eventually - a period of 10 to the 10th x 60th years - so a double exponent) all the matter in the cosmos will form a sentient brain, and our existence is nothing more than its conscious thought. In fact Ludwig Boltzmann argued that the simulation theory is more likely than not. Jumping back to Rogan and Musk:

Which makes it easier to accept the Baron Trump phenomenon is a product of that universal brain's imagination than believing some obsure author 13 decades ago randomly described the entire life of a future US President and his son. 

The truth, as always, is stranger than any fiction.

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